Kenneth Turner v. Commonwealth of Kentucky- Department of Corrections ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                 RENDERED: OCTOBER 16, 2020; 10:00 A.M.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2020-CA-0330-WC
    KENNETH TURNER                                                  APPELLANT
    PETITION FOR REVIEW OF A DECISION
    v.             OF THE WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD
    ACTION NO. WC-15-94425
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY,
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS;
    HONORABLE JONATHAN R. WEATHERBY,
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE; AND
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION BOARD                                      APPELLEES
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: ACREE, GOODWINE, AND JONES, JUDGES.
    JONES, JUDGE: This petition for review comes to us following especially
    protracted proceedings before the Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) and the
    Workers’ Compensation Board (“Board”). The ALJ rendered his original findings
    and conclusions on July 23, 2018. The claimant, Kenneth Turner, appealed to the
    Board which remanded for additional findings with respect to the ALJ’s conclusion
    that Turner suffered only a temporary injury that had fully resolved. In response,
    the ALJ rendered additional findings on March 8, 2019, but did not alter his
    ultimate conclusion that Turner suffered only a temporary injury. Another appeal
    to the Board followed with the result being another remand and additional findings
    by the ALJ but no change in result. Turner once again appealed to the Board. The
    Board, still nonplussed with the ALJ’s analysis and review of the evidence,
    remanded Turner’s claim a third time.
    Following this last remand, Turner petitioned our Court for review
    arguing that the Board’s open-ended remand ignored his arguments, and that any
    remand should be issued with instructions for the ALJ to assess the evidence
    without regard to the opinion of Dr. Thomas O’Brien as that opinion was based on
    an incomplete and inaccurate medical history. While we appreciate Turner’s
    frustration, we cannot conclude that the Board erred as a matter of law. While
    some areas of the report could affect its overall credibility, we cannot agree with
    Turner that the Board erred in leaving the ultimate decision in the ALJ’s hands.
    Therefore, we must affirm.
    -2-
    I.   STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
    In 2015, Turner was 58 years old and employed by the Department of
    Corrections as a full-time maintenance employee. He performed most of his duties
    at the Kentucky State Penitentiary in Eddyville, Kentucky taking care of plumbing,
    electrical, and air conditioning issues. Turner’s job duties required him to lift and
    carry heavy items and climb ladders.
    On February 16, 2015, Turner was injured during the course and
    scope of his employment. Turner had been on call and had worked the night shift
    at the penitentiary. Turner worked overtime until approximately 2:00 or 3:00 p.m.
    the next afternoon when he was sent to return a key to the yard office and go home.
    After returning his key, Turner attempted to walk along a sidewalk within the
    penitentiary. It had been snowing all night, and there was snow and ice on the
    walkway. Turner slipped and fell on the icy sidewalk, injuring his hip, shoulder,
    and neck and fracturing three ribs. Turner has readily admitted that his hip injury
    and rib fractures have resolved, and he is no longer having any problems
    associated with those injuries.
    The following week, on February 23, 2015, Turner visited his family
    practitioner, Holly McCormick, APRN, with complaints of headaches, right
    shoulder pain, and right-sided chest pain; but, it does not appear that Turner
    complained of any neck pain at this time. Turner described his fall to Nurse
    -3-
    McCormick. She ordered x-rays and a CT scan. The x-rays revealed a shoulder
    abnormality of the clavicle and in the AC joint and broken ribs. Nurse McCormick
    referred Turner to an orthopedic surgeon for his shoulder condition. Turner
    returned to Nurse McCormick on March 4, 2015, with continued complaints of
    pain in his right shoulder and ribs. He did not make complaints of neck pain at this
    time either. Nurse McCormick referred Turner to the Trigg County Hospital
    Rehabilitation Department (“Trigg County”) for physical therapy.
    Turner first complained of right upper extremity radicular pain
    during his first physical therapy appointment on March 24, 2015. At a March 31,
    2015 visit, Turner again complained of right upper extremity pain with headaches,
    and the office notes indicate cervical pathology was suspected. Turner continued
    his complaints on April 13, 2015. According to office notes, Turner had a positive
    Spurling’s test for cervical radiculitis and demonstrated limited cervical range of
    motion.
    Turner returned to Nurse McCormick again on April 6, 2015, because
    of his neck pain, which he reported was gradually worsening since his fall. Nurse
    McCormick noted that Turner reported to her that he had been having issues with
    neck pain since his work accident, and that it had been coming on gradually after
    the work accident. Nurse McCormick referred Turner to Dr. Chang after an MRI
    revealed pathology within Turner’s shoulder, and Dr. Chang recommended Turner
    -4-
    visit a cervical specialist. On May 7, 2015, Nurse McCormick noted that Turner
    was still having difficulties with his neck and was awaiting a referral to an
    orthopedic specialist for the condition. On July 16, 2015, Nurse McCormick
    observed that the MRI of Turner’s neck was abnormal and wrote that “[t]his all
    stems from a worker’s comp claim when he fell and hit his neck, head, and
    shoulder area.”
    Turner was eventually referred to Dr. Gregory Lanford, who saw
    Turner for an independent medical examination (“IME”) and a neurological
    evaluation on September 17, 2015. Dr. Lanford diagnosed right C6 radiculopathy,
    weakness in the right biceps, and absent right biceps jerk consistent with foraminal
    stenosis at C5-6 on the right. Dr. Lanford observed that Turner did not experience
    any of his current symptoms prior to the work injury. Dr. Lanford noted that
    Turner had failed conservative treatment and recommended a cervical fusion at
    C4-6. Dr. Lanford concluded that, without surgery, Turner would be at maximum
    medical improvement.
    Dr. Paul Phillips, Jr., analyzed Dr. Lanford’s surgical
    recommendation through a utilization review on September 29, 2015. Dr. Phillips
    found the requested anterior cervical fusion at C4-6 was not medically necessary
    and appropriate as the records did not include significant findings of recent
    electrodiagnostic studies confirming negative cervical radiculopathy. Dr. Phillips
    -5-
    indicated that the surgery was not pre-certified because Turner had not undergone
    selective nerve root blocks.
    Dr. Berkman, a neurosurgeon, also saw Turner at the request of the
    carrier. Dr. Berkman stated that the February 16, 2015, work-related injury caused
    a right shoulder injury, cervical sprain, and exasperation of pre-existing cervical
    spondylosis with a right C5 radiculopathy. Dr. Berkman recommended epidural
    steroid injections at the C4-5 on the right and additional physical therapy for the
    cervical spine problems.
    Turner’s workers’ compensation carrier ultimately denied the
    proposed cervical fusion, at which time there was a lapse in treatment. By July 6,
    2016, however, Turner obtained private insurance coverage and began treating
    with Dr. John Yezerski for his shoulder and neck. Dr. Yezerski diagnosed a right
    rotator cuff tear and adhesive capsulitis of the right shoulder. Dr. Yezerski initially
    treated the condition conservatively with injections, but those measures failed and,
    on August 1, 2016, Dr. Yezerski performed a total shoulder replacement, which
    returned Turner to a functional range of motion and increased his strength. Dr.
    Yezerski opined that following the surgery Turner had a 14% impairment to the
    body as a whole. Dr. Yezerski provided Turner with a number of restrictions,
    including prohibiting him from reaching overhead with his right arm. Since Turner
    had to climb ladders to perform his maintenance job at the penitentiary, this
    -6-
    precluded Turner from returning to the type of work he was performing at the time
    of his injury. Dr. Yezerski indicated that Turner reached maximum medical
    improvement on September 13, 2017.
    After the shoulder surgery, Turner again sought treatment for his neck
    pain. Because his insurance would not permit a return to Dr. Lanford, Turner
    visited Dr. Thomas Gruber on November 8, 2016, for neck pain and numbness.
    Dr. Gruber first saw Turner on November 8, 2016, at which time he noted that
    Turner’s issues were complicated insomuch as the cervical spine problems and
    right shoulder problems made it hard to differentiate the cause of pain. An MRI
    revealed degenerative disc disease with right foraminal stenosis at the C4-5 and
    C5-6 levels along with disc herniation at both levels. Dr. Gruber agreed with Dr.
    Lanford that a two-level fusion surgery was the appropriate treatment, which he
    performed on February 6, 2017. Turner’s cervical condition improved following
    the fusion, and Dr. Gruber recommended trigger point injections to improve
    stiffness in Turner’s neck. Following a July 11, 2017, visit, Dr. Gruber concluded
    Turner had reached maximum medical improvement for his neck condition and
    could return to work. In an August 15, 2017, report, Dr. Gruber indicated that
    Turner’s work injury exacerbated the pre-existing dormant, non-disabling
    degenerative conditions in Turner’s cervical spine and concluded Turner had no
    active impairment rating prior to the injury. He assigned Turner a 25% impairment
    -7-
    rating and gave him several restrictions regarding lifting loads over twenty pounds
    and turning his head.
    On August 12, 2015, Dr. Gregory Gleis performed an IME.
    According to Dr. Gleis, a May 12, 2015 cervical spine x-ray and a June 25, 2015
    cervical MRI revealed pre-existing degenerative changes. Dr. Gleis believed that
    while Turner’s left shoulder condition was consistent with pain from the cervical
    spine and his initial right shoulder symptoms were consistent with an AC joint
    separation, Turner’s symptoms were now suggestive of referred cervical pain.
    From Turner’s examination and medical records, Dr. Gleis found sufficient
    correlation between the neck and right arm symptoms to conclude that the head
    contusion from the February 16, 2015 incident could have caused Turner’s neck
    injury. He determined that Turner was not yet at maximum medical improvement
    for the cervical spine.
    On April 3, 2018, Dr. Thomas O’Brien also conducted an IME. He
    diagnosed minor bruises/contusions to the shoulder, ribs, and hip as a result of the
    work incident. Dr. O’Brien concluded Turner did not sustain a permanent injury in
    the fall; rather, Turner’s rib and hip contusions resolved a few days after the
    incident and his shoulder pain improved. Dr. O’Brien, who did not review
    Turner’s physical therapy records, emphasized that Turner did not complain of
    neck pain until almost two months after the work accident and relied upon his
    -8-
    interpretation of the June 23, 2015 MRI scan of Turner’s cervical spine. Dr.
    O’Brien concluded:
    Mr. Turner has a non-work-related, multilevel, cervical
    degenerative disc disease. The work activities of
    February 16, 2015, did not cause an injury to the cervical
    spine nor cause any type of temporary or permanent
    aggravation, acceleration or precipitation of this
    degenerative cervical condition above and beyond the
    natural history of progression of this condition in a
    middle-aged man. The two-month hiatus where there are
    no symptoms of neck pain or cervical radiculopathy
    effectively rules out a causal association with Mr.
    Turner’s neck symptoms and the ultimate surgical
    procedure that was carried out by Dr. Gruber in the form
    of a C4-C5, C5-C6 anterior cervical decompression and
    fusion procedure on February 6, 2017. Further support
    for my causation opinion comes from the objective
    imaging studies including the cervical MRI scan. The
    cervical MRI scan dated June 23, 2015 depicts
    longstanding, mild, degenerative disc changes at C4-C5
    and C5-C6 with no acute objective findings that can in
    any way be causally associated with an acute injury to
    the cervical spine resulting from the work incident of
    February 16, 2015.
    Record (“R.”) at 322. Dr. O’Brien assessed a 0% impairment for the neck and
    opined Turner could have returned to unrestricted work by May 12, 2015.
    Turner filed a Form 101 on November 11, 2018, seeking both
    temporary and permanent wage and medical benefits for his work-related injuries.
    In his Form 101, Turner alleged he sustained multiple injuries to multiple body
    parts when he slipped and fell at work on February 16, 2015. Following a final
    hearing, at which Turner testified, the ALJ rendered his decision on July 23, 2018.
    -9-
    The ALJ relied heavily upon Dr. O’Brien’s opinions and determined that Turner
    sustained only temporary injuries to the shoulder, ribs, and hip due to his work
    accident. The ALJ awarded Turner temporary benefits from the date of the
    accident until May 12, 2015, when he determined Turner had reached maximum
    medical improvement. Turner appealed to the Board.
    On January 11, 2019, the Board issued an opinion vacating the ALJ’s
    opinion and remanding the claim to the ALJ for a review of the evidence with
    particular regard to Dr. O’Brien’s opinion. The Board acknowledged that Dr.
    O’Brien’s opinion on causation was based in part on a partially incomplete medical
    history insomuch as it did not contain Turner’s physical therapy records. The
    Board directed the ALJ to review Dr. O’Brien’s opinion in the context of those
    records and provide additional findings related thereto.
    On March 18, 2019, the ALJ issued his first decision on remand,
    again finding that Turner had sustained only temporary injuries. Despite the
    Board’s directions on remand, the ALJ did not reference the physical therapy
    records or explain whether he considered how Dr. O’Brien’s failure to review
    those as part of his IME might affect the reliability of Dr. O’Brien’s final opinion.
    Turner appealed, and on August 2, 2019, the Board rendered its
    second opinion vacating and remanding the ALJ’s judgment. Although the Board
    had directed the ALJ to provide a summary of the Trigg County records, the ALJ
    -10-
    had failed to include the fact that Turner was experiencing cervical spine pain at
    his appointments and did not reference the March 24 and 31 physical therapy
    records in his summary. The Board noted that the ALJ’s only reference to the
    physical therapy records was: “[w]hile there was some reference to neck
    symptoms made at a physical therapy visit on March 24, 2015, as well as a
    complaint to a nurse on April 6, 2015, the point made by Dr. O’Brien regarding the
    late onset of symptoms is still persuasive.” R. at 1056. On remand, the Board
    refused to direct the ALJ to issue an opinion without considering Dr. O’Brien’s
    medical opinions altogether as Turner requested; instead, it directed the ALJ to
    address all the records before him as they pertained to Turner’s cervical condition
    and to explain that Dr. O’Brien did not review Turner’s physical therapy records in
    the course of his evaluation.
    On October 22, 2019, the ALJ rendered his second opinion on
    remand. The ALJ addressed the Trigg County physical therapy records briefly,
    mentioning that Turner was seen on April 13, 2015, and referenced notes of
    shoulder impingement, cervical complaints, apparent range of motion
    measurements, and a possible Spurling’s test. However, the ALJ ultimately found
    these records to be “illegible” and therefore of little evidentiary value. The ALJ
    again failed to discuss the March 2015 physical therapy records and reiterated his
    reliance upon Dr. O’Brien’s opinions without accounting for the fact that Dr.
    -11-
    O’Brien rendered his opinion without the benefit of having reviewed all the
    physical therapy records. The ALJ also noted the objective findings supporting Dr.
    O’Brien’s opinions, including his review of the June 23, 2015 MRI.
    Turner again appealed to the Board, arguing that the ALJ had once
    again failed to explain how he could rely on Dr. O’Brien’s conclusion with respect
    to the cervical injury when it appeared that opinion incorrectly relied on the fact
    that Turner had not complained of cervical pain to any of his providers in the
    immediate aftermath of his fall. On February 7, 2020, the Board once again
    vacated and remanded the ALJ’s judgment. The Board wrote:
    We note the ALJ has had multiple opportunities to
    provide an accurate review of the evidence but has failed
    to do so. In his latest decision, the ALJ only made a
    passing statement that the records from the Trigg County
    Hospital Rehabilitation Department are “illegible,” and
    did not reference the physical therapy records. We must
    therefore, again vacate the ALJ’s determinations, and
    remand for a complete review of the records, and those
    from the Trigg County Hospital Rehabilitation
    Department. The ALJ must then discuss the impact of
    the information contained in those records upon Dr.
    O’Brien’s opinion. After reviewing the evidence and the
    impact, the ALJ may make any determination supported
    by the evidence. We do not direct any particular result;
    however, any decision must be based upon an accurate
    review of the evidence and its impact.
    R. at 1146 (emphasis added).
    This time, Turner did not wait for the ALJ to render another opinion.
    Instead, Turner petitioned our Court for review of the Board’s opinion. Before us,
    -12-
    Turner argues the Board abused its discretion insomuch as it should have (1) held
    that Dr. O’Brien’s opinion cannot constitute substantial evidence supporting the
    ALJ’s opinion; and (2) remanded the claim to the ALJ for new findings and
    conclusions in conformity with that holding.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Pursuant to KRS1 342.285, the ALJ is the sole finder of fact in
    workers’ compensation claims. Accordingly, the ALJ has the sole discretion to
    determine the quality, character, weight, credibility, and substance of the evidence
    and to draw reasonable inferences from that evidence. Paramount Foods, Inc. v.
    Burkhardt, 
    695 S.W.2d 418
    , 419 (Ky. 1985); McCloud v. Beth-Elkhorn Corp., 
    514 S.W.2d 46
    , 47 (Ky. 1974). “Moreover, an ALJ has sole discretion to decide whom
    and what to believe, and may reject any testimony and believe or disbelieve
    various parts of the evidence, regardless of whether it comes from the same
    witness or the same adversary party’s total proof.” Bowerman v. Black Equip. Co.,
    
    297 S.W.3d 858
    , 866 (Ky. App. 2009) (citing Caudill v. Maloney’s Discount
    Stores, 
    560 S.W.2d 15
    , 16 (Ky. 1977)).
    On review, neither the Board nor the appellate court can substitute its
    judgment for that of the ALJ as to the weight of evidence on questions of fact.
    Shields v. Pittsburgh & Midway Coal Mining Co., 
    634 S.W.2d 440
    , 441 (Ky. App.
    1
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.
    -13-
    1982). “In short, appellate courts may not second-guess or disturb discretionary
    decisions of an ALJ unless those decisions amount to an abuse of discretion.”
    
    Bowerman, 297 S.W.3d at 866
    . Where the fact-finder’s decision is to deny relief
    to the party with the burden of proof or persuasion, the issue on appeal is whether
    the evidence in that party’s favor is so compelling that no reasonable person could
    have failed to be persuaded by it. Carnes v. Tremco Mfg. Co., 
    30 S.W.3d 172
    , 176
    (Ky. 2000).
    It falls to the Board to decide whether the ALJ’s finding “is so
    unreasonable under the evidence that it must be viewed as erroneous as a matter of
    law.” Ira A. Watson Department Store v. Hamilton, 
    34 S.W.3d 48
    , 52 (Ky. 2000);
    KRS 342.285. “When reviewing the Board’s decision, we reverse only where it
    has overlooked or misconstrued controlling law or so flagrantly erred in evaluating
    the evidence that it has caused gross injustice.” GSI Commerce v. Thompson, 
    409 S.W.3d 361
    , 364 (Ky. App. 2012) (citing Western Baptist Hosp. v. Kelly, 
    827 S.W.2d 685
    , 687-88 (Ky. 1992)).
    III.   ANALYSIS
    As a primary matter, the Department of Corrections urges us to
    dismiss this appeal as improperly taken from an interlocutory order. It points out
    that the Board remanded the claim for additional analysis but did not dictate any
    particular result, meaning the claim is not yet fully resolved. This same issue was
    -14-
    addressed by the Kentucky Supreme Court in Hampton v. Flav-O-Rich Dairies,
    
    489 S.W.3d 230
    (Ky. 2016). In Hampton, the Court was presented with the
    question of whether the Board’s opinion vacating an award and remanding for
    additional proceedings was final for purposes of appeal even though the Board did
    not specifically order or authorize the ALJ to reach a different result on remand.
    Id. at 234.
    The Court ultimately held that a Board opinion is final where it sets
    aside a prior award or determination of consequence and authorizes or requires the
    entry of a different award on remand.
    Id. This is precisely
    what the Board’s
    opinion did in this case. Therefore, we have jurisdiction to review the Board’s
    opinion. “[L]ike any other issue in a workers’ compensation proceeding, the
    appellate courts may review the Board’s decision to remand to the ALJ for error,
    taking into consideration, however, the Board’s wide discretion to do so.” Tryon
    Trucking, Inc. v. Medlin, 
    586 S.W.3d 233
    , 238 (Ky. 2019).
    Having determined that we have jurisdiction, we turn to the merits of
    the petition. Turner argues that the Board erred in remanding his claim to the ALJ
    without an explicit directive for the ALJ to reassess the evidence without
    consideration or reliance on Dr. O’Brien’s opinion. To this end, Turner argues Dr.
    O’Brien’s opinion is based on an inaccurate and incomplete history and therefore
    cannot constitute substantial evidence pursuant to Cepero v. Fabricated Metals
    Corp., 
    132 S.W.3d 839
    (Ky. 2004).
    -15-
    We begin with the ALJ’s explanation of his reliance upon Dr.
    O’Brien’s report. The ALJ stated as follows in his opinion:
    18. The ALJ finds that the report of Dr. O’Brien in this
    matter is the most comprehensive, thorough, and
    persuasive. Dr. O’Brien was also most familiar with the
    Plaintiffs [sic] medical history as demonstrated in his
    report. Dr. O’Brien diagnosed minor bruises and
    contusions to the shoulder, ribs, and hip as a result of his
    work incident but concluded that the Plaintiff did not
    sustain a permanent injury in the fall.
    19. Dr. O’Brien opined that the Plaintiff’s rib and hip
    contusions resolved a few days after the incident and that
    his shoulder pain improved. He also pointed out that the
    Plaintiff didn’t complain of neck pain until almost two
    months after the incident and concluded that the Plaintiff
    had non-work-related, multi-level, cervical degenerative
    disc disease and that the work injury of February 16,
    2015, did not cause an injury to the cervical spine.
    20. Dr. [O’Brien] convincingly stated that the Plaintiffs
    [sic] neck surgery was not related to the work injury and
    pointed out that the cervical MRI dated June 23, 2015,
    revealed longstanding, mild, degenerative disc changes at
    C4-5 and C5-6 with no objective findings showing work-
    relatedness.
    21. Dr. [O’Brien] also convincingly opined that the
    surgery performed by Dr. Yezerski on September 1,
    2016, had no causal relationship to the healed minor right
    shoulder bruise that the Plaintiff sustained on February
    16, 2015. He convincingly stated that had the work
    injury had [sic] caused the tear, he would have had an
    immediate onset of severe pain. Dr. O’Brien added that
    when the Plaintiff was seen in the emergency room, he
    did not have clinical findings of an acute and chronic
    rotator cuff tear and that Dr. Chang’s findings after the
    work injury supported a minor shoulder contusion and
    -16-
    not a traumatic rotator cuff tear or aggravation of a pre-
    existing rotator cuff, degenerative tear or impingement.
    Dr. O’Brien concluded therefore that the Plaintiffs [sic]
    shoulder surgery by Dr. Yezerski and cervical surgery by
    Dr. Gruber were not related to the work injury of
    February 16, 2015.
    22. Finally, Dr. O’Brien assessed a 0% impairment for
    the neck and shoulder and found that the Plaintiff could
    return to work unrestricted after the work incident by
    May 12, 2015. He also said that the Plaintiff needed no
    further medical treatment and was at [maximum medical
    improvement] as of May 12, 2015. While Dr. O’Brien
    found that the Plaintiff needed no restrictions due to the
    work injury. [sic] The opinions of Dr. O’Brien have
    convinced the ALJ and the ALJ thus finds that the
    Plaintiff sustained only temporary injuries that resolved
    as of May 12, 2015.
    R. at 869-71.
    The Board agreed with Turner that Dr. O’Brien’s report was based
    upon a flawed history – Dr. O’Brien did not review any of Turner’s physical
    therapy records from March and April of 2015. However, the Board did not agree
    with Turner that the ALJ erred in refusing to discount Dr. O’Brien’s report
    wholesale.
    Turner repeatedly states that “[t]he Supreme Court [of Kentucky] has
    specifically and unequivocally stated that when a doctor’s opinion is based on an
    inaccurate or incomplete medical history, that doctor’s opinion cannot constitute
    substantial evidence.” Appellant’s Br. at 20. This is a misstatement of the law.
    Instead, our Supreme Court has held that “[w]hen a physician’s opinion is based on
    -17-
    a history that is ‘substantially inaccurate or largely incomplete,’ that opinion
    cannot constitute substantial evidence.” Eddie’s Service Center v. Thomas, 
    503 S.W.3d 881
    , 887 (Ky. 2016) (quoting 
    Cepero, 132 S.W.3d at 842
    ) (emphasis
    added).
    In Cepero, an ALJ awarded a claimant benefits for an alleged work-
    related knee injury based upon evidence from two doctors who indicated that his
    knee condition was related to a work injury. However, neither doctor had been
    informed that Cepero had suffered a severe knee injury several years 
    prior. 132 S.W.3d at 842
    . The Board reversed the ALJ’s finding that the doctors’ opinions
    were based upon substantial evidence and therefore sufficient to support findings
    of causation. The Supreme Court of Kentucky affirmed, quoting the Board’s
    holding:
    [I]n cases such as this, where it is irrefutable that a
    physician’s history regarding work-related causation is
    corrupt due to it being substantially inaccurate or largely
    incomplete, any opinion generated by that physician on
    the issue of causation cannot constitute substantial
    evidence. Medical opinion predicated upon such
    erroneous or deficient information that is completely
    unsupported by any other credible evidence can never, in
    our view, be reasonably probable.
    Id. (emphasis added). In
    Eddie’s Service Center, the Supreme Court of Kentucky applied
    Cepero to hold that an ALJ has the discretion to reject a medical report based on a
    -18-
    substantially inaccurate understanding of the facts and medical 
    history. 503 S.W.3d at 887-89
    . Our Supreme Court held that because of a number of internal
    consistencies within the report, along with the doctor’s inaccurate understanding of
    the facts, the report could not constitute substantial evidence.
    Id. at 889.
    “Evidence is substantial if it is of ‘relevant consequence having the fitness to
    induce conviction in the minds of reasonable men.’”
    Id. at 887
    (quoting Smyzer v.
    B.F. Goodrich Chemical Co., 
    474 S.W.2d 367
    , 369 (Ky. 1971)).
    Finally, this Court held in GSI Commerce that an ALJ was not
    required to disregard a medical report that was “not ‘unsupported by other credible
    
    evidence.’” 409 S.W.3d at 365
    . In that case, an employer contended that a
    physician’s report could not be considered because it did not mention a prior
    relevant injury; however, the doctor explained during deposition that he was aware
    of the claimant’s past injury.
    Id. We differentiated between
    GSI Commerce and
    Cepero, stating “[i]n Cepero, there was a complete omission of a significant and
    clearly relevant past injury [and] the medical opinion described in Cepero was
    completely unsupported by any other credible evidence.”
    Id. at 364
    (emphasis in
    original). Conversely, in GSI Commerce, the physician making the report was
    aware of the prior injury and there was other evidence before the court
    corroborating the physician’s opinion.
    Id. at 365. -19-
                 We are not convinced that the facts before us are analogous to those
    of Cepero or Eddie’s Service Center. Rather, we are persuaded that the facts
    before us most closely resemble those of GSI Commerce. Turner accurately points
    out that Dr. O’Brien did not have the opportunity to review his full medical
    history, while the other doctors did. However, Dr. O’Brien did not arrive at his
    medical determination solely on the basis of the partially flawed medical history
    before him. Dr. O’Brien’s premise for concluding that Turner’s injuries were not
    causally related to his work injury was not entirely based upon his somewhat
    incomplete medical history – it was also based upon his interpretation of objective
    medical data: Turner’s June 23, 2016 MRI. Dr. O’Brien opined that the MRI
    “depicts longstanding, mild, degenerative disc changes at C4-C5 and C5-C6 with
    no acute objective findings that can in any way be causally associated with an
    acute injury to the cervical spine resulting from the work incident of February 16,
    2015.” R. at 322.
    Additionally, we note that Dr. O’Brien states in his report that he
    based his opinion, at least partially, on the lack of reference to any neck pain for
    two months. Two months is approximately eight weeks. Turner fell on February
    16, 2015. The first mention of neck pain in the physical therapy records is around
    March 24, 2015, a period of five weeks and one day, less than two months but
    greater than one month. It is entirely possible the ALJ could have determined that
    -20-
    the physical therapy records would not have totally contradicted Dr. O’Brien’s
    statements insomuch as Turner did not report neck pain to any medical provider in
    the days, weeks, or even first month following his fall. Turner also testified that
    his neck pain was not immediate, beginning a few weeks after his fall.
    Based on our review of the records, we agree with the Board. Dr.
    O’Brien’s opinion, although based in part on an incomplete review of all the
    medical records, is not so “substantially inaccurate or largely incomplete” that it
    could not be considered substantial evidence by the ALJ. See 
    Cepero, 132 S.W.3d at 842
    . As such, we cannot disagree with the Board’s decision refusing to direct
    the ALJ to reconsider the award without consideration of or reliance on Dr.
    O’Brien’s opinion.
    In this circumstance, evaluating the credibility and proper weight of
    Dr. O’Brien’s report falls on the ALJ. Paramount Foods, 
    Inc., 695 S.W.2d at 419
    .
    The ALJ may determine whom and what to believe when there is conflicting
    evidence. Pruitt v. Bugg Brothers, 
    547 S.W.2d 123
    , 124 (Ky. 1977). The Board is
    charged with making sure the ALJ’s opinion is based on an accurate understanding
    of the facts and evidence. To date, the ALJ’s opinions have not demonstrated a
    sufficient understanding of the record to allow the Board to confidently conclude
    that the ALJ considered the scope of the issues before deciding that Dr. O’Brien’s
    report was the most credible and reliable report before him. The Board cannot
    -21-
    affirm the ALJ unless his determinations are based upon an accurate review of the
    evidence and its impact. The ALJ must provide a sufficient basis for his
    determination as the Board has directed. Kentland Elkhorn Coal Corp. v. Yates,
    
    743 S.W.2d 47
    , 49 (Ky. App. 1988).
    In other words, as the Board instructed, on remand, the ALJ must
    provide additional analysis. We urge the ALJ to follow the Board’s directives
    with as much precision as possible as these litigants deserve finality. We suggest
    the ALJ separately discuss each of the following in as much detail as possible to
    provide the assurances the Board requires with respect to the record: (1) provide a
    summary and analysis of the March and April records at issue highlighting any
    complaints or references to cervical/neck pain or treatment; (2) summarize and
    explain his understanding of Dr. O’Brien’s opinions regarding Turner’s neck injury
    and the rationale underpinning those opinions, if any; (3) provide some explanation
    of whether Dr. O’Brien’s failure to review the records at issue affected the ALJ’s
    assessment of the credibility and reliability of Dr. O’Brien’s report, and the
    explanation for such determination; and (4) in light of any such determination
    explain how the ALJ considered Dr. O’Brien’s opinion in comparison to the other
    opinions of record. If the ALJ does so, the Board must then accept the ALJ’s
    ultimate findings so long as they are legally sufficient, as the Board has plainly
    -22-
    determined that Dr. O’Brien’s opinion is capable of serving as substantial evidence
    if supporting analysis is provided by the ALJ.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    In light of the foregoing, we AFFIRM the decision of the Workers’
    Compensation Board remanding this matter for additional analysis by the ALJ.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:
    Jeffery Roberts                           Lee Jones
    Murray, Kentucky                          Pikeville, Kentucky
    Sara May
    Pikeville, Kentucky
    -23-