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Ko: Are Employers Liable After Authorization of Treatment?

  • State: Washington
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To authorize or not to authorize?

Gina Ko

Gina Ko

Authorization of treatment is a tricky issue for Washington self-insured employers trying to strike a balance between restoring an injured worker’s function and running afoul of the state's compensable consequences doctrine, which can hold an employer or insurer responsible for issues stemming from treatments provided under a claim.

The Washington Court of Appeals recently made this decision more fraught with the unpublished opinion Maphet v. Clark County, which found that, “if a self-insured employer authorizes [treatment], the self-insured employer has accepted the condition” and not just consequential treatment.

In Maphet, the injured worker sustained a right knee injury while at work. The self-insured employer subsequently authorized eight right knee surgeries. The fifth surgery caused patellofemoral instability. The employer authorized three additional surgeries to correct that instability. When the worker’s doctor proposed a ninth surgery (again, to correct patellofemoral instability), the employer contested responsibility.

The Department of Labor and Industries ordered the employer to authorize and pay for this procedure. The employer appealed, and a Superior Court jury found that the industrial injury and/or its residuals did not proximately cause the worker’s need for a ninth surgery. The department and injured worker then appealed, arguing that the employer accepted the worker’s right knee condition as a matter of law when it authorized the sixth, seventh and eighth surgeries. The Court of Appeals agreed.

Even in cases where a surgeon performs an authorized procedure negligently, amounting to malpractice, the court concluded the compensable consequences doctrine mandates the employer remain liable for resulting treatment to correct any issues stemming from the procedure. As such, the court reasoned that the worker’s fifth surgery led directly to her patellofemoral instability and need for subsequent surgeries. Moreover, the employer accepted that this condition was claim-related when it authorized the sixth, seventh and eight surgeries.

The court’s reasoning in reaching this determination has potentially broad implications on the decision to authorize any treatment. Based on the definitions of “authorization” and “acceptance” in WAC 296-20-01002, the court concluded that there must be an “acceptance” before an “authorization.” Therefore, if a self-insured employer authorizes a treatment, the self-insured employer has accepted the condition.

Per the court, the responsibility should be put on the employer to investigate and challenge treatment before authorization, if there is any question as to whether a treatment should be provided, because injured workers should not be left to guess whether a condition will be covered once treatment is authorized.

This opinion potentially negates any requirement to prove a causal link between a condition and resulting need for treatment to the industrial injury, if the employer previously authorized treatment regarding or involving the same condition. Furthermore, while the facts of this case apply specifically to the resulting need for surgery after numerous surgical procedures, the court outlined much of its reasoning using the general term “treatment.”

As a result, it is unclear how far this reasoning will extend. For example, will the employer be found to have accepted pre-existing, degenerative arthritis of the knee if it knowingly funds an arthroscopic meniscal repair where the surgeon performs a joint lavage? Will funding epidural steroid injections and mental health prescriptions also be considered de facto acceptances of the underlying conditions treated?

On a bright note, the Court did acknowledge that the employer’s payment for a treatment is not necessarily the same as authorizing treatment; however, the line between payment and authorization is not clearly demarcated. The court does not address whether a self-insured employer’s authorization of surgery, based on a department order, would be considered acceptance of the condition.

Nonetheless, the available reasoning may help support an argument against the application of this type of de facto acceptance of a condition to treatments that do not require pre-authorization, or which have been conditionally authorized (i.e., treatments specified as authorized for a condition slowing recovery).

Finally, this opinion is unpublished and, for the time being, does not have binding effect Therefore, future adjudicators may choose to depart from it.

That being said, the department was aligned with the injured worker in this matter, and is likely to implement the reasoning in Maphet at the department level.

Altogether, Maphet presents a disconcerting ruling that leaves clear that employers and insurers must take increasing care before authorizing and funding any treatment.

Gina Ko is an attorney in the Washington practice group with Reinisch Wilson Weier PC, headquartered in Portland, Oregon. This column is republished with permission from the firm’s website.

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