Anderson v. Hooker

420 S.W.2d 235, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 27, 1967
Docket5898
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 420 S.W.2d 235 (Anderson v. Hooker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Hooker, 420 S.W.2d 235, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

*237 OPINION

PRESLAR, Justice.

This is a malpractice suit brought by the appellant against the appellee, asserting numerous counts of negligence in connection with surgery performed by the ap-pellee on the appellant for removal of a cervical disc. It was alleged that the doctor-appellee should not have operated after he observed an X-ray picture showing no bone defect in appellant’s neck; operated on her until after heat treatments had been tried, and operated upon her without the administration of added amounts of traction; and it was asserted that the doctor should have run a myelogram test prior to the surgery and applied traction following surgery. Appellant-plaintiff also asserted that the defendant-doctor failed to keep a proper lookout for her safety during performance of the surgery; performed the surgery from the front of her neck instead of the back; removed one of her cervical discs without sufficient diagnostic findings; unnecessarily removed such disc; and failed to make a full disclosure to her prior to surgery of the risks, dangers and complications incident to, and that might be reasonably anticipated from, the surgery. In response to special issues the jury found against plaintiff-appellant on each of the above assertions of negligence, and it also found that there was no failure on the part of the doctor to exercise the care and skill usually conformed to by physicians and surgeons in the area which would constitute negligence; that the operation accomplished the purpose for which it was intended, and that no sum of money was due to be paid to the plaintiff-patient by the defendant-doctor. Based upon the verdict, a take-nothing judgment was entered. We affirm.

Appellant gave her written consent for the surgery to be performed, but maintains that she would not have given such consent had the appellee more fully informed her of the risks and dangers involved, more particularly had he informed her that a stroke or paralysis might result. In her brief before this court, appellant states that the central issue in the trial of this case was whether or not Edalene Anderson had given an informed consent to the operation, and that the point of conflict centered upon whether or not the risk of a stroke was incident to the operation performed on her, and whether or not the defendant failed to conform to the standard medical practice by disclosing to her that a stroke was one of the risks incident to the operation. The defendant-doctor informed the plaintiff of various things concerning the proposed surgery, but he did not inform her that a stroke was one of them, and the evidence is that she had some kind of episode or stroke while in the recovery room following the surgery.

Appellant assigns as error the exclusion of evidence which she says would show that the doctor knew that a stroke was a risk of this operation. The doctor’s testimony was that he did not consider a stroke an anticipated complication of the operation. The excluded evidence concerned another patient of the defendant-doctor, one Manon Moore, who had the same type of surgery some two months prior to appellant’s operation. The proffered evidence, which was disputed, was that Moore suffered a stroke some 24 hours after surgery. This evidence was in the form of the hospital records of Manon Moore, the testimony of a doctor who had examined him some several months after surgery and was of the opinion that he had suffered a stroke some time after surgery, and the testimony of the defendant elicited on cross-examination. Appellant urges that the evidence was admissible to show the doctor’s knowledge that a stroke was one of the things to be expected from this type of surgery, and therefore one of the things of which he should have informed her.

As a generalization, it may be said that every normal human being of adult years has a right to determine what shall be done to his own body, and a pa *238 tient’s consent is thus a necessary prerequisite to any treatment or operation. And to that may he added that one who gives his consent must have such information regarding the consequences as is necessary to form the basis of an intelligent consent. The duty of the physician to furnish the patient with sufficient information to make an intelligent decision — to disclose risks inherent in proposed treatment or surgery —is recognized. Wilson v. Scott, 412 S.W.2d 299 (Tex. Feb.1967); Gravis v. Physicians & Surgeons Hospital of Alice, Tex.Civ.App., 415 S.W.2d 674 (n. w. h.). One writer has observed that the reported cases present much confusion as to what risks a physician should disclose to his patient before obtaining consent to operate. Vol. 44 Texas Law Review 799, 800. Both of the above-cited cases quote from the recent opinion by the Supreme Court of Missouri in Aiken v. Clary, 396 S.W.2d 668, 674, as follows:

“We have reexamined this question and have concluded that the question of what disclosure of risks incident to proposed treatment should be made in a particular situation involves medical judgment and that expert testimony thereon should be required in malpractice cases involving that issue. The question to be determined by the jury is whether defendant doctor in that particular situation failed to adhere to a standard of reasonable care. These are not matters of common knowledge or within the experience of laymen. Expert medical evidence thereon is just as necessary as is such testimony on the correctness of the handling in cases involving surgery or treatment. In Fisher v. Wilkinson, Mo., 382 S.W.2d 627, 632, we held: ‘Without the aid of expert medical testimony in this case a jury could not, without resorting to conjecture and surmise or by setting up an arbitrary standard of their own, determine that defendants failed to exercise their skill and use the care exercised by the ordinarily skillful, careful and prudent physician acting under the same or similar circumstances.’ And, as we said in Pedigo v. Roseberry, 340 Mo. 724, 736, 102 S.W.2d 600, 607: ‘Juries should not be thus turned loose and privileged to say, perchance, the method of treating an injury * * * (or an illness) was negligent notwithstanding, for instance, the uncontradicted competent testimony establish (ing) that the uniformly adopted practice of the most skillful surgeons (or physicians) had been followed.’ The question is not what, regarding the risks involved, the juror would relate to the patient under the same or similar circumstances, or even what a reasonable man would relate, but what a reasonable medical practitioner would do. Such practitioner would consider the state of the patient’s health, the condition of his heart and nervous system, his mental state, and would take into account, among other things, whether the risks involved were mere remote possibilities or something which occurred with some sort of frequency or regularity. This determination involves medical judgment as to whether disclosure of possible risks may have such an adverse effect on the patient as to jeopardize success of the proposed therapy, no matter how expertly performed.”

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Bluebook (online)
420 S.W.2d 235, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-hooker-texapp-1967.