Blake v. Southcoast Health System, Inc.

145 F. Supp. 2d 126, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8378, 2001 WL 682741
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 12, 2001
DocketCiv.A. 00-10591-WGY
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 145 F. Supp. 2d 126 (Blake v. Southcoast Health System, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. Southcoast Health System, Inc., 145 F. Supp. 2d 126, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8378, 2001 WL 682741 (D. Mass. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

YOUNG, Chief Judge.

The Hippocratic philosophy of medicine 1 declares that nothing should be more important to a physician than the best interests of the patient who comes to him for care.... Few people faced with a diagnosis of potentially remediable ... disease should be willing to give up the struggle if there is any reasonable chance that some promising form of treatment is available to lessen the ravages of the disease or cure it. To do anything less is not stoicism, but folly. 2

Behind the arid record of every legal case are genuine human beings with hopes, fears, aspirations, and an almost prayerful desire that sound laws will be wisely administered. Occasionally, though, there comes before the Court a situation evidencing such profound and shocking institutional incompetence leading to such unspeakable agony that the very stones of *128 the courthouse would seem to cry out for relief. 3

This is such a case.

I. The Facts 4

Betty Ann Blake (“Betty Ann”), born in 1951, suffered from severe mental retardation, microcephaly, 5 scoliosis, blindness, deafness, and muteness. She weighed a mere fifty-five pounds. Despite her disabilities, Betty Ann, with the help of her parents, lived a fulfilling life. Her parents, William J. Blake (“Mr.Blake”) and Theresa R. Blake (“Mrs.Blake”), despite repeated advice to institutionalize Betty Ann from birth because of her disabilities, chose to keep her at home with their family and to care for her as long as they could. While the Blakes cared for Betty Ann in their home, they provided her with not only loving and nurturing surroundings, but also special care specific to her disability, including special education, occupational therapy, and physical therapy. When the Blakes could no longer care for Betty Ann because of their own advancing age, however, they made the difficult decision to place her in another’s care. In 1996, after forty-four years, Betty Ann moved out of her parents’ home and into a group home in Fall River, Massachusetts. After this split, the Blakes made sure to visit Betty Ann on a regular basis.

On Friday, October 30, 1998, while at her day care program, Betty Ann began to choke on a large piece of meat — she repeatedly grabbed at her throat; she had substantial secretion and drooling; and she had difficulty breathing. Requiring immediate medical treatment, Betty Ann was rushed to the emergency room at Charlton Hospital, 6 the closest emergency medical facility. Betty Ann arrived at 12:00 Noon, still exhibiting pronounced symptoms of choking and respiratory distress.

Were the reader to stop here, she might feel relief that Betty Ann was so quickly placed in the hands of medical care professionals, fully capable of providing life-saving care to Betty Ann. But Betty Ann’s story does not end here. Instead of offering appropriate medical assistance, the doctors prolonged Betty Ann’s slow suffocation for twenty-six hours and ultimately caused her agonizing death. 7

*129 Upon Betty Ann’s arrival at Charlton Hospital, Dr. Pellegrino, the emergency room physician on duty, and several nurses observed Betty Ann’s symptoms of choking. Although it goes without saying that emergency situations require immediate action, Betty Ann’s doctor did not take such action. Instead, he and the nurses tied Betty Ann down on a stretcher and left her alone behind a curtain.

The Blakes, who arrived shortly after Betty Ann, consulted with Dr. Pellegrino. Dr. Pellegrino, who had not looked down Betty Ann’s throat, suggested that she had burned her esophagus eating hot food. The Blakes explained to Dr. Pellegrino that this was impossible because Betty Ann never ate hot foods. The Blakes then proceeded to tell Dr. Pellegrino that Betty Ann was choking — she was signaling that she was choking; she was grabbing at her throat; and she was having trouble breathing. With this knowledge in hand, however, Dr. Pellegrino still did not remove the food obstructing Betty Ann’s airway. He performed only cursory checks for food, and did not attempt more effective treatments, such as using a scope, because, as he put it, it would be “difficult.” His limited efforts proving useless, Dr. Pelle-grino left Betty Ann, still slowly choking to death, for two hours without further medical treatment. Her parents’ insistence that Betty Ann was choking and their pleas for treatment went unheeded.

It was now 5:30 p.m. Five-and-a-half hours had passed while Betty Ann suffered slow and painful strangulation, increasingly deprived of air. Still having received no treatment, Betty Ann was admitted to the hospital. Dr. Miguel Brillantes (“Dr. Bril-lantes”) was assigned to care for Betty Ann once admitted. The Blakes repeated to Dr. Brillantes that Betty Ann was choking. His response was twofold. First, he prescribed Benadryl — a decongestant utterly ineffective for relieving Betty Ann’s choking. Second, he asked the Blakes if they wanted a “do not resuscitate order.” Dr. Brillantes thus appeared to recognize that Betty Ann was struggling for her life — yet he turned away, doing nothing-further.

Betty Ann was left to gasp for air throughout the night. Blind and deaf, separated from her loving parents, she slowly strangled while in the care of those whose first duty it was to save her life. One cannot begin even to speculate as to the thoughts that crowded through the mind of this lonely, isolated individual.

That same evening, both Dr. Pellegrino and Dr. Brillantes consulted a third physician, Dr. Thomas F. Cahill (“Dr. Cahill”), about Betty Ann’s condition. Dr. Cahill “declined” to come to the hospital to observe Betty Ann first hand. He did, however, look in on her on the following afternoon — Saturday, October 31, 1998 — by which time Betty Ann had been struggling to breathe for more than twenty-four hours.

Had there been any doubt that Betty Ann was choking, it was removed when, after merely observing Betty Ann and talking briefly with the Blakes, Dr. Cahill recognized — finally—that he faced an ex *130 treme emergency situation requiring immediate action. At approximately 2:30 p.m., Dr. Cahill x-rayed Betty Ann and performed a scope of her throat. With the help of another specialist, Dr. Cahill was at last able to remove the large piece of meat that had been blocking Betty Ann’s esophagus and depriving her of air for two days.

Dr. Cahill was too late. The delay in removing the blockage from Betty Ann’s throat caused her to develop severe heart and lung complications. The late removal of the blockage could not reverse her worsening condition. On Saturday afternoon, Betty Ann suffered a heart attack. Her lungs filled with liquid, and she suffered convulsions.

Betty Ann died Sunday morning, November 1, 1998, as a direct result of the fact 8

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Bluebook (online)
145 F. Supp. 2d 126, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8378, 2001 WL 682741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-southcoast-health-system-inc-mad-2001.