Aguilera v. Mount Sinai Hospital Medical Center

691 N.E.2d 1, 293 Ill. App. 3d 967, 229 Ill. Dec. 65
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 21, 1998
Docket1-94-1893
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 691 N.E.2d 1 (Aguilera v. Mount Sinai Hospital Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aguilera v. Mount Sinai Hospital Medical Center, 691 N.E.2d 1, 293 Ill. App. 3d 967, 229 Ill. Dec. 65 (Ill. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

JUSTICE CAHILL

delivered the opinion of the court:

We revisit, at the direction of our supreme court, an action for survival and wrongful death based on medical malpractice. The jury found for plaintiff and awarded substantial damages. The trial court entered judgment notwithstanding the verdict, finding "that no reasonable fact finder could conclude that the death of the *** decedent was proximately caused by the failure *** to conduct a CT scan *** in a more timely fashion.” Plaintiff appealed.

In Aguilera v. Mt. Sinai Hospital Medical Center, 282 Ill. App. 3d 363, 668 N.E.2d 94 (1996), we affirmed the trial court’s judgment notwithstanding the verdict. On June 4, 1997, our supreme court ordered that we reconsider our decision in light of Holton v. Memorial Hospital, 176 Ill. 2d 95, 679 N.E.2d 1202 (1997). We withdrew our opinion and invited the parties to rebrief the case in light of Holton. After reviewing the case under the guidance of Holton, we again affirm the judgment notwithstanding the verdict entered by the trial court.

The record shows that in the early morning hours of April 19, 1987, Salvador Aguilera was logged into the emergency room of Mount Sinai Hospital, complaining of numbness on the left side of his body. His brother, who. drove him to the hospital, said they arrived at 2 a.m., but hospital records show Aguilera arrived at 3 a.m. Whatever the hour, the parties disagree about the care and treatment Aguilera received over the next several hours. Plaintiff’s expert medical witnesses testified that the treatment deviated from the standard of care. Defense expert medical witnesses testified that it did not.

Aguilera was formally admitted to the hospital, taken from the emergency room, and assigned to a room at approximately 7 a.m. At about 8:20 a.m. he began to suffer seizures. At about 9:30 a.m. he was given a CT scan that revealed a massive intracerebral hemorrhage measuring 4 by 6 centimeters. Aguilera lapsed into a coma that day and died of cardiac arrest three days later. The death certificate recorded that Aguilera died from cardiopulmonary arrest secondary to a cerebral hemorrhage.

Both of plaintiff’s expert medical witnesses testified that the failure of the emergency room physician to order an earlier CT scan while Aguilera was undergoing treatment and observation in the emergency room was a deviation from the standard of care. Dr. Glenn Hamilton, a board-certified emergency medicine physician, testified that, given Aguilera’s presenting signs and symptoms, an immediate CT scan should have been performed. This would have permitted the medical or surgical intervention that, in Dr. Hamilton’s opinion, may have saved Aguilera’s life. The following colloquy then occurred between plaintiff’s attorney and Dr. Hamilton:

"Q. In your opinion, Doctor, again to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, had that delay been avoided, would Mr. Aguilera survive?
A. My opinion is that he would.
[A]t that point his chance of survival, if appropriately diagnosed, is greater than fifty percent.
Q. Do you believe the delay is directly related to his death?
A. I think the two are definitely related.”

On cross-examination Hamilton testified that, assuming a prompt CT scan, he would have deferred to a neurosurgeon to decide whether surgical intervention was appropriate. Hamilton testified that if a neurosurgeon had concluded the bleed was inoperable, "there [was] the potential of shifting to medical therapy.” But he testified that he knew of no medical treatment that would stop a bleed or prevent a bleed from restarting.

Plaintiff’s second expert, Dr. Dragomir Vuckovich, a board-certified neurologist, testified that it was critical that the CT scan be performed early, not only to permit effective treatment of the patient, but to determine the precise location and size of the hemorrhage while still treatable. In his opinion the CT scan of Aguilera, taken six to seven hours after he entered the emergency room, showed an inoperable hemorrhage. But it was significant, in Vuckovich’s opinion, that Aguilera arrived at the emergency room conscious and alert and remained so for several hours. This showed that there had not yet been involvement of the brain stem. Vuckovich concluded, based on Aguilera’s clinical signs, that if a CT scan had been performed earlier it would have shown a small bleed in the thalamus. Until Aguilera suffered seizures shortly after 8 a.m., he had no clinical signs of severe brain involvement and his level of consciousness and vital signs were encouraging factors. Vuckovich was then asked his opinion about Aguilera’s chance of survival if he had been given prompt treatment. Vuckovich answered:

"At his age at the clinical course that he displayed from 3:20 a.m. until 9 o’clock, I believe his survival, it would have been in the region of 75, 80 percent.”

In explaining the reason for this opinion, Vuckovich relied mostly on studies of and personal experience with patients with thalamic bleeds who were successfully treated through neurosurgery. On cross-examination, Vuckovich said he would consult and seriously consider, if not defer to, a neurosurgeon’s opinion about whether surgical intervention would have been appropriate following an earlier CT scan. He did not know what a neurosurgeon would have done if called after an earlier CT scan. When asked whether neurosurgery is "a modality for treatment of a thalamic stroke or thalamic bleed,” Vuckovich initially responded "at times, yes.” But he then reaffirmed his deposition testimony that neurosurgery is "[n]ot an ideal” modality for thalamic bleeds.

In granting judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the trial court reasoned that even if defendants deviated from the standard of care in failing to order an earlier CT scan, plaintiff failed to offer evidence that this negligence was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury. Plaintiff argues on appeal that the trial court erred by: (1) allowing use of the CT scan at trial and disallowing evidence challenging the CT scan’s reliability; and (2) finding that her experts’ testimony was insufficient to establish proximate cause.

We first address an evidentiary issue raised by plaintiff. She suggests that the CT scan films on which her experts relied were "irreparably tainted.” She argues that the trial court erred by allowing use of the films at trial and not allowing plaintiff to argue that the films may have been those of another patient. Plaintiff concludes that, without the CT scan, Aguilera’s condition was less certain and "the list of [possible] conditions [included some] which were *** more susceptible to successful treatment.”

Before trial, plaintiff moved to bar use of the CT scan films. Plaintiff argued that although Aguilera’s name and patient number were typewritten on the films, the typewritten date on the films was April 18, 1987, the day before Aguilera went to the hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
691 N.E.2d 1, 293 Ill. App. 3d 967, 229 Ill. Dec. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aguilera-v-mount-sinai-hospital-medical-center-illappct-1998.