This is an appeal from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission. The single issue is whether the Commission’s decision that appellee, Brenda VanWagner, suffered a compensable injury is supported by substantial evidence. The case requires an interpretation of our workers’ compensation statute provisions specifying that a compensable injury be established by objective medical evidence. In particular, it concerns Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-102 (Supp. 1997), including subsections (5)(A)(i), (5)(D), and (5)(E) made a part of the code by Act 796 of 1993. The case is before this Court on a grant of petition for review pursuant to Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 1-2(e)(i). Appellant, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (“Wal-Mart”), contends VanWagner failed to show by a preponderance of the evidence that she suffered a compensable injury to her right breast implant in the course of her employment. Wal-Mart asserts that the Commission’s decision, therefore, is not supported by substantial evidence. We disagree and affirm.
Appellee began working for Wal-Mart in July of 1994. It is undisputed that she had breast implants as a result of reconstructive surgery following a double mastectomy in the early 1980s. It is also undisputed that appellee suffered an injury to her shoulder at work on November 17, 1994. She received medical treatment from Dr. Gary Moffit. After the shoulder injury, VanWagner was returned to work on “light duty.” VanWagner alleges that on *445November 25, 1994, while working in the Wal-Mart bakery, she slipped on water, and in raising her arm to protect her shoulder as she began to stumble, fell against a piece of equipment suffering injury to her right chest. She contends this fall displaced and ruptured her right breast implant. VanWagner reported the injury to her supervisor, but no record of the report exists. Appellee reported the incident to Dr. Moffit on November 28, 1994. His medical report contradicted her statement that she had experienced a lot of bruising after the fall. VanWagner first mentioned displacement of her breast implant to Dr. Moffit on June 20, 1995, who referred her to a plastic surgeon, Dr. Alderson. Dr. Alderson performed surgery and substantiated that the right implant was displaced and ruptured. The Administrative Law Judge found VanWagner showed by a preponderance of the evidence that she suffered the injury in the course of her employment. Upon review, the full Workers’ Compensation Commission adopted the judge’s findings.
Standard of Review
Upon a petition for review, we consider a case as though it were originally filed in this court. Burlington Indus. v. Pickett, 336 Ark. 515, 988 S.W.2d 3 (1999). On appeal in a worker’s compensation case from the Court of Appeals to this Court, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the Commission’s decision, and its decision must be upheld if supported by substantial evidence. Deffenbaugh Indus. v. Angus, 313 Ark. 100, 852 S.W.2d 804 (1993). We will not reverse the Commission’s decision unless we are convinced that fair-minded persons with the same facts before them could not have reached the conclusion arrived at by the Commission. Pickett at 518; E.R.C. Contractor Yard & Sales v. Robertson, 335 Ark. 63, 977 S.W.2d 212 (1998).
Compensable Injury
Prior to an examination of whether substantial evidence supported the Commission’s finding that appellee suffered a compen*446sable injury, we must clarify the meaning of compensable injury. Appellant argues that based on Ark. Code Ann. §§ 11-9-102(5)(A)(i), (5)(D) and (5)(E)(i), in order for appellee’s injury to be compensable, it must be established by showing: (1) that it arose out of and in the course of employment; (2) that it occurred accidently as a result of a specific identifiable incident; and (3) that it was established by medical evidence supported by objective findings, i.e., findings not within the control of appellee. Appellant asserts that medical evidence is necessary not only to establish the existence of an injury,' but also to establish that a work-related accident caused the injury. Appellant, therefore, contends objective medical evidence of causation is elemental to proper proof of a compensable injury.
This court has not previously addressed this question. However, the Arkansas Court of Appeals has in at least two published opinions directly confronted the issue. In Stephens Truck Lines v. Millican, 58 Ark. App. 275, 950 S.W.2d 472 (1997), a worker alleged injury to his back when he fell while pulling a tarp over a load on a truck. The worker went to the emergency room and complained of neck pain, but it was not until several weeks later that an MÜRJ revealed herniation at C4-C5 in his spinal column. The employer contested compensability. It contested it, not as to the existence of the injury, but as to the injury’s causation by a work-related incident. The employer contended that objective medical evidence was necessary to show that the injury occurred on the alleged date or while working for the employer. The court of appeals held to the contrary, stating, “Were we to interpret the Act so strictly as to require objective medical evidence to prove nonmedical elements of compensability, we would defeat the overriding legislative intent. Consequently, we hold the requirement that a compensable injury must be established by medical evidence supported by objective findings applies only to the existence and extent of the injury.” Id. at 280. The court of appeals cited to Stephens Truck Lines in Aeroquip, Inc. v. Tilley, 59 Ark. App. 163, 954 S.W.2d 305 (1997). In Tilley, a worker with prior back problems alleged injury to his back from being pulled across a table by a 700 to 800 pound work implement. The court upheld *447the Commission’s award citing Millican and stating, “A claimant need not offer objective medical evidence to prove circumstances under which the injury was sustained or the precise time of the injury’s occurrence.” Id. at 168.
We find the court of appeal’s reasoning in Millican and Tilley persuasive. We therefore adopt the holding in Millican that objective medical evidence is necessary to establish the existence and extent of an injury but not essential to establish the causal relationship between the injury and a work-related accident. The plethora of possible causes for work-related injuries includes many that can be established by common-sense observation and deduction. To require medical proof of causation in every case appears out of line with the general policy of economy and efficiency contained within the workers’ compensation law. To be sure, there will be circumstances where medical evidence will be necessary to establish that a particular injury resulted from a work-related incident but not in every case.
Adopting the Millican holding does not fully resolve this case, however. It means that appellee need not produce objective medical evidence that the fall she said occurred on November 25, 1994, caused her injury where objective medical evidence established the injury’s existence, and a preponderance of other non-medical evidence established a causal relation to a work-related incident. The remaining question, then, is did appellee meet her burden with the evidence she did produce? The principal evidence of causation for appellee’s injury consisted of appellee’s own testimony. She testified regarding the fall, reporting it to her supervisor, seeking medical attention and that others present witnessed it. She also offered some physician testimony recorded months later which was at best inconclusive. Appellant countered this evidence with the testimony of appellee’s supervisor who could not remember the incident and with physicians’ statements in which the physicians were unwilling to state a causal connection between the alleged fall and appellee’s medical condition. This case then resolves down to a matter of credibility. Was the claimant’s story believable?
*448 Our case law on this issue is clear. Credibility of witnesses is properly the province of the Commission, which had the benefit of the witnesses’ presence to judge their demeanor and determine the weight to be accorded their statements. Gansky v. Hi-Tech Engineering, 325 Ark. 163, 924 S.W.2d 790 (1996). Upon review, it is not a matter of whether we would come to a different conclusion but whether reasonable minds could reach the Commission’s conclusion. Pickett, supra. After reviewing the record, we hold that reasonable minds could reach the Commission’s conclusion and therefore affirm its decision that claimant suffered a compensable injury.
Affirmed.
Arnold, C.J., dissents.
Corbin, J., not participating.