Benedict v. United States

634 F. Supp. 123, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27317
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 2, 1986
DocketC78-0529
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 634 F. Supp. 123 (Benedict v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benedict v. United States, 634 F. Supp. 123, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27317 (N.D. Ohio 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AND DECISION

BATCHELDER, District Judge.

This cause came on for trial to the Court sitting without a jury, on the complaint of Virginia and Leonard Benedict against the United States, seeking damages for injuries suffered as a result of Virginia Benedict’s inoculation for swine flu. This case is one of the many “swine flu” cases filed throughout the country following the mass immunization program undertaken by the United States government in 1976. In this particular case, the government has conceded that the plaintiff contracted Guillain-Barre Syndrome (hereinafter GBS), and thus, by the terms of the pretrial order of Judge Gerhard Gesell, the plaintiff need not prove any particular theory of liability, but must prove that the swine flu inoculate which she received was causally related to her GBS.

*124 The expert testimony and medical literature, and indeed, the parties, are in agreement that medicine has not yet developed any test capable of determining the cause of GBS in any given patient. Thus, to prevail in this case, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that her swine flu inoculation was the most likely cause of her subsequent GBS. Because the plaintiff has failed to sustain her burden of proof, the Court finds that judgment must be rendered against the plaintiffs and in favor of the defendant, the United States of America, and makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of this judgment.

FINDINGS OF FACT

A. FACTS SURROUNDING THE SWINE FLU INOCULATION AND THE ONSET OF PLAINTIFF’S GBS.

Although there are numerous discrepancies and inconsistencies between Mrs. Benedict’s testimony at trial and her deposition, which was taken some five and one-half years prior to the trial and considerably closer in time to the inoculation and her ensuing problems, I find that the deposition testimony is more consistent with the medical and hospital records and histories than is the trial testimony. Further, while I am convinced that both plaintiffs and their daughter, Debbie Stahurski, who also testified at trial, have in their trial testimony endeavored to relate the events subsequent to the inoculation and leading to the onset of Mrs. Benedict’s GBS as accurately as they are able, I am likewise convinced that their memories of these events have inevitably been colored by their having undergone the horror of GBS, either as its victim or the family members of the victim, and having then lived with the stress of the subsequent litigation for over seven years. Accordingly, after reviewing the trial testimony, the depositions filed in this case and the hospital and medical records, I find the facts surrounding the inoculation and the subsequent onset of GBS to be as follows.

Virginia and Leonard Benedict each received a swine flu inoculation on November 5, 1976. Although Leonard Benedict suffered no ill effects from the shot, Virginia Benedict felt fatigued and not well for approximately two days after receiving the shot, and then felt better, until approximately two weeks following the inoculation. At that time she began to experience a “flu like” illness, with general achiness of her muscles. Mrs. Benedict continued to feel ill to some degree throughout the remainder of November and December, but did not seek any medical assistance until December 29, 1976. On that date, she visited her family physician, Dr. Leonard Magpoc, for treatment of a cough from which she had been suffering for an indeterminate period of time.

Doctor Magpoc noted on his office records that Mrs. Benedict’s cough was “productive” and prescribed a course of treatment consisting of tetracycline and an expectorant. It is significant to note that Dr. Magpoc’s records and deposition testimony indicate that the December 29th office visit was due solely to the upper respiratory infection, and that the Doctor conducted no neurological examination of Mrs. Benedict because she did not complain of any symptoms which indicated the need for any such examination.

Mrs. Benedict’s upper respiratory infection improved after the visit to Dr. Magpoc, and he had no further contact with her until she was admitted to Southwest General Hospital on January 13, 1977, complaining of severe pain in the lower back and the nape of the neck, and difficulty in walking. Doctor Magpoc’s deposition testimony indicates that upon admission to the hospital Mrs. Benedict’s problems in walking were due to the pain, rather than weakness, and that her reflexes at the time of admission to the hospital were normal. The medical history taken shortly after her admission to the hospital reflects that Mrs. Benedict began experiencing pain on January 11, 1977 after lifting her granddaughter.

*125 The Southwest General Hospital records note that by January 16, 1977, the third hospital day, Mrs. Benedict was complaining of weakness in both legs as well as the pain, and by January 17, 1977, she was becoming uncoordinated and experiencing difficulty in movement, and was unable to move her legs. At this point, Dr. Magpoc called in Doctor John Bryk, a neurosurgeon, as a consulting physician, who diagnosed Mrs. Benedict’s condition as GBS, noting that she had a four day history of ascending paralysis, and that at the time of his examination of her on January 17, she had no reflexes in her ankles and knees.

Mrs. Benedict was transferred on January 17, 1977, to Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital where she remained for over one month, during which time her condition deteriorated to a paralysis of all four extremities as well as her facial muscles, and she required the assistance of a respirator to breathe. The Metro General Hospital records of January 18, 1977, reflect that she had been suffering from weakness for five days with accompanying tingling of hands and feet. Those records further reflect that the patient herself furnished considerable history to the Doctor, specifying that she first had noticed low back pain sometime after picking up her “niece.” She also advised that she had been suffering from the “flu” for some six weeks, with a cough which was so severe that she experienced occasional incontinence, but that the cough had recently improved.

After a long and arduous ordeal including extensive physical therapy, Mrs. Benediet recovered from the illness, to the point where she is generally able to walk without the assistance of a cane and can again drive a car.

B. CAUSATION.

The factual issue which is pivotal to a resolution of this case is whether Virginia Benedict’s GBS was causally related to the swine flu inoculation. Because the parties are in agreement that the actual cause of GBS cannot be determined with medical certainty in any given case, it is necessary to determine first, how the most likely cause of any given case of GBS may be identified, and then whether the most likely cause of this case of GBS was the preceding swine flu inoculation. After careful review of the testimony of all of the expert witnesses and the documents admitted into evidence in this matter, I find as follows.

It is clear that in the absence of any medical or biological tests to ascertain the specific cause of GBS, its cause in a specific case cannot be established without relying on epidemiological data.

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634 F. Supp. 123, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 27317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benedict-v-united-states-ohnd-1986.