Bazargani v. State Civil Service Commission

711 A.2d 529
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 15, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 711 A.2d 529 (Bazargani v. State Civil Service Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bazargani v. State Civil Service Commission, 711 A.2d 529 (Pa. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

This is an appeal filed by Dr. Tawoos Bazargani (Employee) challenging the State Civil Service Commission’s (Commission) order dismissing Employee’s appeal of her removal from her position as a regular staff psychiatrist at Haverford State Hospital, Department of Public Welfare (Appointing Authority). The Commission concluded that the Appointing Authority established just cause to remove Employee, pursuant to Section 807 of the Civil Service Act, 1 for her failure to follow hospital policy regarding the administration and monitoring of Lithium prescribed to her assigned patients. Employee questions whether the Appointing Authority established just cause for her removal.

I.

Employee became employed with the Appointing Authority in April 1978 as a staff psychiatrist. She received her medical degree in Iran and served an internship, residency and fellowship in New York, Michigan and Pennsylvania, respectively, before commencing her employment with Haverford State Hospital. At the time of her discharge, Employee was assigned to Unit 14East, to which she was transferred in September 1993 to care for patients who suffer severe psychological problems. After determining that Employee had deviated from its policy as to Lithium treatment, the Appointing Authority met with Employee on November 4,1994 and December 7, 1994 at pre-disciplinary conferences to discuss concerns about her treatment approach. Employee’s responses at both meetings were unacceptable to the Appointing Authority.

On December 9, 1994, Employee received a letter informing her that the Appointing Authority had suspended her pending an investigation. On December 22, 1994, the Appointing Authority sent another notice to Employee informing her that she was terminated, effective the close of business on December 27, 1994. The notice listed the following charges: inappropriate prescription of medications; failure to comply with hospital policies and monitoring practices which resulted in a patient’s hospitalization; failure to follow policy and procedure related to two other patients; and failure to follow direction, policy and procedure and falsification of documents concerning a patient. The charges stem from Employee’s treatment of Caroline K., Theresa M., Anthony S. and James H. Central to this appeal is the treatment of Caroline K., who was admitted to Bryn Mawr Hospital on October 24,1994 in a comatose state due to Lithium toxicity, and Theresa M., who received continuous Lithium prescriptions from Employee and too few readings of her Lithium level. Caroline K. is seventy-four years old, and Theresa M. is thirty years old.

Employee appealed her removal to the Commission, and hearings were held on Oc *531 tober 31, 1995 and May 1, 1996. Employee testified that she did not falsify her patient’s records and denied that she improperly treated Caroline K. or Theresa M. She testified that she did not observe Lithium toxicity in either patient and that she believed it was appropriate to prescribe higher dosages of Lithium when it appeared that patients were not responding to their current dosage. She also disagreed with the medical diagnosis that Caroline K. suffered Lithium toxicity, claiming that Activan, another drug administered to her, was the cause of her condition. Employee attributed her patients’ high Lithium levels to what she called “false highs” and stated that the Lithium levels were being taken too close to the time that the Lithium dosage was given, which would show a peak reading and not the true amount of Lithium in a patient’s blood stream.

Dr. Bazargani presented Dr. Dan Jacobs, a board-certified psychiatrist, as her expert witness. From 1978 to 1981, he worked with patients in the state health-care system with psychiatric problems similar to those treated by Employee. He opined that Employee’s treatment was permissible because of the type of patients she treated. He also stated that when a doctor prescribed a higher dosage of Lithium, it showed that the doctor treated patients as individuals rather than as prototypes. Dr. Jacobs acknowledged on cross-examination that he speculated as to the causes for Caroline K.’s comatose state.

The Appointing Authority presented, among others, Drs. Lyudima Glazman, John Brady, Joseph DiGiacamo and Richard Eisner. Drs. Brady, DiGiacomo and Eisner reached the same conclusion and questioned Employee’s competency as a psychiatrist. Dr. Brady, a board-certified psychiatrist, was hired specifically to review the patients’ medical records. It appeared to him that Employee used Lithium to control behavior; he stated that this treatment practice was dangerous because “it is easy to exceed a safe level and get into a toxic range” and because the positive effects of Lithium are not reflected until weeks after a patient is stabilized. Dr. DiGiacamo testified that before Employee began treating Caroline K, a notation was placed in her file that her Lithium level should remain around .8 millequivalents per liter (meq./L) because of the patient’s failing kidneys. However, Employee substantially increased the patient’s Lithium intake. Caroline’s level reached 2.99 meq./L on October 20, 1994, and Theresa’s level reached 2.37 meq./L on August 2,1994. Employee, nevertheless, noted in Theresa’s chart that her condition was satisfactory. Dr. Glazman, Employee’s supervisor, testified that prior to her suspension and subsequent removal, the hospital held two pre-disciplinary conferences with Employee to discuss hospital concerns about her treatment practices, and Employee ignored the Appointing Authority’s concerns because she believed in another treatment approach not followed by the hospital.

The Commission found that the Appointing Authority’s evidence was credible and sufficient to support Employee’s removal for just cause. However, it dismissed the charges of falsifying records and mistreatment of James H. and Anthony S. because the Appointing Authority had not established those charges. The Commission rejected Employee’s claim that she was charged with medical malpractice and concluded instead that the Appointing Authority removed Employee for her failure to adhere to its policies and procedures rather than for her professional negligence. 2

II.

Employee initially argues that the Appointing Authority lacked just cause to remove her and that the Appointing Authority failed to demonstrate that Employee could not or would not perform her assigned duties. Employee also argues that her suspension notice was inadequate because it lacked clarity in apprising her of the charges presented as required by 4 Pa.Code § 105.3. Finally, Employee maintains that the Commission should have accepted her argument *532 that the charges against her amounted to an allegation of medical malpractice, which would have allowed her to present a “second school of thought” defense or to prove that her treatment and monitoring procedures were acceptable in the profession. Employee cite Levine v. Rosen, 532 Pa. 512, 616 A.2d 623 (1992).

The Appointing Authority contends that the notice issue was waived because it was not argued below.

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Bluebook (online)
711 A.2d 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bazargani-v-state-civil-service-commission-pacommwct-1998.