ScanFiles, Inc.

Ogilvie vs Almaraz-Guzman Ratings in 2015

INTRODUCTION

In 2003, RAND and CHSWC sent a report to the legislature that said permanent disability benefits in California were barely adequate under the 2/3 replacement level standard, and below many other states. This was mostly due to the poor return to work performance of California employers. As a result of this study, the legislature enacted several key changes to the system in SB 899, and part of that was a move to the AMA Guides as the description of injuries, and an empirical, formula-based method for calculating the percentage of permanent disability. The method proposed in LC 4660 was to be a fair and impartial formula that would forecast what the injured employee could expect as far as diminished future earning capacity (DFEC) caused by the work-related injury. Unfortunately, in 2004 while formulating the SB 899 mandated PDRS, the administrative director lacked the empirical data necessary to execute on the promise of Labor Code Section 4660. The administrative director simply did the best she could at the time, but the result was a FLAWED PDRS that by all accounts – including the DWC and CHSWC – slashed permanent disability ratings by OVER 50%. Since that time, the Administration has left it up to the applicant attorneys to rebut the flawed PDRS if they expect their clients to receive an accurate measurement of their permanent disability.

Last week, I introduced a method for rebutting the DFEC Adjustment Factors in Table A of the 2005 PDRS that can be used to rebut the schedule for cases with dates of injury between 2005 and 2012. I think most attorneys had all but given up on the Ogilvie-style “FEC Adjustment Factor” rebuttal method after the Court Of Appeal Ogilvie III decision. However, last week I encouraged all applicant attorneys to read my post and give my version of this method a try.

This week, I want to give you some EXAMPLES comparing the VALUES of the permanent disability awards for several common scenarios using the standard PDRS, the CHSWC “adjustment factor” rebuttal method I discussed last week, and the Almaraz-Guzman style rebuttal method.

THE DIFFERENT METHODS

KEY DIFFERENCES

DIFFERENCE IN RATINGS

 

(Click to enlarge)

In Example 1 above, the CHSWC FEC Adjustment Factor method provides the highest percentage of permanent disability, at 46%. The Almarez-Guzman method nets a 42%, and the standard PDRS rating nets only a 30%.

(Click to enlarge)

In Example 2 above, the CHSWC FEC Adjustment Factor method again provides the highest percentage of permanent disability, providing a 24%… but the Almaraz-Guzman method provides a very close 23%. The standard PDRS provides a 15%.

(Click to enlarge)

In Example 3 above, the Almaraz-Guzman method provides a much higher permanent disability rating – 27% – than the others because the Hernia section of the AMA Guides was used. The CHSWC FEC method provides a solid bump over the standard method, but at only 18%, it’s much lower than the Almarez-Guzman rating.  The standard PDRS method provide a 12% percentage of permanent disability.

PROS AND CONS OF THE REBUTTAL METHODS

There are some definite differences in the rebuttal methods described here. While I didn’t discuss it so far, there is a THIRD method available when the injured employee is 100% disabled and not amenable to rehabilitation. This is called the LeBoeuf method. You can read my post about THIS type of rebuttal rating here (Dahl).

Here are the pros and cons of the three methods:

Almaraz-Guzman Rebuttal Method

Pros:

Cons:

CHSWC FEC Adjustment Factor Method

Pros:

Cons:

LeBoeuf Method

Pros:

Cons:

CONCLUSION

The proverbial “walls” may be closing in on the California injured employees’ right to receive an ACCURATE percentage of permanent disability measurement. By “accurate”, I mean anything CLOSE to a measurement that meets the standard in Labor Code Section 4658 of “percentage of disability to total disability.”  In 2013, SB 863 changed the way permanent disability is calculated and no longer includes a “Diminished Future Earning Capacity” goal or standard. Labor Code Section 4660.1 merely states that account shall be taken of the nature of the physical injury, which is again described as the AMA Guides 5th Edition, but this version of 4660 provides a STRAIGHT multiplier of 1.4, and does not describe this as having anything to do with a loss of future earning capacity. This likely eliminates the “CHSWC Method” that I’ve described here for 2013 dates of injury and beyond. I should point out that the CHSWC method I’ve described provides a Spine multiplier of 2.01, which would provide a dramatic increase in rating over SB 863’s 1.4.

Almaraz-Guzman is not only alive under SB 863, but has been incorporated into the code section at LC 4660.1(h). However, the courts have been signaling an increasingly narrow view on getting a medical report into evidence that isn’t provided by the PTP (who is often in the employer’s network), AME or panel QME. This will put friction and complication on the injured employee’s ability to find a doctor willing and able to provide an Almarez-Guzman style medical report and WPI rating that is substantial evidence – and the WCJ will accept.

It will be quite interesting to see how all this plays out in the next 24-36 months. It’s common knowledge in the industry that the 2005 PDRS was not based on the correct rating data and therefore reduced measurements of permanent disability by a whopping 50+% from what was already described by RAND in 2003 as barely adequate. Given the ample data provided by CHSWC, DWC and RAND, SB 863’s changes to Labor Code Section 4660.1 only gave back to injured employees a small fraction of that 50% cut they received back in 2005, and the world of “rebuttal ratings” to bring the values back up to anything near “accurate” seems – to me, anyway – at grave risk.