Asia Anderson v. Jennifer L Tracy Rn

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 2018
Docket333135
StatusUnpublished

This text of Asia Anderson v. Jennifer L Tracy Rn (Asia Anderson v. Jennifer L Tracy Rn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asia Anderson v. Jennifer L Tracy Rn, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

LIBBEY BRYSON, as next friend of ASIA UNPUBLISHED ANDERSON, a minor, April 3, 2018

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 333135 Genesee Circuit Court GENESYS REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, LC No. 10-092893-NH

Defendant-Appellant, and

JENNIFER L. TRACY, R.N., STACEY A. NELSON, R.N., CAROL POWERS, D.O., WOMEN’S SPECIALTY ASSOCIATES, and HOLLY JASKIERNY, D.O.,

Defendants.

Before: JANSEN, P.J., and CAVANAGH and GADOLA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this medical malpractice action, defendant Genesys Regional Medical Center (Genesys) appeals as of right a judgment entered on the jury verdict in favor of plaintiff Asia Anderson in the amount of $2,997,623. Genesys contends that errors at trial entitle it to judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) or, in the alternative, a new trial. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

FACTS

This case arose after plaintiff sustained a permanent injury to her brachial plexus, a network of nerves that originate near the neck and shoulder, during her birth at Genesys Regional Medical Center on January 1, 2008, at 3:05 a.m. A few days earlier, plaintiff’s mother, Libbey Bryson, had been admitted to the hospital after contracting influenza late in her pregnancy. Bryson was also exhibiting signs of preeclampsia. Once she recovered sufficiently from the flu to tolerate labor, Bryson and her attending physician, Dr. Carol Powers, agreed to induce labor. Dr. Powers testified that Bryson’s pregnancy was routine except for diagnoses of gestational diabetes and obesity. Pitocin, a drug designed to induce labor, was administered starting just

-1- after noon on December 31, 2007. Dr. Andy Phung, a first-year resident performing an obstetrics rotation at Genesys, and Dr. Tammi Starr, a third-year resident practicing obstetrics and gynecology at Genesys, monitored Bryson’s labor throughout the day and night, which included use of an electronic fetal heart rate monitor.

In the late evening during Bryson’s labor, the electronic fetal heart rate monitor displayed various periods of diminished variability in the fetal heart rate pattern, decelerations likely caused by compression of the umbilical cord, and tachycardia, or an abnormally rapid heart rate, the concern of which is fetal hypoxia or acidosis. At 11:20 p.m., Bryson was given oxygen via a mask. At 1:20 a.m., an amnioinfusion was performed to increase the level of fluid in the uterus to attempt to relieve pressure on the umbilical cord. Pitocin was stopped at 1:37 a.m., but was resumed at 2:00 a.m. By 2:45 a.m., delivery was imminent as Bryson’s cervix was dilated to 9¾ centimeters.

Dr. Powers testified that she was contacted at 11:00 p.m. regarding the progress of Bryson’s labor, but then was not called again until approximately 2:45 a.m. Dr. Powers explained that she immediately began traveling to the hospital, but was delayed roughly five minutes due to snowy weather. Dr. Phung and Dr. Starr were both in the room with Bryson as the delivery proceeded. Plaintiff’s father, Demarius Anderson, and Bryson’s nephew, Joshua McEchian, were also present in the room. Dr. Phung made the first attempt to deliver the baby. Once plaintiff’s head had been delivered, the baby’s anterior shoulder became stuck against Bryson’s pubic bone. Dr. Starr diagnosed a shoulder dystocia, asked Dr. Phung to step aside, had Bryson placed in the McRoberts position,1 and had a nurse apply suprapubic pressure while she attempted to free the anterior shoulder. Her attempt was unsuccessful. Dr. Holly Jaskiernay, the staff obstetrician and gynecologist at Genesys that night, entered the room after plaintiff’s head had been delivered and while Bryson was still in the McRoberts position. Dr. Jaskiernay was present while Dr. Starr unsuccessfully attempted to free plaintiff’s anterior shoulder by performing the Woods corkscrew maneuver;2 she then attempted to perform the maneuver herself. When both attempts were unsuccessful, Dr. Jaskiernay attempted to deliver plaintiff’s posterior arm, which ultimately freed her anterior shoulder and delivered the rest of the body.

Following the delivery, plaintiff was diagnosed with a permanent brachial plexus injury affecting all levels of the nerve roots. When plaintiff was six months old, she underwent surgery at the University of Michigan, during which neurologists took three nerves from her leg and grafted them into her shoulder. Plaintiff underwent a second surgery when she was three years old, at which point her parents learned her brachial plexus would never regain normal function.

1 The McRoberts position involves placing a mother’s legs up against her chest during delivery to attempt to expand the opening of the pelvis. 2 The Woods corkscrew maneuver is a rotational maneuver in which a physician attempts to rotate the shoulders of an infant 180 degrees to release an obstructed shoulder from the pelvis of the mother during delivery.

-2- PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff filed a medical malpractice action against Dr. Powers and her practice, Women’s Specialty Associates, P.C., Dr. Jaskiernay, two nurses, Jennifer Tracy and Stacey Nelson, and Genesys, raising numerous theories of liability. 3 The case proceeded to trial over 12 days in September 2013. Regarding the specific mechanism of injury, plaintiff’s theory at trial was that one of the Genesys residents, either Dr. Phung or Dr. Starr, caused plaintiff’s brachial plexus injury by applying excessive lateral or rotational traction to plaintiff’s head or neck after encountering the shoulder dystocia. Genesys’ theory was that plaintiff was injured by the endogenous forces of labor (Bryson’s contractions), after her shoulder became stuck during delivery.

Plaintiff’s standard of care expert, Dr. David Plourd, testified that plaintiff’s permanent brachial plexus injury was the result of “excessive lateral and/or rotational traction on the nerves of the right side of the neck due to delivery by inexperienced obstetricians without supervision at the time of delivery.” Dr. Plourd testified that plaintiff suffered a “pan-plexopathy,” which affected all levels of the nerve roots. He explained that the “most common” and “number one cause” of a permanent brachial plexus injury is excessive lateral or rotational traction applied by the delivering physician, which accounts for 90 to 94% of cases of permanent brachial plexus injury. According to Dr. Plourd, the propulsive forces of labor alone have never been scientifically shown to cause permanent brachial plexus injury. He explained that congenital defects, osteomyelitis, and utero anomalies during pregnancy could also result in brachial plexus deficiencies, but none of these exceptions offered a “biologically plausible alternative explanation” for plaintiff’s injury in this case. Dr. Plourd explained that hospital records revealed plaintiff had bruising on her right cheek and forehead after birth, which he said confirmed that excessive traction was applied in a downward fashion.

Dr. Plourd explained that physicians with less than four years of experience following a residency are more likely to cause brachial plexus injuries during a delivery. He testified that the standard of care required the Genesys residents to contact Dr. Powers when Bryson was eight centimeters dilated and when she had the urge to push. In Dr. Plourd’s opinion, if an experienced physician, like Dr. Powers, had been present at the delivery, “[v]irtually every time” the physician using appropriate maneuvers could safely release an impacted shoulder and successfully deliver a fetus without causing permanent injury.

Dr. Plourd also testified that between 10:30 p.m. and 11:20 p.m. on the evening of delivery, the standard of care required the Genesys residents to notify Dr.

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Asia Anderson v. Jennifer L Tracy Rn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asia-anderson-v-jennifer-l-tracy-rn-michctapp-2018.