Angela Greaud Individually and on Behalf of Steven Greaud (D) v. Jahanyar Khorsandi, M.D.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 2024
DocketCA-0024-0134
StatusUnknown

This text of Angela Greaud Individually and on Behalf of Steven Greaud (D) v. Jahanyar Khorsandi, M.D. (Angela Greaud Individually and on Behalf of Steven Greaud (D) v. Jahanyar Khorsandi, M.D.) 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
Angela Greaud Individually and on Behalf of Steven Greaud (D) v. Jahanyar Khorsandi, M.D., (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

24-134 ANGELA GREAUD VERSUS JAHANYAR KHORSANDI, M.D. eek a EK APPEAL FROM THE

SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF ST. MARTIN, NO. 87,248 HONORABLE KEITH R. J. COMEAUX, DISTRICT JUDGE

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VAN H. KYZAR JUDGE

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Court composed of Shannon J. Gremillion, D. Kent Savoie, and Van H. Kyzar, Judges.

AFFIRMED. Patrick R. Jackson Kyle McCotter Patrick R. Jackson, APLC 4442 Viking Drive, Suite 100 Bossier City, LA 71111 (318) 752-3335 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: Angela Greaud, Individually and on Behalf of Steven Greaud

Alan K. Breaud

Timothy W. Basden

Breaud & Meyers

P.O. Box 51365

Lafayette, LA 70505

(337) 266-2200

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Jahanyar Khorsandi, M.D. KYZAR, Judge.

In this medical malpractice action, Plaintiff, Angela Greaud, individually, and on behalf of her deceased husband, Steven Greaud, appeals from the trial court judgment in favor of Defendant, Dr. Jahanyar Khorsandi, dismissing her claims against him, with prejudice. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This matter stems from the sudden death of Steven Greaud, the husband of Plaintiff, which occurred at their Crowley, Louisiana home on April 11, 2015, one day after his final appointment with his primary care physician, Defendant, a family medicine physician. Mr. Geraud was forty-three years old at the time of his death.

Mr. Greaud’s death certificate lists “Poly Drug Overdose” as the sole cause of his death, as determined and certified by Dr. Mark Dawson, the Acadia Parish Coroner. A toxicology report attached to the death certificate confirmed that blood taken from Mr. Greaud’s heart following his death was positive for amphetamines; benzodiazepines (Xanax); opiates (hydrocodone, oxycodone); analgesics (Soma, meprobamate); anti-depressants (Trazodone, Cymbalta, chlorophenylpiperazine), antihistamines (chlorpheniramine); cardiovascular agents (Norvasc); and stimulants (caffeine).

Subsequently, Plaintiff sought review of a medical malpractice claim against Defendant, in which she alleged that he breached the standard of care through his “negligent lack of medical assessment, care, and treatment” and that as a result, Mr.

Greaud “was denied appropriate medical care, and was over medicated to such a

' The toxicology report lists the concentration and the therapeutic range (indicated in parenthesis) for each substance found in Mr. Greaud’s system, including amphetamines 565 ng/ml (10-100); hydrocodone 250 ng/ml (10-40); oxycodone 509 ng/ml (10-200); and antihistamines 280 ng/mi (10-40). severe stage that it eventually caused his death.” In its July 25, 2018 opinion, the medical review panel found that Plaintiff failed to prove that Defendant breached the standard of care applicable to him in his treatment of Mr. Greaud.

On September 24, 2018, Plaintiff filed suit against Defendant, alleging that he overprescribed pain medication for her husband causing his addiction to drugs and ultimate death via a drug overdose. The matter proceeded to a jury trial.

At trial, Plaintiff testified that Mr. Greaud’s condition and behavior deteriorated over the six years he was treated by Defendant, March 6, 2009—April 10, 2015. She stated that in August 2009, he passed out while driving in Abbeville and that on another occasion, he hit a concrete pillar after putting his car in drive and then passing out. She said that his behavior, attitude, work performance, and ability to parent her autistic son declined and that she spoke to Dr. Dawson, the coroner, about having him committed pursuant to an order for protective custody. Plaintiff testified that Mr. Greaud changed jobs multiple times and began selling his possessions. She stated that in August 2012, he became confused and ended up in Cecilia while on his way home from Lafayette, and she later learned that he was found passed out in the parking lot of a Crowley Auto Zone.

Plaintiff described Mr. Greaud’s condition during his fifth year of treatment by Defendant, as follows:

So, basically, he was a shell of a person. He largely walked around in a stupor. You heard before falling [sic] asleep over the dishwasher, falling asleep with his face, I mean, literally his face in his food at the dinner table. He would fall asleep watching television. I mean, just basically — 1 came home one day. Landon [her son] was in a panic because he was passed out in the car under the carport. We don’t have a garage, but we have a carport. And Landon was pretty panicked about that. We couldn’t allow Landon to be in a vehicle with him anymore. I made it a point that Landon was no longer to be in a vehicle

with him. At the time Landon had a DSW worker, which is a direct service worker or support worker. He received that through Medicaid services because of his disability. So, you know, there was a lot of

discussion about not allowing Landon to be alone in his care. He, he,

he just — he wasn’t Steve anymore at that point.

Plaintiff stated that Mr. Greaud again passed out while in a Walgreen’s drive- thru in April 2014. Although he was tested for seizures following this incident, the test results were normal. By early 2015, “he was always in a stupor, passing out. I mean, this had become our normal.” She stated that in March 2015, Mr. Greaud could not walk up the steps of a hair salon, and he was slurring his words and falling over himself. She said that people expressed concerns regarding his behavior.

Plaintiff testified that on the day Mr. Greaud died, she was with him from 10:00 a.m. until she started cooking supper at 8:00 p.m., during which time they argued about him seeing Defendant and whether he was overmedicated. She stated that by the time she started cooking, he appeared to be non-perceptive. Plaintiff testified that while Mr. Greaud was sorting his prescription medication in their bedroom, he kept falling over, slurring his words, and had difficulty walking. She testified that when she eventually returned to the bedroom, he was wedged between the wall and the bed and was unresponsive. He was pronounced dead by emergency medical technicians (EMTs).

Plaintiff stated that other than talking to the EMTs, she did nothing to determine whether Mr. Greaud had taken a larger quantity of medication than prescribed. She stated that his pill organizers looked no different when she found him than when she left him earlier. However, she admitted that she has no idea what happened to the pill organizers as she has not seen them since then. She denied that she told the EMTs that she had an altercation with Mr. Greaud prior to his death as “altercation” is not a word she typically uses. While she admitted that they argued,

she denied that there was a physical fight. Plaintiff testified that Mr. Greaud did not use illegal drugs or alcohol and that she never noticed him misusing his medication:

Steve was very diligent about filling out these pill boxes with the

amount of, you know, this is Monday’s dose, this is Tuesday’s dose,

this is Wednesday’s dose, and any time we tried to bring up the idea of

addiction with him he would refer back to that. I can’t be addicted, look,

I’m taking everything exactly as prescribed.

Count my pills. Like almost throwing it in our face. Here. You know, here’s my pill box. You can count them. They’re all there.

He was very meticulous about pointing out those pill boxes.

Plaintiff was adamant that Mr. Greaud’s overdose was not intentional.

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Angela Greaud Individually and on Behalf of Steven Greaud (D) v. Jahanyar Khorsandi, M.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angela-greaud-individually-and-on-behalf-of-steven-greaud-d-v-jahanyar-lactapp-2024.