Alaama v. Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, Inc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 18, 2019
DocketB288360
StatusPublished

This text of Alaama v. Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, Inc. (Alaama v. Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaama v. Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, Inc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 8/28/19

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

ABDULMOUTI ALAAMA, B288360

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC634219) v.

PRESBYTERIAN INTERCOMMUNITY HOSPITAL, INC., et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, James C. Chalfant, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions. Alan I. Kaplan for Plaintiff and Appellant. Baker & Hostetler, Mark A. Kadzielski and Joelle A. Berle for Defendants and Respondents.

_____________________________ INTRODUCTION

Business and Professions Code section 809.11 requires a hospital peer review board to give a physician notice and the right to request a hearing when the hospital revokes or terminates the physician’s membership, staff privileges, or employment for a “medical disciplinary cause or reason.” In 2016 Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, Inc., doing business as PIH Health Hospital-Whittier, and PIH Health Physicians (collectively, the hospital) terminated Dr. Abdulmouti Alaama’s privileges and staff membership without giving him a hearing. Dr. Alaama filed a complaint that included causes of action seeking a writ of administrative mandate, alleging, among other things, the hospital denied him the right to a hearing before terminating his privileges. The trial court denied the petition. Because the hospital terminated Dr. Alaama’s privileges and staff membership for a “medical disciplinary cause or reason,” we reverse.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Dr. Alaama Misbehaves in the Hospital Dr. Alaama was not always on his best behavior. In April 2008 the hospital warned Dr. Alaama that he had to work cooperatively with doctors, nurses, and staff at the hospital and that he would be subject to discipline if he yelled at, verbally abused, or displayed any “physically inappropriate and

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Business and Professions Code.

2 unprofessional behavior” toward hospital patients or employees. In August 2010 the hospital placed Dr. Alaama on probation for one year “because of his inappropriate and unprofessional behavior directed towards an anesthesiologist and the nursing staff” during a medical procedure. But things did not improve. In March 2012 Dr. Alaama “yelled, verbally abused, physically hit, and displayed physically inappropriate and unprofessional behavior” toward a hospital employee. In April 2012 he “continued with a procedure on a patient whose blood pressure remained dangerously high, despite repeated requests by the anesthesiologist to abort the procedure.” Dr. Alaama acknowledged he had “a pattern of engaging in unprofessional, disruptive, and harassing behavior.”

B. Dr. Alaama Signs a Behavioral Agreement In April 2012 Dr. Alaama signed a written contract with the hospital titled “Behavioral Agreement,” in which he agreed to comply “in all respects” with the medical staff and hospital bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies. As a condition to retaining his medical privileges at the hospital, Dr. Alaama agreed to comply with a list of “Specific Behavioral Requirements.” For example, Dr. Alaama agreed not to “make any demeaning, discourteous, disrespectful, harassing, or profane statements, requests or demands” to any of the nurses, administrative staff members, or other employees at the hospital, including “name calling, profanity, sexual comments or innuendos, and/or racial, ethnic, or sexual jokes.” He also agreed not to “shout or otherwise raise his voice, act in an aggressive or abrasive manner, or engage in any type of verbally abusive behavior,” including when he responded to anyone who called to

3 discuss patient issues or concerns. He further agreed not to criticize anyone at the hospital “in front of or within earshot of” anyone else, including making “disparaging statements regarding an individual’s professional competence, comments that undermine a patient’s trust in other caregivers at [the hospital], and/or comments that undermine a caregiver’s self-confidence in caring for patients.” And he agreed not to “touch, hit, slap or otherwise engage in any physical behavior with” anyone at the hospital, including “touching, punching, slapping, pushing, shoving, smacking, inappropriate touching and/or throwing instruments, charts, or other objects.” Of particular relevance to this action, Dr. Alaama agreed in paragraph 2.6 of the Behavioral Agreement that he would “be readily available and exercise professional courtesy when called upon to discuss a patient’s course of treatment or medical care” and that he would “not exhibit any other inappropriate, unprofessional, abusive or harassing behavior” on the hospital’s premises, such as failing “to address the safety concerns or patient care needs expressed by another caregiver” or failing “to work collaboratively with other caregivers” at the hospital. He also agreed in paragraph 2.8 of the agreement not to retaliate or threaten to retaliate against anyone who reported behavior by him that violated the agreement or the hospital bylaws, rules, regulations, or policies. Dr. Alaama also acknowledged he understood any further failure to comply with the standards of the hospital medical staff would result in the “automatic termination” of his medical staff privileges. The Behavioral Agreement provided in paragraph 4.3 that, upon a finding by the hospital medical executive committee Dr. Alaama violated the agreement or hospital rules and regulations, his privileges would

4 be “automatically terminated.” Dr. Alaama agreed any “such automatic termination shall not give rise to any substantive or procedural rights under California Law” or the hospital’s bylaws. The parties further agreed the Behavioral Agreement, “in and of itself, does not require that a report be made to the Medical Board of California or any other federal or state agency.”

C. Dr. Alaama Misbehaves in the Hospital Again And yet, things did not improve. In particular, an incident occurred in November 2015 that gave rise to the termination of Dr. Alaama’s privileges at the hospital and, ultimately, this litigation. A hospital patient was lying in a bed on his stomach, “profusely vomiting” with his “face changing to shades of purple,” after an endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography procedure. Two nurses and a gastrointestinal technician each asked Dr. Alaama to move a cart where he was “documenting” so they could move a bed into the room and turn over the patient. Dr. Alaama “responded to each request with words to the effect of, ‘No, they can wait.’” According to the nurses, Dr. Alaama motioned with his left hand and waved away the nurses and technicians without looking up from the computer screen he was working at on the cart, as though he did not want to be bothered, and “barked” repeatedly, “[T]ell them to wait.” One of the nurses said that Dr. Alaama “showed no concern” for the patient’s needs and put “himself first instead of the patient’s needs” and that “Dr. Alaama’s conduct (focusing on his documentation and his lack of cooperation) prevented staff from properly taking care of the patient’s needs.” The other nurse said Dr. Alaama did not properly address the patient’s needs, did not work collaboratively

5 with the staff, and did “what he wanted to do” without listening to the nurses. After Dr. Alaama learned one of the nurses had reported the incident, he asked the hospital not to assign that nurse to his cases. The hospital’s medical executive committee met in early December 2015 to consider what to do about the November 2015 incident, as well as six other complaints filed against Dr. Alaama between May 2013 and November 2015. The courses of action the committee considered included requiring Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
Alaama v. Presbyterian Intercommunity Hospital, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaama-v-presbyterian-intercommunity-hospital-inc-calctapp-2019.