Bichai v. Dignity Health

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 2021
DocketF078658
StatusPublished

This text of Bichai v. Dignity Health (Bichai v. Dignity Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bichai v. Dignity Health, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 2/25/21 Modified and Certified for Pub. 3/12/21 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

WILLIAM N. BICHAI, F078658 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. BCV-18-100629) v.

DIGNITY HEALTH et al., OPINION Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Kern County. Thomas S. Clark, Judge. Fenton Law Group, Henry R. Fenton and Dennis E. Lee for Plaintiff and Appellant. Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, Barry S. Landsberg, Doreen W. Shenfeld, Joanna S. McCallum and Colin M. McGrath for Defendant and Respondent Dignity Health. -ooOoo- Plaintiff William N. Bichai, M.D., reapplied for staff privileges at a hospital and was preliminarily told his application would be granted. After Bichai disagreed with the treatment one of his patients received at another hospital, and advocated for what Bichai believed was medically appropriate care, the second hospital reported to the first hospital that Bichai had interfered with a patient’s treatment. The medical executive committee of the medical staff of the first hospital then recommended that Bichai’s reapplication for staff privileges be denied based on his inability to control his behavior and work cooperatively with others. Bichai sued both hospitals before the first hospital issued a final decision in the peer review proceeding addressing his reapplication. Bichai alleged multiple claims, including retaliation in violation of Health and Safety Code section 1278.5 (section 1278.5), a whistleblower provision that protects healthcare workers who advocate for medically appropriate care of a patient. This appeal arises from the trial court’s decision to sustain a demurrer filed by the first hospital—that is, the hospital where Bichai’s reapplication for privileges was pending. We conclude Bichai’s claims against that hospital for unfair competition and conspiring with the second hospital to violate section 1278.5 failed to allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The hospital had yet to take any adverse action against plaintiff and his reapplication for privileges. The medical staff is a separate legal entity and, thus, its recommendation to deny Bichai’s reapplication is not an act of wrongdoing by the hospital. Consequently, a cause of action against the hospital has not yet accrued. We therefore affirm the judgment. FACTS Bichai is a licensed nephrologist and internist residing in Bakersfield and practices medicine in the Kern County area. Defendant Dignity Health is a California corporation that does business as Mercy Hospital in Bakersfield (Mercy Hospital). Defendant San Joaquin Community Hospital is a California corporation that does business as Adventist Health Bakersfield (SJC Hospital). Bichai had privileges at Mercy Hospital from 2008 until June 2012, when, by mutual agreement, he surrendered those privileges. Bichai obtained privileges at SJC Hospital in 2008 and has been on a leave of absence since May 2013.

2. In April 2016, Bichai submitted a reapplication for medical staff membership at Mercy Hospital. Bichai completed the University of California San Diego Physician Assessment Clinical Education (PACE) Program and, in January 2017, the PACE Program issued its findings that he was fit for duty without accommodation. In May 2017, the medical executive committee of the medical staff of Mercy Hospital invited Bichai to be interviewed. During the interview, Bichai was asked several hypothetical questions about interpersonal relationships. In August 2017, Bichai and the chief of staff of Mercy Hospital spoke and Bichai was told he was going to be granted privileges with some conditions. Bichai’s counsel also was informed of Mercy Hospital’s intent to grant privileges. Later that August, a patient of Bichai, with whom he had a long professional relationship, suffered a heart attack while at the Rehabilitation Center of Bakersfield (Rehab Center). The patient was taken by ambulance to the emergency room at SJC Hospital. After being evaluated in the emergency room, the patient was admitted to SJC Hospital under the care of Sound Hospitalist Group (Sound), which may be an entity separate from SJC Hospital and the Adventist family of entities. The patient’s treatment team at SJC Hospital included an attending physician and consulting physicians. The team’s consulting physicians included Dr. Sam Singh, a cardiologist, and Dr. Amir Mokri, a nephrologist, both of whom Bichai knew well from his time on SJC Hospital’s medical staff. The same night the patient was taken from Rehab Center to SJC Hospital, Bichai telephoned SJC Hospital and informed the person he spoke with that the patient’s hospitalist needed to address the patient’s chronic kidney issues and other health issues. Bichai also texted information about the patient to Dr. Mokri to ensure he knew about the patient’s kidney disease and other health issues. During the week or longer that the patient was treated at SJC Hospital, Bichai spoke by telephone with the members of the patient’s treatment team, except Dr. Dang, a

3. hospitalist. On August 28, 2017, Bichai received a text message from Elizabeth Rogers, a liaison of Rehab Center, stating that the patient was being sent from SJC Hospital to home care with Adventist Home Health, an Adventist entity associated with SJC Hospital. Bichai was concerned with the potential inadequacy of home health care to help the patient’s recovery. To address this concern, Bichai contacted the patient, but was unable to communicate effectively because the patient is a native Spanish speaker with some English and Bichai speaks very little Spanish. Bichai then called the patient’s son, who confirmed his father was very weak and they agreed the patient should return to the Rehab Center, rather than return home. Based on this discussion, Bichai spoke with the physician at SJC Hospital and recommended that the patient be returned to the Rehab Center. Bichai then spoke by telephone with a hospital case manager, whose job was to coordinate care with medical providers and ensure a safe discharge plan. The case manager informed Bichai that the patient was strong enough to go home where he would be treated by Adventist Home Health. Bichai disagreed, set forth his concerns, and asked to speak with the Sound hospitalist who made the determination to send the patient home. Bichai was told the hospitalist was Dr. Dang. Bichai phoned Dr. Dang several times and left messages, but she never returned his calls. Bichai next phoned Sound and was referred to Dr. Dang’s boss, Dr. Ronald Reynoso. Bichai’s declaration states: “I was stunned when Dr. Reynoso immediately became very angry and asked why I was trying ‘so hard’ to ‘force’ the patient to ‘go to a nursing home,’ which was an absolute and total mischaracterization of what I was trying to do. He also accused me of harassing Dr. Dang, even though she never even called me back or ever responded to me at any time.” Bichai explained his purpose in attempting to contact Dr. Dang and also voiced his concern over a trend, based on many observations, of SJC Hospital sending patients directly to another Adventist owned entity. Bichai’s declaration states: “Dr. Reynoso angrily ignored my concerns and simply terminated the

4. conversation by stating that he would notify the [SJC Hospital] Chief of Staff and the Chief Medical Officer (‘CMO’) of my involvement in this ‘incident.’ ” On September 25, 2017, the medical executive committee of Mercy Hospital’s Medical Staff voted to recommend the denial of Bichai’s reapplication for staff membership. On October 2, 2017, Dr. Emanuel Dozier, chief of staff, sent Bichai a letter informing him of the proposed action and the medical executive committee’s determinations.

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Bichai v. Dignity Health, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bichai-v-dignity-health-calctapp-2021.