Author: Richard H. Adler
One phrase or buzzword often causing confusion for the health care
provider in a legal context is "pre-existing condition." Under the law,
there are two types of pre-existing conditions. The first is known as
an "inactive" or "dormant" pre-existing condition. The second is an
"active" or "symptomatic" pre-existing condition.
A provider generally learns of a pre-existing condition when obtaining
the patient's history. The provider may also learn of a prior condition
when reviewing x-rays which indicate degenerative or arthritic changes
in the same area as the pain from recent trauma. When asked by
insurance companies or attorneys whether the recent trauma is "causing"
the pain or disability, or whether the "cause" arises from a
pre-existing injury, the health care provider must understand that the
answer to this question should not be considered from a "medical only"
perspective, but from a "medical-legal" perspective.
A medical only perspective may lead a provider to conclude that the
pre-existing condition, whether resolved or not, contributes to the
cause, severity, or duration of the present symptoms. Accordingly, a
provider responding from a medical only perspective might assert that
some percentage of the present condition is a result of the
pre-existing condition. However, the medical-legal perspective requires
a different analysis and the provider's answer will vary, depending on
whether the pre-existing condition was inactive or active at the time
of the recent trauma or the onset of the present condition.
Washington law states that if there is no evidence that a
pre-existing condition is causing pain or disability before trauma is
sustained, then the "lighting up" of that pre-existing condition makes
the at-fault party liable for all damages proximately caused to the
injured person. With inactive pre-existing conditions, there is no
prior pain or disability to segregate from the injuries caused by the
new trauma. From the medical-legal perspective, the "proximate cause"
of the present symptoms is the recent trauma even though the symptoms
may be worse or healing takes longer because of a pre-existing
condition.
The Washington Supreme Court has considered pre-existing conditions on several occasions, including the case of Reeder v. Sears & Roebuck Co., 41 Wn.2 550 (1952). The plaintiff in Reeder sustained a low back injury when a walking ramp collapsed at a Sears & Roebuck Co. store.
The doctor diagnosed Mr. Reeder's condition as a "muscular and
ligamentous injury" to his low back, superimposed on certain
degenerative changes in his spine. The court summarized the treating
doctor's testimony this way:
His fall...caused an arthritic condition in his spine to
be lighted up and become active...It was the doctor's opinion that
Respondent would experience continued pain and trouble with his back as
a result of his fall because it had lighted up the latent arthritic
condition in his back.
Three months prior to this accident, the plaintiff had wrenched and
injured his back while working at the Boeing plant. He lost no time
from work. The plaintiff and his physician testified that at the time
of the most recent fall, the plaintiff was fully recovered from the low
back injury sustained at Boeing. The fact that Mr. Reeder was
asymptomatic at the time of the fall was undisputed at trial. There was
also medical testimony that the plaintiff might have continued
indefinitely, without any active symptoms, unless and until something
occurred
to light it up.
The Sears & Roebuck Co.'s attorneys requested the trial judge
instruct the jury that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover for
any physical ailment or disability which may have existed prior to the
fall, from which the plaintiff may now be suffering, which was not
caused or contributed to by reason of the fall. The Washington Supreme
Court decided that it was proper for the trial court to refuse to give
the Sears & Roebuck Co. proposed jury instruction because the facts
did not support it. Instead, the Supreme Court approved the instruction
given to the jury stating:
The rule is, if by reason of delicate condition of health, the
consequences of a negligent injury are more serious still, for those
consequences the defendant is liable, although they are aggravated by
imperfect bodily conditions.
The duty of caring and of abstaining from the unlawful injury of
another applies to the sick, the weak, the infirm, as fully as to the
strong and healthy; and when the duty is violated, the measure of
damages is for the injury done, even though the injury might not have
resulted but for the peculiar physical condition of the person injured,
or may have been augmented thereby. The proximate cause of an injury is the efficient cause; the one that necessarily sets the other cause in motion.
Another case that illustrates the difference between the medical only perspective and the medical-legal perspective is
Greenwood v. The Olympic Incorporated,
a case decided by the Washington Supreme Court in 1957. In that case,
Ruth Greenwood was injured in a fall while walking down stairs in a
hotel.
After the jury reached a verdict against the plaintiff, a motion was
filed requesting a new trial asserting the jury had been improperly
instructed. The trial judge, after further study, agreed and granted a
new trial. The defendant appealed. The Supreme Court ruled that the
plaintiff was entitled to a new trial because the jury instruction had
been improper. The Court stated:
Although there was evidence that, in consequence of the respondent's fall, a dormant
arthritic condition was activated, causing much pain and discomfort,
there was no evidence that she was suffering any disability prior to
her fall. Consequently, the statement in the (jury) instruction
that the plaintiffs `are not entitled to recover for any physical
ailment or disability which may have existed prior to the fall,' while
technically correct and proper in many cases, invited the jury to
speculate about prior physical ailments or disability, concerning which
there was no testimony.
In 1969, the Supreme Court again had the opportunity to review the
legal standards regarding pre-existing conditions in the case of
Bennett v. Messick,
76 Wn.2d 474 (1969). In that case, the plaintiff was employed as a
fruit picker. Another employee was driving a forklift tractor and ran
into the plaintiff. There were several injuries, including an injury to
the same ankle the plaintiff had injured forty years earlier while
playing basketball. The evidence showed that the prior injury had
healed normally and that the plaintiff suffered no pain or disability
in the ankle thereafter, until the tractor accident. Testimony
indicated however, that a degenerative arthritic process was present in
the left ankle, presumably caused by the basketball injury forty years
earlier. The treating doctor testified that the second injury from the
forklift tractor caused pain and limitation of motion within the ankle
because it aggravated the dormant arthritic condition. He further
testified that without the tractor injury superimposed on the earlier
injury, the chances were better than 50/50 that the plaintiff would
have never had a medical problem with the ankle. The Court reaffirmed
the applicable rule:
The rule is that when a latent condition itself does not cause
pain, suffering, or a disability, but that condition plus an injury
brings on pain or disability by aggravating the pre-existing condition
and making it active, then
the injury, and not the dormant condition, is the proximate cause of
the pain and disability. Thus, the party at fault is held for the
entire damages as a result of the accident.
In 1982, the Court of Appeals, in the case of
Sutton v. Shufelberger,
31 Wn. App. 579 (1982), reviewed the case of a Seattle police officer
who, while on duty, had stopped his motorcycle, dismounted, and was hit
by a truck. The emergency room doctor testified that the officer
reported he had "chronic low back pain." The plaintiff indicated he did
hurt his back in 1971, but that it was
not symptomatic. The
emergency room doctor had no information as to whether the low back
condition was symptomatic or not when he treated the officer. The Court
of Appeals ruled that it was
not proper to give an instruction
on an "active" and "symptomatic" pre-existing condition unless there
was evidence of "actual pain or disability" at the time of the new
accident. In this case, there was no evidence to support such an
instruction.
There are many practice tips for the health care provider to be gleaned
from an understanding of the medical-legal issues that relate to
causation of pain or disability:
- It is not enough for the health care provider to simply
read and interpret x-rays as indicating that a degenerative process was
present.
- A non-symptomatic pre-existing condition is not the "proximate cause" of post-trauma symptoms.
- There must be an additional inquiry by the health care
provider into the degree of symptomatology, if any, just prior to the
present trauma.
- It is important for the health care provider to inquire as
to when a prior injury occurred, whether the patient had residual pain
or disability from that prior injury, and whether there had been any
resulting restriction of activities or work.
- Precise phrasing of answers given in deposition or trial as
to causation and "proximate cause" is critical to the patient's legal
rights.
I hope that this information provides you with some useful insights
into how the legal process considers certain medical issues that are
often perplexing and difficult for the treating or examining physician.
If we can be of assistance to you, your staff, or patients concerning
personal injury issues, please do not hesitate to contact my office.
Very truly yours,
ADLER GIERSCH, P.S.
Richard H. Adler
Attorney at Law