Adams v. El-Bash

338 S.E.2d 381, 175 W. Va. 781, 1985 W. Va. LEXIS 681
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1985
Docket16497
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 338 S.E.2d 381 (Adams v. El-Bash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. El-Bash, 338 S.E.2d 381, 175 W. Va. 781, 1985 W. Va. LEXIS 681 (W. Va. 1985).

Opinion

McHUGH, Justice:

This is an appeal from a final judgment order of the Circuit Court of Cabell County, West Virginia, entered on August 3, 1983, upon a jury verdict in favor of the defendant in a medical malpractice action. This Court has before it the petition for appeal, the record, and the briefs and argument of counsel.

The appellee, Dr. Omar El-Bash, performed a urethrotomy on the appellant, Robert E. Adams. Subsequent to the operation, Mr. Adams, became incontinent to a degree that made it necessary for him to wear diapers. Adams and his wife sued El-Bash, alleging that the operation was negligently performed, that El-Bash was liable both for negligence and for the commission of a battery because the operation was performed without an informed consent of the patient, and that Adams sustained permanent injuries 1 as a proximate result of El-Bash’s negligence.

Following a trial of these issues on July 26-28, 1983, the jury returned a general verdict in favor of Dr. El-Bash. The appellants moved the trial court to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial. The appellants contended that the jury verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence. In a supplement to the motion for new trial, the appellants asserted that newly discovered evidence, in the form of testimony by a physician (J.M. Bobbitt) who had treated Adams for many years prior to the treatment by El-Bash and who had not been located prior to the trial, would warrant a new trial. The motion was denied, and this appeal followed.

The appellants contend that the verdict of the jury, insofar as it found that Adams gave an informed consent to the operation, was contrary to the weight and preponderance of the evidence and must therefore be set aside. The appellants also contend that the revelation of newly discovered evidence entitled them to a new trial. 2

Robert E. Adams suffered from strictures of his urinary tract since 1934, when at the age of eight, he was struck by a car. He sustained a rather severe fracture of the pelvic bone, which injury caused the further complications of a stricture, or narrowing due to the growth of scar tissue, of the urethra. For many years, Adams was periodically treated by Dr. John Bobbitt, a urologist, in Huntington. When such a stricture caused urine retention and pain, Dr. Bobbitt performed a procedure known as cystoscopy and urethral dilatation. This procedure entailed the use of a filiform that was inserted in the urethra to stretch and enlarge the narrowed passage. Generally, following the dilatation, Dr. Bobbitt inserted a catheter to empty Adam’s bladder and to prevent swelling that might cause further narrowing and urine retention.

*784 Recent office records of Bobbitt’s treatment were introduced by El-Bash. They show that Adams had the dilatation procedure performed in 1970, 1971, 1976 and 1977. In 1979, Dr. Bobbitt retired and his practice was taken over by Dr. El-Bash. According to Adams’ testimony, Dr. Bobbitt informed him of the retirement. When Adams experienced the same problem of pain and urine retention in August of 1979, he visited Dr. El-Bash, who performed, as Dr. Bobbitt had done previously, the procedure of cystoscopy, dilatation and catheteri-zation. Four days after the procedure, Adams could not pass urine and was in extreme discomfort. He called Dr. El-Bash in the middle of the night. Adams was told to come to the hospital emergency room. Upon his arrival shortly after 1:30 a.m., he was given an injection to relieve his pain. Dr. El-Bash arrived 15 to 20 minutes later. What occurred thereafter was the subject of conflicting testimony.

Adams testified that El-Bash attempted, without success, to insert a catheter. Dr. El-Bash testified that he tried to perform a dilatation but was unable to insert the fili-form. According to Adams’ testimony, Dr. El-Bash scheduled surgery for 8:00 a.m. but said nothing about the nature of the procedure to be performed. Adams made no inquiry because he assumed that the same procedure that had been used previously would be performed again. Adams signed a hospital consent form, authorizing Dr. El-Bash to perform a “cystoscopy with dilatation.”

Dr. El-Bash performed a urethrotomy, a procedure in which the physician uses an instrument called a urethrotome to excise scar tissue in the urethra. Dr. El-Bash testified that he told Adams and his wife, when he met with them during the night before the operation, that he was going to perform the urethrotomy, although he did not remember whether he actually used the word “urethrotomy.” Mrs. Adams denied that El-Bash told her anything about an operation on that occasion. From the time of the operation, Adams has been incontinent, a condition, he alleged, that was caused by the urethrotomy.

Informed Consent

In Cross v. Trapp, 170 W.Va. 459, 294 S.E.2d 446 (1982), we explored the various standards by which informed consent to surgery is measured. The disclosure that a physician must make to a patient was particularized in syl. pt. 2 of Cross v. Trapp:

A physician has a duty to disclose information to his or her patient in order that the patient may give to the physician an informed consent to a particular medical procedure such as surgery. In the case of surgery, the physician ordinarily should disclose to the patient various considerations including (1) the possibility of the surgery, (2) the risks involved concerning the surgery, (3) alternative methods of treatment, (4) the risks relating to such alternative methods of treatment and (5) the results likely to occur if the patient remains untreated. We adopted the patient need standard of

assessing informed consent. In syl. pt. 3 of Cross v. Trapp, supra, this Court held:

In evaluating a physician’s disclosure of information to his or her patient, relative to whether that patient gave an informed consent to a particular medical procedure such as surgery, this Court hereby adopts the patient need standard, rather than physician disclosure standards based upon national or community medical disclosure practice. Pursuant to the patient need standard, the need of the patient for information material to his or her decision as to method of treatment, such as surgery, is the standard by which the physician’s duty to disclose is measured. Under the patient need standard, the disclosure issue is approached from the reasonableness of the physician’s disclosure or nondisclosure in terms of what the physician knows or should know to be the patient’s informational needs. Therefore, whether a particular medical risk should be disclosed by the physician to the patient under the patient need standard ordinarily depends upon the existence and materiality of such risk with respect to the patient’s decision relating to medical treatment.

*785 In establishing our standard of informed consent, we relied on Canterbury v. Spence, 464 F.2d 772 (D.C.Cir.1972), cert. denied, 409 U.S. 1064, 93 S.Ct. 660, 34 L.Ed.2d 518 (1972), and Sard v. Hardy,

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Bluebook (online)
338 S.E.2d 381, 175 W. Va. 781, 1985 W. Va. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-el-bash-wva-1985.