Avilez v. South Jefferson General Hospital

403 So. 2d 1260, 1981 La. App. LEXIS 5295
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 1981
DocketNo. 12043
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 403 So. 2d 1260 (Avilez v. South Jefferson General Hospital) 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
Avilez v. South Jefferson General Hospital, 403 So. 2d 1260, 1981 La. App. LEXIS 5295 (La. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

KLIEBERT, Judge.

On May 26, 1978, JoAnne Avilez (hereinafter “Avilez”), plaintiff-appellee, struck her hand through a glass door at her home and was admitted to South Jefferson General Hospital (hereinafter “South Jefferson”), for surgery and skin graft to her hand. After the operation, Avilez was returned to her hospital room for the usual post-operative treatment. At approximately 6:00 o’clock A.M. the following morning, plaintiff awoke and went to the bathroom. While enroute to the bathroom, Avilez began to feel sick and lightheaded. She pulled the emergency light button for assistance but no one came. Plaintiff then lost consciousness and fell forward to the floor. Avilez sued South Jefferson General Hospital seeking damages for injuries to her mouth, neck, arms, back, hips and legs, as well as for mental pain and suffering and disfiguration. After trial on the merits, Avilez was awarded damages of $14,-623.08. South Jefferson appeals.

On appeal, South Jefferson argues three main specifications of error: 1) Plaintiff had not fulfilled her burden of proof by showing that the hospital was guilty of negligence which caused her injuries; 2) plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; 3) the damages awarded were excessive.

Dr. Edward Sudderth, Administrator of South Jefferson Hospital, was called to testify under cross-examination. He testified to South Jefferson being a small, 75 room hospital which is shaped like an “X”, with the nurses’ station located in the middle of the “X”. He stated that Avilez was in room 102, which is the second room down the hallway from the nurses’ station. Sud-derth explained the bathroom situation whereby one bathroom services two rooms. Further, the bathroom has an emergency system whereby a white light over the door to the room flashes simultaneously with a white and red light at the nurses’ station. Further, a beeping sound begins and continues until someone at the nurses’ station responds. However, the only way to turn these lights off is to go down the hallway and turn them off in the bathroom.

JoAnne Avilez testified as follows: After her surgery, she was placed in Room 102— Bed A and was told by the nurse that she was not to get up from bed too soon after surgery. At 3:00 P.M. on May 26, she called for help to go to the bathroom, but no one came. She called again at 5:00 P.M., but no one came; instead, her mother had to assist here. (In a prior deposition, plaintiff had stated that she made it to the bathroom unassisted at 5:00 P.M., but at trial, she explained the inconsistency by stating that her mother had reminded her, subsequent to the deposition, that her mother had assisted her to the bathroom at 5:00 P.M.)

A nurse came in at approximately 8:00 P.M., looking for a specimen and told plain[1262]*1262tiff that someone would be there about 5:30 A.M. to get another specimen. She received a shot for pain at approximately 9:00 P.M., and then the nurse raised the railing on the left side of the bed but failed to do so on the right side.

The next morning no one arrived for the specimen. At approximately 6:00 A.M., Avilez got up and went to the bathroom. Avilez only had a throbbing headache when she got up, but as she approached the bathroom, she started feeling lightheaded and dizzy. As she opened the door she started feeling clammy and sweaty all about her whole body, and when she got to the bathroom, she rang the “call” light, grabbed onto the hand rail and sink, and eased herself down to the toilet. She then took a urine specimen and took care of her menstrual needs. At that time, things began to get grayish looking, and as she was holding onto the sink moaning for help, she heard someone asking “Are you all right? May I help you?” She then fainted and fell, face first.

When Avilez came to, she was unclothed (the surgical gown had fallen off) and she crawled back to her bed. However, prior to leaving the bathroom the door on the other side of the bathroom opened and a woman with dark hair and a long pink robe “did something and closed the door immediately.”

Avilez related that Annie Jacks, who was dressed in blue, was the first person she remembered seeing' after she returned to bed, and then two women in white came in. Jacks told her that the nurses were arguing over who would answer the call light and that there had been complaints all night about the nurses responding to calls. Avi-lez stated that the emergency light was on the entire time she was in the bathroom. She estimated that from the time she got in the bathroom, rang the light and took care of her personal needs, approximately three minutes had elapsed, and that from ringing the bell until she got back into bed was approximately four to five minutes.

Adele Valliant, the licensed practical nurse on duty at the time of the accident, testified that she was at the nurses’ station when Avilez signalled for assistance. Valli-ant twice pushed the intercom to Room 100 (sic) and asked what was wrong, but no one answered. Valliant then called to the nurses’ lounge for an aide, but received no answer, so she then got up and went to Room 100 herself. Before she went to look she told the registered nurse on duty to find an aide. Upon arriving at Room 100, she determined that both patients were sleeping. She then went back to see if she had the right room. Upon further investigation, she saw Avilez, naked, standing at the foot of the bed trying to get back into bed. As she assisted Avilez back into bed she noticed Annie Jacks, an aide, for the first time. She noticed that Avilez had broken her front teeth, but denied seeing any blood around her mouth. Valliant estimated that approximately a minute or a minute and one-half had elapsed between the first buzzer until the time she saw Mrs. Alivez standing in the room.

Mildred Raacke Kepler, the registered nurse and night supervisor at the time of the accident, testified that she and Valliant were at the nurses’ station and Annie Jacks, the aide, was in the nurses’ lounge at the time the emergency buzzer first sounded. Kepler related that Valliant had gone down the hall when the light came on and how she (Kepler) had called for the aide at the nurses’ lounge. Kepler stated that both Valliant and Jacks arrived before she did, but that Valliant had gone to investigate before Jacks had. Kepler estimated from the time she had first heard the buzzer until the time she arrived at room 102 approximately one and one-half to two minutes had elapsed.

Nell Jordon, plaintiff’s mother, testified that on the evening of May 26, she was present at 5:00 P.M. when Avilez had called for assistance to go to the bathroom but none came, and she had to assist Avilez herself.

Annie Jacks, the nurses’ aide, testified to having reacted immediately when she heard the emergency bell. She claimed to have arrived at the scene in less than one minute [1263]*1263and that plaintiff was standing next to the wash basin with her gown on when she arrived. Jacks did not remember Valliant being there when she arrived.

Hospitals and their employees have a duty to respond to a patient in need of emergency care, especially when the patient is signalling for assistance from the bathroom. Furthermore, where, as here, hospital personnel do not want the patient to go to the bathroom unassisted, said personnel have a duty to ensure that the chances of the patient attempting to do so are minimized and therefore they have a duty to take necessary protective measures (e.g., putting up both sides of the hospital bed) while leaving the patient unattended.

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Bluebook (online)
403 So. 2d 1260, 1981 La. App. LEXIS 5295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avilez-v-south-jefferson-general-hospital-lactapp-1981.