Alice Clark v. St. Francis Medical Center, Inc.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 2026
Docket56,796-CA
StatusPublished
AuthorHunter

This text of Alice Clark v. St. Francis Medical Center, Inc. (Alice Clark v. St. Francis Medical Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alice Clark v. St. Francis Medical Center, Inc., (La. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Judgment rendered April 22, 2026. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 56,796-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

ALICE CLARK Plaintiff-Appellant

versus

ST. FRANCIS MEDICAL Defendant-Appellee CENTER, INC.

Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court No. 2019-2615

Honorable Frederick Douglass Jones, Judge

LAW OFFICE OF Counsel for ANTHONY J. BRUSCATO Appellant By: Anthony J. Bruscato

EDDIE M. CLARK & ASSOCIATES, LLC By: Eddie M. Clark

NELSON, ZENTNER, Counsel for SARTOR & SNELLINGS, LLC Appellee By: David Hyland Nelson Douglas R. Nielsen

Before PITMAN, COX, and HUNTER, JJ. HUNTER, J.

Plaintiff, Alice Clark, appeals from a jury verdict finding that plaintiff

failed to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the treatment rendered

to her by defendant, St. Francis Medical Center, Inc., fell below the standard

of care ordinarily practiced by hospitals under similar circumstances. The

trial court rendered judgment in accordance with the jury’s verdict and

denied plaintiff’s motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and new

trial. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS

On October 12, 2016, plaintiff, Alice Clark, underwent an outpatient

surgical procedure at St. Francis Medical Center (“SFMC”) in Monroe,

Louisiana. Between 8:07 a.m. and 9:34 a.m., plaintiff was administered

Propofol (an anesthesia agent), fentanyl, and Dilaudid (for pain

management). At 10:07 a.m., plaintiff was transferred from the Post-

Anesthesia Care Unit (“PACU”) to the Ambulatory Surgery Unit (“ASU”)

to await discharge. Soon after arriving in the ASU, plaintiff requested to use

the restroom. Teresa Massey, a registered nurse, assisted plaintiff to the

restroom by holding her arm. Nurse Massey, who noted plaintiff was alert

and oriented, left plaintiff on the toilet with instructions to remain seated and

to use the “white cord” to alert the staff if she required assistance. Nurse

Massey then went to the desk to call plaintiff’s family member. After using

the restroom, plaintiff attempted to pull up her underwear. She stated that

she became “sleepy and dizzy,” fell off the commode, and fractured her left

hip.1

1 The following day, plaintiff underwent a surgical procedure to repair her fractured hip. She remained hospitalized until October 28, 2016. On March 16, 2017, plaintiff filed a request for the formation of a

Medical Review Panel (“MRP”), and a panel was formed and convened.

After reviewing the evidence submitted by plaintiff and SFMC, a unanimous

MRP determined that the evidence did not support the conclusion that

SFMC or its employees failed to meet the applicable standard of care. In its

opinion, the MRP stated as follows:

*** This Panel finds that all care and treatment rendered to Ms. Clark by the nurses and staff of St. Francis Medical Center was within the standard of care. Propofol is a relatively short acting anesthesia. When Ms. Clark had been discharged from PACU to the ambulatory surgery unit in preparation for her discharge, she was alert as evidenced by her deposition testimony recalling the details of the subject incident. It is within the standard of care for Nurse Massey to have left Ms. Clark unattended once she was seated on the toilet in the restroom to go call a family member. Nurse Massey gave Ms. Clark appropriate instructions not to get up from the toilet until Nurse Massey returned and if assistance was needed before then to pull the call cord. While it is unfortunate that Ms. Clark fell and sustained her injury, the nurses of St. Francis Medical Center acted at all times appropriately and within [the] standard of care. ***

The MRP opinion did not address the effects of fentanyl and Dilaudid.

On August 19, 2019, plaintiff filed a medical malpractice lawsuit

against SFMC, alleging SFMC and its employees were negligent for the

following acts/omissions: (1) failure to have the originally assigned nurse,

who was familiar with plaintiff’s preexisting condition, to care for her when

she returned to the ASU; (2) leaving plaintiff alone, seated on a toilet, after

she underwent surgery; (3) failure to have a policy and/or procedure in place

regarding caring for patients after outpatient surgery; (4) failure to apply and

maintain the standard fall risk precautions; (5) leaving a patient in the

bathroom for “an inordinate amount of time” without periodic monitoring;

2 and (6) failure to periodically and timely monitor a patient “in a weakened or

impaired physical and mental condition.”

A jury trial was held October 28-31, 2024. During the trial, plaintiff

testified that the nurse assisted her to the restroom and told her she would

“be right back” and instructed her to “push the red button” if she needed

assistance. She stated as follows:

I was sitting there and using the bathroom. I was sitting there, and it seemed like she was a long time coming back, a long time coming back. *** So, I – I got through and, like I – like I was sitting there a long time, so I just kind of raised up trying to get my clothes back up on me. And when I raised up *** to pull my clothes up on me *** I just fell out on the floor[.] ***

Plaintiff stated that while waiting for the nurse to return, she began to

feel “kind of sleepy and kind of woozy like.” She later clarified that she felt

“sleepy and dizzy” while sitting on the toilet. During cross-examination,

plaintiff testified that she did not pull the cord as the nurse had instructed

because she “didn’t think about that cord.”

Dr. Stella Fitzgibbons, an expert retained by plaintiff, agreed with the

MRP that Propofol did not play a role in plaintiff’s injury. However, Dr.

Fitzgibbons noted the MRP overlooked the fact that plaintiff had also

received fentanyl and Dilaudid, and the side effects of those drugs include

disorientation, drowsiness, dizziness, and balance issues. Dr. Fitzgibbons

testified as follows:

*** She also, in the operating room, was given Fentanyl, 25 micrograms, four different times. Given at 8:25, 8:45, 8:50, and at 9:07. Fentanyl generally lasts up to an hour, but it has a half- life of [two] to [four] hours. Ms. Clark, being [70] years old, would probably be towards the long end of that, and I think she probably was still feeling the effects more than an hour after she had it. That was a very stiff dose for a 70-year-old lady, regardless of her state of health, and she was probably still very 3 sleepy when she got to the post-operative area. She also, at 9:34, was given an IV push dose of Dilaudid, half a milligram, and Diluadid lasts for three or four hours. *** Fentanyl and Diluadid are both narcotic pain medicines *** [and] like any other narcotic pain reliever, it causes sleepiness, sedation, and can easily cause mental confusion. *** I think she would have been drowsy, and I doubt very much that her balance was something reliable. *** I don’t think she was even alert enough to grab the grabrail, if there was one. She probably just sat down. Usually when you void your bladder, your blood pressure drops, and that would have made the confusion a little bit worse. I think that a heavily sedated patient like this really did not need to be trained to manage her balance all by herself or follow instructions to stay sitting down. *** Dr. Fitzgibbons opined that plaintiff was not in “any kind of condition to be

left alone.”

During cross-examination, Dr.

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