A middle-aged woman who injured her knee when she tripped and fell has won an appeal forcing ACC to pay for surgery.
This was ordered in the Wellington District Court this month, even though Tui Olsen's knee has some evidence of osteoarthritis, a degenerative condition.
The Accident Compensation Corporation in January last year declined an application to pay for the operation on Ms Olsen's left knee to remove part of the torn inner or "medial" meniscus, one of the joint's cushioning pads of cartilage.
ACC argued that no causal link had been established between her fall and the need for surgery, saying it was more likely that the cartilage tear was related to arthritis, a pre-existing degenerative process that started causing symptoms because of the accident.
In July 2010, Ms Olsen, then 49, fell while walking into a cafe. The knee swelled up, hurt and started locking.