Bowman v. The University of Chicago Hospitals

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 26, 2006
Docket1-04-2478 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Bowman v. The University of Chicago Hospitals (Bowman v. The University of Chicago Hospitals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowman v. The University of Chicago Hospitals, (Ill. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION June 26, 2006

No. 1-04-2478

BELINDA BOWMAN, Indiv. and as Independent Adm'r of ) Appeal from the Estate of Solomon Bowman, a Minor, Deceased, ) the Circuit Court ) of Cook County Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 00 L 7346 ) THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO HOSPITALS, ) KWANG-SUN LEE, and MICHAEL SCHREIBER, ) Honorable ) Thomas L. Hogan, Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE CAHILL delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff Belinda Bowman brought a medical negligence action against defendants

University of Chicago Hospitals, Dr. Kwang-Sun Lee and Dr. Michael Schreiber after her

newborn son Solomon died in defendant hospital's neonatal intensive care unit. Plaintiff

dismissed defendant Schreiber before trial. A jury found in favor of defendants and against

plaintiff. Plaintiff appeals, claiming: (1) the jury's verdict was against the manifest weight of the

evidence; (2) the trial court erred in denying her motion for a directed verdict; and (3) the trial

court allowed improper cross-examination of plaintiff's expert witnesses. We affirm.

The evidence at trial showed the following facts. Solomon was delivered prematurely in

an emergency Caesarian section at defendant hospital on August 6, 1999. (All dates that follow 1-04-2478

are in the year 1999 unless otherwise noted.) Solomon was placed on a ventilator with an

endotracheal tube and started on antibiotics because of the risk of infection. On August 9,

cultures taken from him were negative for an infection and antibiotics were discontinued.

Solomon's physicians became concerned about a possible infection again on August 13, but a

culture from Solomon's endotracheal tube was negative. From then until August 21, Solomon

appeared to be progressing well. Then Solomon's blood counts began to change, including a

Ashift to the left,@ a particular type of change in the blood count. Solomon looked clinically ill

late on August 25 or early on August 26. His physicians conducted additional tests and gave him

antibiotics, but he developed an infection and septic shock. Solomon died on August 28.

Plaintiff presented the testimony of defendant Lee, who testified as an adverse witness

under section 2-1101 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1102 (West 2000)). Lee

said Solomon was born prematurely and died from pneumonia and sepsis. Lee agreed that a

pseudomonas organism colonized at the site of the baby's trachea, then went to the lungs and

bloodstream. Lee testified that if doctors suspect sepsis based on a baby=s clinical signs, they

perform blood tests and administer antibiotics. Lee testified that if a baby has a colonization of

pseudomonas organisms, the condition is not treated unless the baby shows signs of infection,

pneumonia or sepsis. He said pseudomonas is rare. He testified that he met the standard of care

in this case. Lee admitted that a chest X Ray on August 26 showed "a density which is

compatible with pneumonia." Lee said he thought pseudomonas was "quite possible" when the

baby became seriously ill. He testified that an infectious disease doctor ordered a pseudomonas-

specific antibiotic for Solomon on August 27.

Dr. Blaise Congeni, a pediatric infectious disease specialist, testified as plaintiff's expert.

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Congeni said his opinions were based on Solomon's hospital chart. He said Lee deviated from

the standard of care in treating Solomon. He opined that if a tracheal and aspirate culture had

been taken on August 22, the presence of pseudomonas would have been known by August 23,

and that the standard of care specified that antibiotics should have been given at that time.

Congeni testified that there was no culture until August 26 and no therapy until August 27. He

opined that had Solomon been given pseudomonas therapy by August 24, he would have

survived. He agreed that Solomon "was doing pretty well symptomologically up until *** the

late evening of the 25th." He said the medical term "shift to the left" means that a blood count

has shifted toward more immature cells. He said infection soon comes to mind when a Ashift to

the left@ is seen. He gave his opinion to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that Lee

deviated from the standard of care. He testified that the deviation was a failure to respond to the

"shift to the left," to do a culture on August 22 and to provide pseudomonas therapy on August

23. This, he testified, caused or contributed to Solomon=s death.

Congeni admitted on cross-examination that a "shift to the left" can have causes other

than infection. He testified that 99% or more of his practice deals with children older and bigger

than Solomon. He said a bad result from a doctor's judgment call is not the same as medical

negligence. Defense counsel asked Congeni if textbooks would contain useful information.

Plaintiff's counsel objected on the basis that defense counsel intended to introduce literature that

the witness had not designated as authoritative, but only as helpful and reliable. Congeni

testified in response to the objection that he considered the pediatric textbook by Drs. Jack S.

Remington and Jerome O. Klein to be a standard, well-respected text. A table from the

Remington and Klein text was admitted into evidence. The table showed the outcomes of

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neonatal bacterial systemic infection at Parkland Memorial Hospital from 1969 to 1989. The

table showed a 76% mortality rate in babies with pseudomonas. Congeni agreed with statements

from the text that bacterial infection may "masquerade" as other noninfectious conditions and

that signs and symptoms of an infection may be vague and misleading. On redirect, Congeni

testified that the standard of care required a sputum and blood culture on August 22.

Plaintiff called Dr. Marcus Hermansen, a pediatrician and neonatologist. Hermansen

testified that Lee deviated from the standard of care in his treatment of Solomon and that those

deviations were the direct cause of the baby=s death. He said Lee deviated from the standard of

care by not obtaining cultures on August 21 when infection should have been ruled out as part of

a differential diagnosis. Hermansen said that, based on the information about the baby on

August 21, he would have been "highly suspicious for an infection." He opined that had

antibiotics against pseudomonas been started on August 21, 22 or 23, the baby would have

recovered and survived. Hermansen said he receives 15% to 20% of his income from

medical/legal work and he reviews more cases for plaintiffs than for defendants.

Hermansen said on cross-examination that Solomon's risk factors at birth gave him a 75%

to 80% chance of survival. He testified that there is a statistically significant association

between intrauterine growth restriction, which Solomon had suffered, and neonatal death.

During questioning on blood counts, Hermansen testified that "two very good authors to look at"

on the subject were doctors other than Remington and Klein. Plaintiff objected to questions

about the works of those other authors which the court overruled. Hermansen called the

textbook "Infectious Diseases of the Newborn" by Remington and Klein a "very good book." He

agreed that virtually everyone in his field is aware of it, it is a "standard book" and "a good

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