NWCDN Members regularly post articles and summary judgements in workers’ compensations law in your state.
Select a state from the dropdown menu below to scroll through the state specific archives for updates and opinions on various workers’ compensation laws in your state.
Contact information for NWCDN members is also located on the state specific links in the event you have additional questions or your company is seeking a workers’ compensation lawyer in your state.
Readers of The Compendium may recall DWC’s launching two years ago of CompCourses. These free webinars are designed to benefit workers’ compensation professionals, including adjusters, employers, and healthcare staff, by providing essential education on the workers’ compensation system, delivered in free 1-hour webinars. Not only are participants able to stay informed on current trends and improve their professional skills, they are also able to earn free Continuing Education (CE) credits by watching the webinars and completing a short quiz.
DWC announced last month that its CompCourses webinars will now be available in an on-demand, self-study format, allowing participants to learn and earn CE credit whenever it fits their schedule by watching previously recorded CompCourses webinars and completing the short quiz to earn 1 hour of TDI self-study CE credit.
Earning on-demand credit could not be easier! Simply visit the CompCourses webpage here and select the course you wish to take. You will fill out a Microsoft form, watch the 1-hour webinar on YouTube, and take the quiz to test your knowledge.
Voila…..
DWC has announced that it will continue to offer live CompCourses in 2026, affording participants the opportunity to engage directly with subject-matter experts and earn CE credit.
CompCourses webinars for 2026 are planned as follows:
Copyright 2026, Stone Loughlin & Swanson, LLP
DWC is considering amending 28 Texas Administrative Code Chapter 152 concerning attorney fees and sought comments through last month on whether changes to the current hourly rate for attorney fees are necessary.
We note that when the Act was implemented in 1991, the approved hourly rate for attorney fees was $150. That rate remained in place for 26 years, until 2017, when it was increased to $200.
Per the Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index Inflation Calculator, $200 in January, 2017, has the same buying power as $266.89 in December, 2025. Further, $200 in December, 2025, has the same buying power as did $149.88 in January, 2017. In other words, due to inflation, it’s as if the rate was never increased.
By comparison, the maximum weekly temporary income benefit in 1991 was $428, and the minimum was $64. By 2016, the maximum weekly benefit had risen to $895, and the minimum to $134. Today, the maximum weekly benefit is $1,271, and the minimum is $191. So, benefit levels have nearly tripled since 1991, while the attorney hourly rate has increased only once and remains at $200 nearly a decade later. Meanwhile, that rate must cover the overhead required to operate and maintain an effective law practice which has increased in ways that were inconceivable in 1991.
Workers’ compensation now has the second lowest average hourly rate of any practice area at an average of $180, second only to juvenile law at $146, while the average hourly rate for all practice areas is $367. Hourly Rates in Texas.
The overarching concern is that if the rate cap is not raised, the workers’ compensation bar will continue to shrink, as it is doing now, as older, experienced attorneys retire and new attorneys choose other practice areas over workers’ compensation law because it is more difficult to make the numbers work. At that point, employees, employers, and carriers will no longer be able to obtain effective legal representation in this highly complex area of the law.
Copyright 2026, Stone Loughlin & Swanson, LLP
by: Kisa P. Sthankiya
|
On May 31, 2026, the Illinois General Assembly passed HB5228.
The bill amends several provisions of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act.
The legislation faced significant opposition from employer and business
interests during the legislative process.
Consequences for Missing the 90-Day
Deadline
What Conduct Is Covered?
II. Utilization Review – Section 8.7
III. Burial Benefit |
|
On May 31, 2026, the Illinois General Assembly passed HB5228.
The bill amends several provisions of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act.
The legislation faced significant opposition from employer and business
interests during the legislative process.
Consequences for Missing the 90-Day
Deadline
What Conduct Is Covered?
II. Utilization Review – Section 8.7
III. Burial Benefit |
Stephanie Ringbloom, Esq.:
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued an unpublished opinion in the case of Yoder v. McCarthy Construction, Inc., et. al., No. 43 EAP 2024, 2025 WL 2981889 (Pa. Oct. 23, 2025). In this decision, the Court confirmed the applicability of the McDonald test for coverage of a subcontractor. The Court noted that “Under the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act), as interpreted by this Court for decades, a general contractor that hires a subcontractor to perform work on a jobsite is deemed an “employer” that is secondarily liable to the injured employee of the subcontractor for the payment of compensation under the Act, provided that the subcontractor—the one primarily liable—fails to make payment.” They cited to Section 302(b) of the Act, 77 P.S. § 462. A general contractor can thereby avail itself of the same tort immunity afforded to the subcontractor by way of this secondary liability.
There are five
elements that must be met under the McDonald test for a general
contractor to qualify as a statutory employer: (1) the existence of a contract
with an owner or one in the position of an owner; (2) occupancy and/or control
of the premises upon which the work is being performed; (3) the existence of a
subcontract with the general contractor; (4) entrustment of part of the general
contractor’s regular business to the subcontractor; and (5) the claimant is an
employee of that subcontractor. The Supreme Court determined that McCarthy
Construction had demonstrated all five elements in the claim filed by Yoder,
thereby granting it statutory immunity for the civil claim that the injured
worker had tried to file against McCarthy.
On December 3, 2025, an Arkansas Court of Appeals issued an opinion that further bolstered the supreme reign of the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission (more commonly referred to as the “Full Commission”) as the deferential trier of fact and arbiter of credibility. One of the most noteworthy quirks of Arkansas workers’ compensation law is that Arkansas appellate courts and the Arkansas Supreme Court afford near-complete deference to the Full Commission’s credibility assessment of witnesses while completely disregarding the credibility determinations rendered by Administrative Law Judges that have had the opportunity to personally observe witnesses and their demeanor while testifying on the stand. The Full Commission is tasked with reviewing the decisions rendered by ALJs along with the evidentiary record of a claim once an ALJ’s decision has been appealed, but their review of the record is limited to transcripts of testimony, evidentiary exhibits, and briefs submitted by legal counsel for both parties. However, despite never getting to personally observe witnesses and their demeanor as they testify, it is well settled in Arkansas workers’ compensation law that the reviewing Court of Appeals or Arkansas Supreme Court will “give no weight to the ALJ’s findings whatsoever” and will instead defer to the credibility assessments and findings of facts rendered by the Full Commission even though it is the ALJ that presides over a claim for months (potentially even years), makes rulings on the admissibility of evidence, and personally observes claimants and other witnesses as they testify under direct and cross-examination. Dardanelle Pub. Sch. v. Ewton, 2025 Ark. App. 575, at 7, 728 S.W.3d 401, 405 (citing Clark v. Peabody Testing Serv., 265 Ark. 489, 579 S.W.2d 360 (1979)).
In the case in point, Claimant Andrea Ewton was employed as a substitute custodian for Dardanelle Intermediate School and was on the clock when she walked from the school’s office to her car and injured her knee and ankle when she stepped down from a curb in the parking lot. At issue was whether she was performing employment services when she went to her car or whether she had gone to her car for a personal errand (specifically to retrieve her water bottle). Mere hours after Ewton’s fall, she spoke on the phone with a claim supervisor and reported that she had gone to her car that morning to retrieve a water bottle when she slipped off a curb injuring her knee and ankle. In the recorded transcript of that call, Ewton was specifically asked if she had gone to her car for any purpose other than retrieving her water bottle, and she responded, “No ma’am”. The school nurse that iced Claimant’s injuries immediately after the accident also testified that Ewton told her she had been walking to her car to get a drink when she slipped off the curb. These reports made by Claimant immediately after her accident are noteworthy because she eventually changed her story and testified at the hearing in front of the ALJ that she had gone to her car to retrieve a set of keys that she needed to open school buildings. Ewton had also testified during her deposition that she went to her car to retrieve a set of keys; however, during her deposition, she testified that the school nurse had given her the wrong set of keys earlier that morning. In contrast, she testified in front of the ALJ that the school’s secretary had given her the wrong set of keys that morning (perhaps after she and her attorney realized that the school nurse only had keys that could open the nurse’s office rather than the various school buildings that Ewton needed to access that day).
After observing the demeanor of Ewton, the school nurse and the secretary while they testified, in addition to reviewing the Claimant’s deposition transcript and the transcript of her recorded statement made on the same day of her accident, the ALJ ruled that Ewton had failed to prove she suffered a compensable injury to her knee and ankle because she was not performing employment services at the time of her fall. In his opinion, the ALJ specifically found that Ewton did not provide credible testimony when she testified that she had gone to her car that morning to retrieve a set of keys to one of the school’s buildings. His credibility determination was based on Ewton’s inconsistent narratives regarding why she went to her car that morning as well as other instances of doubtful credibility in the record such as her testimony at the hearing that she hadn’t worked since her accident which was contradicted by Claimant’s unemployment application wherein she reported working for a nursing and rehabilitation facility for a period of four months after her accident at the school.
In spite of the ALJ’s personal observations of the witnesses throughout their testimony as well as his thorough opinion which cited to numerous inconsistencies in the evidentiary record in support of his credibility assessments, the Full Commission reversed his denial of the claim and found that Ewton had met her burden of proof in establishing that she was performing employment services at the time of her fall. The Full Commission noted in its decision that it specifically found Ewton’s testimony to be credible when she testified at the hearing that she had gone to her car to retrieve a set of keys rather than only going to her car for a bottle of water. Respondents appealed the Full Commission’s decision to the Court of Appeals arguing that Claimant had failed to prove she sustained a compensable injury within the scope of her employment because she provided inconsistent statements regarding her purpose for going to her car. However, the Court of Appeals abided by long-standing precedent in deferring to the Full Commission’s credibility determination and stating that Arkansas courts will affirm the Commission’s decisions when the issue on appeal comes down to the Commission’s assessment of the credibility of witnesses.
Given that the Court of Appeals is bound by the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Act and decades of case law which designate the Commission as the ultimate factfinder, the Court of Appeals’ decision to affirm the Full Commission is certainly not surprising to those who are familiar with workers’ compensation law in the natural state. Ultimately, it is up to the Arkansas legislature to amend the law if they believe that the ALJs who have the opportunity to personally observe the demeanor of witnesses and to comb through extensive evidence should be given deference when making credibility determinations and other valuable findings of fact over the administrative and judicial bodies who are charged with reviewing the evidentiary record from transcripts and records alone.
The burial benefit under the Nebraska Workers’ Compensation Act will increase to $12,200.00 effective July 1, 2026. This benefit applies upon the death of an employee, resulting through personal injuries as defined in NEB. REV. STAT. § 48-151.
By: Jigar S. Desai
In a February 26, 2026, opinion, the Illinois Appellate
Court, Fifth District, Workers’ Compensation Commission
Division, addressed a question of first impression under the Workers’
Compensation Act (Compensation Act), 820 ILCS 305/1, et seq.:
whether a claimant who sustains a single injury to one body part may receive
concurrent awards under both the scheduled loss provisions of §8(e) and the
person-as-a-whole provisions of §8(d)(2). Azcon Metals v. Illinois
Workers' Compensation Commission, 2026 IL App (5th) 250301WC. The
court held that a claimant must elect one remedy or the other for the same
injury, and that an employer who made a voluntary payment under §8(e) is
entitled to a credit against a subsequent award under §8(d)(2).
The court affirmed the Commission’s award of permanent
partial disability benefits under §8(d)(2) but reversed the Commission’s denial
of credit to the employer for benefits previously paid under §8(e).
The decision provides important guidance on the interplay
between §§8(e) and 8(d)(2), the election-of-remedies doctrine in workers’
compensation, and the credit principles that apply when employers make prompt
voluntary payments under the Compensation Act.
Factual Background
Tom Snyder sustained an injury to his right foot and leg
while working for Azcon Metals on March 19, 2020. His right foot was crushed
between two rail cars. Snyder initially underwent surgery that resulted in the
amputation of four toes on his right foot. However, the following day, he
underwent a second surgery that resulted in the amputation of his right leg at
the mid-tibia, below the knee.
Following the surgeries, Snyder was fitted for a transtibial
prosthetic and participated in physical therapy, work hardening, and a
functional capacity evaluation. The evaluation indicated that he could perform
work at the heavy physical demand level but had decreased tolerance for
prolonged standing and walking on uneven surfaces. Snyder participated in
vocational rehabilitation and expressed his intent to pursue employment in
heating, ventilation, and air conditioning or in the construction industry, acknowledging
that those fields may require traversing uneven ground but believing he could
manage the slower pace of such work.
Following the work injury, the employer promptly paid Snyder
$97,010.30 in permanent partial disability benefits for the scheduled loss of
his right foot pursuant to §8(e)(11) of the Compensation Act. The payment was
made in two installments: $60,716.19 on April 20, 2020, and $36,294.11 on April
28, 2022, calculated at 167 weeks using a stipulated minimum statutory
amputation rate of $580.90.
Procedural History
On April 17, 2020, Snyder filed an application for
adjustment of claim. The matter proceeded to an arbitration hearing on January
27, 2023. At the outset of the hearing, the parties stipulated that the
employer had paid, and was entitled to credit for, $17,438.31 in temporary total
disability benefits and $42,822.94 in maintenance benefits. The parties further
stipulated that the employer had paid $97,010.30 in permanent partial
disability benefits for the scheduled loss of Snyder’s right foot under
§8(e)(11), but they disagreed as to whether the employer was entitled to a
credit for that payment against any additional permanent partial disability
award.
Snyder waived his right to a wage differential award under
§8(d)(1). The arbitrator awarded all requested medical expenses and, after
considering the factors set forth in §8.1b(b)(v) of the Compensation Act, found
that Snyder sustained permanent partial disability to the extent of 65 percent
loss of use of the person as a whole under §8(d)(2). The arbitrator denied the
employer’s request for a credit for the §8(e)(11) payment against the §8(d)(2)
award.
On review, the Commission unanimously reduced the §8(d)(2)
award from 65 percent to 45 percent loss of use of the person as a whole,
finding that Snyder was young and remained capable of physically demanding
work. The Commission, however, agreed with the arbitrator that the employer was
not entitled to a credit. The Commission characterized the credit issue as one
of first impression, concluded that §8(d)(2) did not permit an offset for
previously paid amputation benefits, and noted that the employer had paid
benefits under the incorrect section — §8(e)(11) (loss of foot, 167 weeks)
rather than §8(e)(12) (amputation below the knee, compensated as loss of a leg
at 215 weeks).
The circuit court affirmed the Commission’s decision in its
entirety. The employer appealed to the appellate court.
The Appellate Court’s Analysis
Framing the Issue
As a threshold matter, the appellate court corrected the
framing of the employer’s first argument on appeal. The employer had argued
that the Commission erred by awarding benefits under both §§8(e) and 8(d)(2).
The court clarified that the Commission did not “award” benefits under §8(e);
rather, the employer had made a voluntary payment under that section prior to
arbitration. The Commission only awarded benefits under §8(d)(2) and separately
considered whether the employer was entitled to a credit. Accordingly, the
court reframed the central issue as whether the Commission erred by denying the
employer a credit for its voluntary §8(e) payment against the §8(d)(2) award.
Standard of Review
The court noted that while the Commission’s determination of
whether an employer is entitled to a credit is ordinarily reviewed for abuse of
discretion, the Commission in this case interpreted statutory provisions and
concluded that §8(d)(2) did not permit an offset. Because the dispute involved
statutory interpretation, the court applied de novo review.
Election of Remedies: Section 8(e) Versus Section 8(d)(2)
for a Single Injury
The core of the court’s analysis addressed the interplay
between §§8(e) and 8(d)(2). The court acknowledged the tension between the two
provisions. Section 8(e) provides that a claimant who receives a scheduled loss
“shall not receive any compensation under any other provisions of this Act.”
820 ILCS 305/8(e). Section 8(d)(2), on the other hand, states that compensation
awarded under that subsection “shall not take into consideration injuries
covered under paragraphs (c) and (e)” and that such compensation “shall not
affect the employee’s right to compensation payable under paragraphs (b), (c)
and (e) . . . for the disabilities therein covered.” 820 ILCS 305/8(d)(2).
The Commission had relied on the language of §8(d)(2) to
conclude that recovery under §8(e) should have no effect on an award under
§8(d)(2), and vice versa, effectively permitting concurrent awards and denying
the employer any credit. The circuit court agreed, adding that any ambiguity
should be resolved in the claimant’s favor under the principle of liberal
construction.
The appellate court disagreed. In its view, the language of
§8(e) clearly precluded a claimant from recovering under both sections for the
same injury to one body part. The court interpreted the language of §8(d)(2) as
permitting an election — not a concurrent award — for a single injury.
Specifically, the court concluded that §8(d)(2) permits a claimant to elect an
award under either §8(e) or §8(d)(2) for an injury to a single body part, while
also permitting recovery under both sections when a claimant sustains injuries
to multiple, separate body parts in the same work accident.
Consistency with Prior Caselaw
The court grounded its conclusion in several lines of
precedent. First, the court analogized to established caselaw holding that a
claimant who sustains a scheduled loss may elect between a scheduled loss award
under §8(e) and a wage differential award under §8(d)(1), but may not receive
both. Citing Payetta v. Industrial Commission, 339 Ill.App.3d
718, 791 N.E.2d 682, 274 Ill.Dec. 590 (2d Dist. 2003), and General
Electric Co. v. Industrial Commission, 89 Ill.2d 432, 433 N.E.2d 671,
60 Ill.Dec. 629 (1982), the court noted that this election principle reflects
the understanding that an injured party will choose the award most likely to
approximate the earnings loss the Compensation Act is designed to compensate.
The Commission had distinguished those cases on the basis that §8(d)(1)
contains an explicit exclusion for §8(e) claims, whereas §8(d)(2) does not. The
appellate court acknowledged the difference in statutory language but concluded
that the exclusionary language in §8(e) itself — prohibiting compensation under
“any other provisions of this Act” (820 ILCS 305/8(e)) — resolved the issue.
Second, the court observed that both wage differential
awards under §8(d)(1) and person-as-a-whole awards under §8(d)(2) serve to
compensate injured workers for reduced earning capacity under certain
circumstances. Given this functional similarity, the court concluded that the
rationale prohibiting dual recovery under §§8(e) and 8(d)(1) applies equally to
§§8(e) and 8(d)(2) when a single injury to one body part is at issue.
Third, the court distinguished its prior decisions in Beelman
Trucking v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission, 233 Ill.2d 364,
909 N.E.2d 818, 330 Ill.Dec. 796 (2009), and American Coal Co. v.
Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission, 2024 IL App (5th) 230815WC,
248 N.E.3d 493, 478 Ill.Dec. 868. In those cases, the claimants had sustained
injuries to multiple body parts during a single work accident, warranting
additional compensation under the Compensation Act. In Beelman
Trucking, the supreme court permitted concurrent awards under
§§8(e)(18) (loss of legs) and 8(e)(10) (loss of arm), reasoning that denying
compensation beyond two members would leave additional losses uncompensated.
In American Coal, this court extended that reasoning to
permit concurrent awards under §§8(e)(18) and 8(d)(2) for nonscheduled injuries
sustained in addition to the scheduled losses. The appellate court found those
decisions consistent with its holding in Azcon Metals, noting
that the present case involved only a single injury to one body part, and that
allowing concurrent awards would result in impermissible double recovery.
Employer Entitled to Credit for Voluntary Payment
Having concluded that the claimant was entitled to
compensation under only one statutory provision for his single injury, the
court turned to the credit issue. The court held that the Commission erred by
denying the employer’s credit request. The employer had promptly and
voluntarily paid benefits under §8(e) following the work accident, providing
the claimant with immediate financial relief. When the claimant subsequently
elected to receive benefits under §8(d)(2), the Commission should have credited
the employer for its prior voluntary payments.
The court cited World Color Press v. Industrial
Commission of Illinois, 125 Ill.App.3d 469, 466 N.E.2d 270, 80
Ill.Dec. 818 (5th Dist. 1984), for the proposition that an employer may receive
credit for overpayments absent a statutory bar, and Salisbury v.
Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission, 2017 IL App (3d) 160138WC,
78 N.E.3d 979, 413 Ill.Dec. 703, for the policy principle that encouraging
prompt and voluntary payments of benefits furthers the purpose of the
Compensation Act. The court emphasized that denying credit for good-faith
payments would encourage administrative delays as employers attempt to resolve
every ambiguity before paying benefits — a result inconsistent with the
Compensation Act’s primary purpose of providing employees with prompt and
definite compensation.
Practical Implications
This decision establishes several important principles for
practitioners on both sides of the bar.
For employers and carriers, the decision confirms that when
a single injury to one body part is involved, a claimant must elect between a
scheduled loss award under §8(e) and a person-as-a-whole award under §8(d)(2).
The employer who promptly and voluntarily pays benefits under §8(e) will be
entitled to a credit against a subsequent §8(d)(2) award. This holding should
encourage prompt payment of scheduled benefits, as employers need not fear that
early payments will go uncredited if the claimant later elects a different form
of permanent disability compensation. Practitioners should carefully document
voluntary payments, including the statutory section under which they are made,
the calculation methodology, and the dates of payment.
For claimants, the decision preserves the right to elect the
more favorable remedy — but it forecloses the possibility of receiving both a
scheduled loss award and a person-as-a-whole award for the same injury.
Claimants and their counsel should carefully evaluate which remedy produces the
greater benefit before making an election, particularly in cases involving
amputations or other injuries that may qualify under both sections. The
decision also reaffirms that concurrent awards remain permissible when a claimant
sustains injuries to multiple, separate body parts in a single work accident,
consistent with the rationale of Beelman Trucking, supra, and American
Coal, supra.
Finally, the employer’s miscalculation of the scheduled loss
payment in this case — paying 167 weeks for loss of a foot under §8(e)(11) when
the below-knee amputation should have been compensated as a loss of a leg at
215 weeks under §8(e)(12) — serves as a reminder that correct classification of
the injury under the appropriate subsection of §8(e) is critical. An incorrect
classification may result in an underpayment that could affect the credit
calculation or expose the employer to additional proceedings.
By: Kisa P. Sthankiya
The claimant in Aim National Lease v. Illinois
Workers’ Compensation Commission, 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U, ¶8,
worked as a rental representative conducting “360 inspections” of trucks,
which required walking around and climbing in and out of vehicles. On August
13, 2019, she tripped over a parking block during an inspection and fell,
testifying that she felt throbbing pain in her left lower leg and shooting
pain from her heel to her toes. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶9.
She was treated at Working Well Occupational Health,
diagnosed with contusions and left foot and ankle sprains, and placed on
light-duty restrictions. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶10. Although
X-rays showed no fractures, she continued to experience swelling, antalgic
gait, and pain and was referred to physical therapy. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶11.
Beginning in September 2019, Dr. James Hong, a podiatrist,
treated her for persistent ankle pain, numbness, and tingling, diagnosing ankle
sprain and neuritis, and prescribed therapy, medication, injections, and
work restrictions. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶¶12 – 14. At subsequent
visits in September and October 2019, the claimant continued to report sharp,
shooting pain and neuritis-type symptoms, though some improvement was noted
with gabapentin and therapy. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶¶13 – 14. Dr.
Hong administered a steroid injection, adjusted medications, and maintained
work restrictions while documenting ongoing nerve pain and reduced range of
motion. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶14.
From October 24 through October 28, 2019, the claimant
participated in a 30-mile cancer walk where participants had to walk
10 miles a day. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶18. The claimant
testified that she did some walking during the event but spent most of the
weekend riding around in a golf cart. Id.
On October 29, 2019, the claimant went to a physical therapy
appointment and reported that she was slightly worse than the week prior due to
being out of town but she felt 76-to-80-percent better and some improvements.
2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶19. The following therapy visit on October 30,
2019, she again noticed increased pain in the left heel since the weekend but
also showed progress with strength, range of motion, flexibility, and function.
2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶20.
On November 21, 2019, the claimant followed up with Dr. Hong
and complained of numbness, tingling, and shooting pain radiating from her
ankle to her toes and calf. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶21. Dr.
Hong’s examination revealed positive Tinel’s and Valleix’s signs in the
tarsal tunnel, and he diagnosed neuritis/neuropraxia, left foot sprain, and
possible plantar fasciitis. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶¶22 –
23. Because her symptoms were worsening and appeared structural, he ordered
MRIs, increased medication, and modified restrictions. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶23.
MRIs of the left ankle were taken on December 14, 2019,
and interpreted as largely negative, showing normal ligaments and tendons with
only minor findings such as mild arthritis in the first MTP joint. 2026 IL
App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶24.
At the employer’s request, the claimant underwent an
independent medical exam (IME) on December 18, 2019, with orthopedic surgeon
Dr. Kamran Hamid. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶25. He diagnosed ankle
sprain and instability related to the work accident and suggested the claimant
may have had complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) or sympathetic mediated
pain, though evaluation was complicated by medication use. Id. Dr.
Hamid considered prior treatment reasonable, found that the claimant was not at
maximum medical improvement (MMI), and recommended further MRI imaging due to
poor quality of the December 14 images. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶26.
On December 19, 2019, Dr. Hong expressed concern about
early CRPS and referred the claimant for pain management, recommending
possible dorsal root ganglion (DRG) treatment while maintaining work
restrictions and agreed with new MRI imaging. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at
¶27.
Additional MRIs of the left tibia/fibula, left ankle, and
foot in January 2020 showed mild edema, fluid, and bursitis but no major
abnormalities. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶28. Dr. Hong continued to
suspect early CRPS and recommended pain management due to persistent nerve pain
and limited relief from medication. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶¶29 – 30.
In contrast, Dr. Kenneth Candido, who conducted an IME on
January 28, 2020, opined that the claimant did not have CRPS but instead had
tarsal tunnel syndrome and that she could return to full-duty work without
restrictions. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶31. Based on his opinion, the
employer denied further pain management treatment. Id.
With the employer’s consent, the claimant started
treatment with Dr. Hamid in March 2020. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at
¶32. He expressed concern of CRPS versus sympathetic mediated nerve pain and
recommended pain clinic consultation, which the employer refused to
approve. Id.
In April 2020, during a telemedicine visit with Dr. Hamid,
claimant reported an increase in nerve pain. He reviewed the January 2020 MRIs
as showing ligament tears and recommended surgical reconstruction but cautioned
that pain management was necessary first due to likely CRPS exacerbation.
2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶33.
A third IME was performed by orthopedic foot
specialist, Dr. Anand Vora, in May 2020. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶34.
He found no instability or CRPS and concluded the claimant had reached MMI
with only a resolved contusion, releasing her to full duty without
further treatment. Id. Dr. Vora questioned the claimant’s
reported symptoms based in part on records referencing her participation in the
cancer walk in October 2019. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶35.
Meanwhile, the claimant began treatment with pain specialist
Dr. Thomas Pontinen, who disagreed with the tarsal tunnel diagnosis and
supported a diagnosis of CRPS based on symptom distribution and examination
findings. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶36. After a lumbar sympathetic block
in May 2020 resulted in approximately 90-percent pain relief, Dr. Pontinen
concluded that the improvement strongly supported CRPS rather than tarsal
tunnel syndrome. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶38.
The employer scheduled claimant for a reexamination with
Dr. Candido in June 2020 that the claimant refused to attend. 2026 IL App
(1st) 250494WC-U at ¶37. A meeting was held by the parties with the arbitrator,
and, according to the employer, the arbitrator opined during that meeting that
the IME should not proceed. Id.
Dr. Candido performed a record review in August 2020 and
opined that claimant had sustained a neuropraxia of the posterior tibial
nerve. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶39.
Dr. Hamid maintained his CRPS diagnosis
and recommendation for surgery after pain control. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶40. Throughout 2020 and 2021, the claimant, under Dr. Pontinen’s
care, continued lumbar sympathetic blocks with temporary relief. 2026 IL App
(1st) 250494WC-U at ¶41.
In April 2021, Dr. Candido reaffirmed his view that no CRPS
was present and that no further treatment or restrictions were necessary upon
an updated examination and reviewing surveillance video. Id.
In January 2022, Dr. Matthew Jaycox, a pain management
specialist who agreed with the CRPS diagnosis and noted that although an
anterior talofibular tear had been confirmed, surgery was not feasible
due to CRPS. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶42. He recommended
neuromodulation treatment and referred the claimant to Dr. William Landphair to
consider a DRG stimulator. Id. After consultation, the
claimant proceeded with a DRG trial in March 2022. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U
at ¶43.
The claimant reported greater than 80-percent pain relief
following the trial and elected to proceed with permanent implantation.
2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶44. The permanent DRG was implanted on March
23, 2022, and subsequent follow-ups documented 90-percent or greater relief,
decreased swelling, and significant functional improvement. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶45. By August 29, 2022, her pain had decreased to two out of
ten, she was active with walking and swimming, and she continued to report
substantial improvement. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶46.
The arbitrator found that the conditional ill-being was
related and awarded medical expenses and prospective
medical treatment. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶3. The
employer appealed the decision to the Commission. The Commission denied some
medical bills due to no evidence of supporting medical records. 2026
IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶4. They affirmed the arbitrator’s denial
to admit certain documents offered by the employer and denying a fourth
IME. Id. The Circuit Court of Cook County subsequently
affirmed the decision on appeal. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶5.
At trial, Arbitrator Amarillo found that the claimant proved
her left foot and ankle condition was causally related to the August 13, 2019,
work accident and credited the opinions of her treating physicians,
concluding that the DRG implant’s success supported causation and the
necessity of treatment. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶47. The
arbitrator also found the claimant’s testimony credible and supported by
objective findings, rejecting any suggestion that she was exaggerating her symptoms. 2026
IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶48.
The arbitrator determined that the opinions of Dr. Candido
and Dr. Vora were not credible or persuasive, noting inconsistencies with
the medical evidence and treating physicians’ findings. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶¶49 – 50. The arbitrator specifically found Dr. Vora’s
malingering theory unsupported, criticized his selective reliance on the
record, and remarked negatively on his deposition demeanor. 2026 IL
App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶¶50 – 51. The arbitrator further rejected the
employer’s experts’ assumption that the claimant had walked 30 miles shortly
after cancer surgery. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶52.
The arbitrator held that the claimant’s medical treatment
was reasonable and necessary and ordered the employer to pay the submitted
medical bills paid by claimant’s private insurer pursuant to §§8(a) and 8.2 of
the Workers’ Compensation Act, 820 ILCS 305/1, et seq. 2026 IL
App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶53. He also ordered the employer to authorize
ongoing care, including Lyrica and maintenance of the DRG stimulator, but
declined to award penalties or fees. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U
at ¶¶54 – 55.
On appeal, the Commission modified the decision by
disallowing certain unsubstantiated medical bills but otherwise affirmed,
finding the remaining medical expenses reasonable, necessary, and causally
related to the accident. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶56. The
Commission also ordered payment for prospective care related to the DRG and
Lyrica. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶57.
The Commission rejected the employer’s argument that it had
been improperly denied a §12 IME, noting the employer had invited the
arbitrator’s guidance and that the record did not support a finding
of error. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶¶58 – 59. The
Commission affirmed and adopted the arbitrator’s decision in all other
respects. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶60.
The employer sought judicial review, and the Circuit Court
of Cook County confirmed the Commission’s decision. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶61. The circuit court rejected the employer’s argument that
it was not liable for group health insurer-paid “billed charged” on a
“subrogation lien statement” because some of the charges were not substantiated
by any medical bills from the claimant’s healthcare provider. 2026 IL App
(1st) 250494WC-U at ¶62. The circuit court rejected the employer’s
argument that it is liable to pay the lesser of the healthcare provider’s
actual charges, the negotiated rate, or the amount identified in the fee
schedule provided in §8.2 of the Act, 820 ILCS 305/8.2. Id. The
employer maintained that such a determination cannot be made unless the
healthcare providers’ bills are produced at the time of trial. Id.
1. Causation and Intervening Injury
The first issue the employer raised was regarding whether
the October 2019 breast cancer walk that the claimant participated in was an
independent intervening cause breaking the chain of causation.
The court noted that every natural consequence flowing from
a work-related injury is compensable unless an independent intervening accident
completely breaks the chain of causation between the original injury and
the subsequent condition, as recognized in National Freight Industries
v. Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission, 2013 IL App (5th)
120043WC, ¶26, 993 N.E.2d 473, 373 Ill.Dec. 167. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶69. To relieve an employer of liability, the intervening
cause must entirely sever the causal connection rather than merely contribute
to the claimant’s condition, as explained in Global Products v.
Workers’ Compensation Commission, 392 Ill.App.3d 408, 411, 911 N.E.2d
1042, 1046, 331 Ill.Dec. 812 (1st Dist. 2009). Id. A
non-work-related accident that only aggravates a weakened condition does not
break the causal chain, and other incidents that aggravate the claimant’s
condition are legally irrelevant, as held in Teska v. Industrial
Commission, 266 Ill.App.3d 740, 640 N.E.2d 1, 3, 203 Ill.Dec. 574 (1st
Dist. 1994), and Vogel v. Industrial Commission, 354
Ill.App.3d 780, at 821 N.E.2d 807, 813, 290 Ill.Dec. 495. Id. So
long as a “but-for” relationship exists between the original work injury
and the subsequent condition, the employer remains liable, consistent
with Global Products, supra, 911 N.E.2d at 1046. Id.
The court upheld the Commission’s rejection of the
employer’s argument that the claimant’s participation in a breast cancer
charity walk constituted an independent, intervening cause of her
subsequent left leg, foot, heel, and ankle conditions. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶72. They noted that the Commission found implausible the
employer’s assertion that the claimant walked 30 miles one week after major
breast cancer surgery, crediting her testimony that she did not complete the full
distance and spent most of the event riding in a golf cart due to postoperative
pain. Id. Because the Commission found the claimant credible,
the court noted it was entitled to rely on her testimony regarding the extent
of her activity. Id.
Although the employer pointed to therapy and treatment
records reflecting a temporary increase in heel pain and new clinical findings
after the event, the court concluded that this evidence did not compel a
finding of an independent intervening cause. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶¶73 – 74. The post-event therapy records also documented
substantial overall improvement, including increased strength, range of
motion, ambulation tolerance, and decreased pain frequency and intensity. 2026
IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶74.
The court further emphasized that neither the medical
records nor expert testimony supported a finding that the charity walk broke
the causal chain. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶75. The
treating physicians consistently attributed the claimant’s lower extremity
conditions, including CRPS, to the August 13, 2019, work accident. Id. The
employer’s reliance on testimony that plantar fasciitis could be aggravated by
prolonged standing was insufficient. Id.
Even assuming there had been a post-walk aggravation, the
court held that such evidence, at most, demonstrated a contributing aggravation
of a preexisting work-related injury — not a complete break
in causation. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶76. The record
contained no medical testimony establishing that walking alone was the sole
cause of her disabling conditions. Id. To the contrary,
citing Vogel the court held that the evidence supported a
“but-for” causal relationship between the original work injury and the
claimant’s subsequent condition, and thus the employer failed to establish an
independent intervening cause. Id.
2. Medical Bills and Group Health Payments
The most important issue on appeal was regarding the medical
bill award by the Commission.
First, the employer argued that the Commission erred in
awarding the claimant medical expenses for physical therapy treatments
related to her left shoulder. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U
at ¶78. The employer correctly noted that the claimant’s case involved
injuries to her left lower leg, foot, ankle, and heel — not her shoulder. Id. Nevertheless,
the Commission awarded payment for several physical therapy sessions in
November and December 2019 that appeared to involve shoulder treatment
alone. Id. The court agreed that these shoulder-related
expenses should not have been awarded. Id.
The employer also argued that the Commission improperly
awarded certain medical expenses despite the absence of supporting medical
bills in the record. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶79. After
the employer refused to pay for pain management treatment following Dr.
Candido’s January 2020 IME report, the claimant’s private group health insurer,
Blue Cross Blue Shield (BCBS), began covering those treatments. 2026 IL
App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶80. The claimant introduced medical bills from
her providers and a “Consolidated Statement of Benefits” from BCBS covering
medical treatments from January 5, 2021, through November 1, 2022. Id. The
employer asserted that BCBS prepared this document in connection with a
subrogation lien claim. Id.
The “Consolidated Statement of Benefits” listed total
amounts billed for each date of service but did not itemize the
specific treatments performed. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U
at ¶81. The document reflected that BCBS paid a total of
$208,342.16 in benefits, including approximately $169,000 to Rush
Surgicenter for services on March 23, 2022, approximately $30,000 to Rush Oak
Park Hospital for services on March 10, 2022, and payments for anesthesiology
services on both dates. Id. After determining that the
claimant’s medical expenses were reasonable and necessary, the Commission
awarded $204,559.62 — the amount identified in the BCBS statement — minus
certain medical bills lacking corresponding treatment records. Id.
The employer contended that this award was improper because
the BCBS statement showed only amounts BCBS claimed to have paid for
unspecified services and was unsupported by the medical providers’ actual
bills. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶83. The employer argued that
without the providers’ actual medical bills in evidence, there was a failure of
proof and no basis for liability for the bill. Id. The
employer further maintained that, even if it were liable for some treatments,
the actual bills were necessary to determine the correct amount owed under
§8(a) of the Act. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶84. According to
the employer, §8(a) requires payment at the lesser of the negotiated rate, the
provider’s charge, or the statutory fee schedule rate under §8.2, and such
a comparison could not be made without the actual bills. Id.
The court rejected these arguments. 2026 IL App
(1st) 250494WC-U at ¶85. It explained that §8(a) requires payment at the
negotiated rate if applicable, or otherwise at the lesser of the provider’s
charge or the fee schedule rate. Id. Because BCBS had already
paid the providers, the amount BCBS had paid constituted the “negotiated rate”
under §8(a), which the employer was required to pay. Id. The
court noted that analysis of actual charges versus the fee schedule is only
necessary when the medical bills have not yet been paid by a third-party
insurer. Id.
However, the court identified a discrepancy between the BCBS
“Consolidated Statement of Benefits” and a separate BCBS spreadsheet that
itemized charges and payments. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶86.
Although both documents reflected the same amounts billed by providers, they
listed dramatically different amounts paid by BCBS. Id. For
example, while both documents showed Rush Surgicenter billed $169,119.60 on
March 23, 2022, the Consolidated Statement recorded a payment of $168,526.34,
whereas the spreadsheet listed only $50,059.40 as paid. Id. The
Commission did not address this discrepancy, and the claimant did not explain
it. Id.
Accordingly, the court remanded the matter to the Commission
to resolve the discrepancy and determine the actual amount BCBS paid for the
services at issue. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶87. The court
held that only the amount actually paid by BCBS should be awarded. Id.
3. Arbitrator’s Actions Regarding the Employer’s Fourth
IME Request
The employer contended that the arbitrator improperly
interfered with its statutory right to obtain a fourth IME on June 23, 2020, by
ruling that the examination should not proceed. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶89. The court rejected this argument, noting that the employer
itself invited the arbitrator’s involvement by requesting guidance after
the claimant refused to attend the scheduled IME. 2026 IL App (1st)
250494WC-U at ¶90. In an email to the arbitrator, the employer’s counsel expressly
asked for a prompt discussion and indicated that “if that is what you decide,”
thereby submitting the issue to the arbitrator for determination. Id. Having
requested the arbitrator’s opinion, the employer could not later claim error
based on that involvement. Id.
The court further observed that no transcript of the
discussion existed and as a result, the record did not permit meaningful
review of the alleged procedural error. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶91.
The court remanded the case back to the Commission to
disallow any charges for treatments to the claimant’s left shoulder and to
determine the amount that BCBS paid the claimant’s healthcare providers for
medical services relating to the claimant’s work-related injuries, and
to award the claimant that amount. 2026 IL App (1st) 250494WC-U at ¶93.
The remainder of the Commission was affirmed.
PRACTICE POINTER: Proving and Defending Medical Bills
When Group Insurance Has Paid
Ultimately, the significance of this case is the second
issue the court addressed on appeal. This case reinforces that in
group-health-paid claims, the dispositive figure is the actual negotiated
amount paid. Additionally, the record should be clear to either sustain or
defeat a medical expense award.
This case underscores the evidentiary and strategic
importance of properly substantiating medical expenses when a claimant’s group
health insurer has made payments for medical bills. For petitioner’s counsel,
reliance on a consolidated insurer statement alone may be insufficient if
discrepancies exist between the consolidated statement of benefits reflecting a
paid amount and the actual medical bills. Practitioners should ensure the
record clearly establishes (1) the services rendered via medical records, (2)
medical bills, and (3) the actual amount paid for medical treatment when a
group health insurer has made payments.
For respondent’s counsel, it is important to scrutinize the
medical bills to the actual medical treatment records for discrepancies to
determine what they are obligated to pay under the award. Further, this
decision highlights that once a group health insurer has paid medical providers
at a negotiated rate, the employer is obligated to pay the actual amount paid
for the medical service and not the amount paid listed on the Consolidated
Statement of Benefits in the lien itemization. If the medical bills remain
unpaid, the fee schedule would apply. Respondent’s counsel should scrutinize
the Consolidated Statement of Benefits and the actual medical bill to determine
the accurate amount paid. If the petitioner fails to admit this information
into evidence, the respondent should present the evidence to determine the
actual amount paid and clearly raise the issue to preserve it for review.