Print
 

  MIG Update – February 13, 2023



Uncontroverted Psychological Diagnosis Wins and Loses

This week, an Applicant’s evidence of a psychological impairment was not sufficiently persuasive for IRB entitlement but, without competing psychological evidence, was sufficient for a MIG escape. Read on to learn why self-reporting was not acceptable for the IRB test but acceptable for the Minor Injury test.



LAT Update – What Difference Did A Year Make?

The LAT released Performance Stats up to mid-year 7 which is current through to the end of September 2022. Together with the LAT’s last update we can now provide a comparison of year over year, with projections through to the end of year 7 in this annual update. What difference did a year make?

Continue Reading >



Factor: No Competing Psychological Opinion

In Chen v. The Co-operators (20-012408), Xue Yun Chen was involved in a motor vehicle accident on April 21, 2019. She claimed that she sustained a psychological impairment and chronic pain and should not be subject to the MIG. Chen also sought entitlement to IRB’s.

Chen relied on various treatment forms and a disability certificate submitted by her chiropractor Dr. Gorge Palantzas and Ahmad Afifi, physiotherapist. She further relies on the report of Dr. Mehrdad Pojhan, psychologist dated March 13, 2021 and a treatment plan from Dr. Maneet Bhatial dated August 9, 2019. Both diagnosed Chen with adjustment disorders, symptoms of anxiety and depression, sleep disturbances, irritability and anger, and nightmares as a result of the accident.

The Co-operators submits that Chen has not provided sufficient medical evidence to prove her claim for IRBs, nor to satisfy her burden of demonstrating that she sustained anything more than a minor injury. Specifically, the psychological diagnoses advanced by Chen’s experts were largely based on Chen’s self-report.

With respect to the IRB Co-operators relied on the IE report and conclusion by Dr. Alphonse Marchie, physiatrist, dated February 27, 2020 that the Tribunal accepted on the issue of IRB entitlement. Further, that the conclusions by Dr. Bhatia and Dr. Pojhan are “unpersuasive without any comparison to medical records, or any direct connection between the diagnoses and the IRB test’.





This was not the case with respect to Dr. Bhatia’s and Dr. Pojhan’s psychological diagnosis with respect to the Minor Injury. The Tribunal found:

  • The reports of Dr. Bhatia and Dr. Pojhan had minimal value with respect to the IRB test and their opinions in this regard were based on Chen’s self-report and not corroborated by any other medical evidence other than the forms submitted by her treating practitioners.
  • “Dr. Pojhan also supervised a battery of psychological testing. The results of the RDS Inventory, for example, resulted in Dr. Pojhan diagnosing the applicant with severe clinical symptoms of depression. Dr. Pojhan mitigates this somewhat with the open-ended statement that the applicant’s “responses to clinical inquiries and presentation are somewhat incongruous with the test results.” Regardless, his final conclusion is that the applicant’s “presentation is consistent with a diagnosis of adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood according to the DSM V.”
  • Co-operators mostly relied entirely on Dr. Marchie and no psychological IE was conducted.
  • Little weight was given to Dr. Marchie conclusions with regard to the psychological symptoms and impairments reported by Chen – as this was not his area of expertise.
  • “The psychological symptoms alone are enough to find that the applicant sustained an injury that is not a minor injury.”


If you Have Read This Far…

Our MIG Monday series discusses the multitude of factors to consider when evaluating a risk position on MIG cases. The Tribunal has ruled on the MIG in 24% of the decisions so far. Each case is nuanced, but with similar factors.

Inform your position & present persuasive arguments. Include an Outcome Analysis Report (OAR) in your case evaluation complete with For/Against cases. Need an OAR?

 

Archive of LAT Updates

April 30, 2025: Tribunal Confirms Four Class 4 Marked Impairments

CAT

April 28, 2025: MIG Not Conceded Despite Approved CAT Assessments

MIG

April 23, 2025: Court Reverses Tribunal’s Unreasonable Adjournment Refusal

Adjournment, CAT, Divisional Court

April 21, 2025: MIG Escape on Fractured Tooth 15 Months Later

MIG

April 16, 2025: Deficient Notice Renders NEB Payable

NEB

April 14, 2025: MIG Valid Medical Reason

MIG

April 9, 2025: Bus Travelling Over Elevated Manhole Cover Satisfies “Collision”

Definition Accident

April 7, 2025: Four OCF 18’s Payable Despite MIG Hold

MIG

March 26, 2025: Post 104 IRB Ongoing for Non-CAT

CAT, IRB

March 24, 2025: 30% Award for Failure to Review CNRs Overturned on Reconsideration

MIG

March 19, 2025: Yes to CAT, No to Post 104 IRB

CAT, IRB

March 17, 2025: Imaging Report Alone Insufficient to Establish Causation

MIG

March 12, 2025: Tribunal Rules Again on Matter Referred Back by the Court

Definition Accident, Divisional Court

March 10, 2025: Res Judicata Waived on New Evidence

MIG

March 5, 2025: No Criterion 8 CAT as Physical Pain the Limiting Factor

CAT

March 3, 2025: Cause of Shoulder Tear Degenerative or MVA Related?

MIG

February 26, 2025: NEB Payable to 104 Week Mark Due to Technical Breaches

NEB

February 24, 2025: Doctor Not Required to Provide Diagnosis

MIG

February 19, 2025: Court Sets Aside Tribunal S.32 Notice Decision

Breaking News, Div Court, Limitation Period

February 12, 2025: Post 104 IRB Despite Employment & No CAT As Only Two Marked Impairments

CAT, IRB

February 10, 2025: GP Evidence Preferred over IE Regarding Concussion

MIG

February 5, 2025: No Election Required Despite Endorsement of IRB & NEB

Procedure, SABS

January 27, 2025: CNR’s + Imaging Determinative of Complete Shoulder Tear

MIG

January 22, 2025: Court of Appeal Upholds Divisional Court Decision

Divisional Court, NEB, Reconsideration

January 20, 2025: GP’s Diagnosis of “Head Injury” Prevails

MIG

January 15, 2025: Tribunal Accepts Neither Expert in Awarding Pre But Not Post 104 IRB

IRB

January 13, 2025: A Brain Contusion is Not Enough for a Concussion Diagnosis

MIG

January 9, 2025: Court Awards $69K in Costs for Apparent Miscarriage of Justice

Divisional Court,Costs

January 6, 2025: Corroborative Evidence Not Necessarily Required in Psych Diagnoses

MIG

December 18, 2024: Applicant Successful in CAT Case Where Respondent’s Expert Unavailable

CAT

December 16, 2024: Applicants Lose on Flawed Interpretation of the Schedule

MIG

December 11, 2024: Court Sends Paraplegic Matter Back to Tribunal re “Accident”

Definition Accident, Divisional Court, Reconsiderations

December 9, 2024: Pre-Existing Conditions MIG Escapes?

MIG

December 4, 2024: Court Remits $770K Award Worthy Matter Back to Tribunal

Award, Divisional Court, IRB

December 2, 2024: GP Questionnaire Does Not Trigger MIG Escape on Pre Existing

MIG

November 27, 2024: Court Remits $200K Award Worthy Matters Back to Tribunal

Award, Divisional Court, IRB

November 25, 2024: Pre-Screen Not Psychological Diagnosis

MIG

November 20, 2024: IE Not Reasonable or Necessary – No to CAT & IRB

CAT, IRB, Procedure

November 18, 2024: No Evidence Pre-Existing Conditions Prevent MMR

MIG

November 13, 2024: Applicant’s Explanation for Delayed Application Found Reasonable

Procedure

November 11, 2024: GP Concussion Diagnosis Accepted as Legitimate

MIG

November 6, 2024: Court Remits “Unsafe” Decision Back for Rehearing

CAT

November 4, 2024: Submissions Do Not = Evidence

MIG

October 30, 2024: Court Remits “Unsafe” Decision Back for Rehearing

CAT, Divisional Court

October 28, 2024: IE Fails to Explain Lack of Diagnosis

MIG

October 23, 2024: Loose Lid Unexpected "Accident"

Definition Accident

October 21, 2024: Dental Work Required Not Caused by MVA

MIG

October 7, 2024: Continuity of Complaints Confirm Chronic Pain

MIG

October 2, 2024: All Items in Dispute Deemed Incurred

Treatment Plans

September 30, 2024: Ignoring Medical Evidence Proves Award Worthy

MIG