Brazil v. United States

484 F. Supp. 986, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7960
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedDecember 14, 1979
DocketCiv. A. 78-X-0323-S
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 484 F. Supp. 986 (Brazil v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brazil v. United States, 484 F. Supp. 986, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7960 (N.D. Ala. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION IN LIEU OF FORMAL FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

GROOMS, District Judge.

This is an action under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346, by plaintiff, Thomas R. Brazil, against the United States for injuries suffered as a result of the alleged negligent failure of the Veterans Administration Hospital (VAH) in Birmingham, Alabama, acting through its agents, servants and employees, to diagnose and treat plaintiff’s fractured spine on May 21, 1977. More specifically, plaintiff claims that VAH failed to: (1) diagnose his back condition; (2) properly read the X-rays; and (3) take proper X-rays, and negligently: (1) discharged him without giving him proper instructions regarding back pain; (2) ignored his complaints of severe back pain; and (3) failed to admit him to the hospital and to immobilize him in accordance with accepted standards of good care for a person with a severe back injury.

Plaintiff, 53 years of age at the time, was involved in a head-on collision near Bir *988 mingham during the evening of May 21, 1977. After he was extricated from the car, which he was operating, he was brought by ambulance to the VA Hospital around 8:30 or 9 p. m. There is a sharp dispute in the evidence as to whether he was intoxicated. He conceded that he had consumed four, five, or six cans of beer during the day of the accident. He was dazed. His memory returned at. the VA Hospital. He does not remember the examination at the hospital, nor has he any recollection of any combativeness while there.

Dr. Paul Shanker, a senior medical resident specializing in internal medicine, was the Officer of the Day and on duty when the plaintiff was brought in. According to Dr. Shanker all his complaints actually focused on back pain, and he considered the plaintiff a major trauma patient. He sent him to X-ray and called in Dr. Richard Stuhr, surgical officer of the day, as a consultant. Dr. Stuhr, was in his first year of residency. Dr. Shanker ordered a skull series, a chest X-ray (a.p. & lat.), lumbar spine and cervical spine X-rays. No thoracic (dorsal) spine X-ray was ordered. It was in the thoracic spine that the fracture had occurred. Drs. Shanker and Stuhr found an arthritic condition known medically as ankylosing spondylitis, or “bamboo spine.” That condition conceivably would have rendered the spinal column more liable to fracture. The posterior-anterior and lateral views of the chest reveal the thoracic spine from those views. Plaintiff’s chief complaint in respect to the X-rays is the failure to take a p.a. picture of the thoracic spine, which he contends would have clearly shown the fracture. Drs. Shanker and Stuhr did not find the fracture on the X-rays which were taken. Those X-rays, on later examination, reveal the fracture, although not very distinctly. Drs. Shanker and Stuhr undertake to explain the failure to take the thoracic view on the uncooperative conduct of the plaintiff.

Although both doctors had had some neurological and orthopedic training in medical school, neither had specialized in either field. Orthopedic and neurological consultation was available at the hospital on a 24-hour a day and 7-day a week basis. It is the standard and accepted practice in trauma cases for the examining physician to palpate the area of suspected injury or fracture to determine the response to pain that might point to the location of an injury. The medical records do not record any such palpation although both doctors now testify that they did palpate the thoracic area.

Plaintiff was not admitted to the hospital, but was discharged and left shortly after midnight. He walked to a car with the assistance of his son and another and was taken to his ex-wife’s home. Before leaving the hospital those accompanying him were told to wake him every hour after he had gone to sleep and to ask him questions to determine whether he was coherent. The lack of coherence would indicate brain damage. They were to contact the hospital in the event of any such symptoms.

Plaintiff continued to suffer a great deal of back pain and complained often of the presence and severity of such pain. The next day he went to the University Hospital emergency room across the street from the VA Hospital seeking relief. He was under examination for about one hour by Dr. Alexander Nading, who took no X-rays of his back but testified that he palpated his back and that there was no apparent tenderness of the back as indicated by the fact that he didn’t record any. Plaintiff returned to his ex-wife’s home. He began losing the feeling in his legs and was walking with difficulty. He returned to the VA Hospital on the 24th. When X-rays were taken of the thoracic spine, they revealed a sharp subluxation, or displacement, of 9T. He lacked reflexes in his legs, but could move them and could walk. An operation was indicated but was not performed at that time because of an irregular heart condition. He was given steroids to reduce the swelling in the spinal cord. Dr. Ricardo Brau, the attending physician, told him that he had a fractured spine, that he should lay flat on his back, and that if he moved he could become a paraplegic. Notwithstanding the *989 warning of the doctor and the attending nurse, he continued thrashing around significantly more than the average patient. He would sit up and on one occasion got out of the bed and cranked the bed to change its position. By the 29th his condition had materially grown worse. Both legs .were paralyzed. An X-ray revealed that the fracture had realigned itself. A laminectomy was performed on that date, and Harrington pins were installed to maintain the alignment and to stabilize the spinal column. The pins remained in place until removal on February 12, 1979.

The medical testimony revealed that the displaced bone could move in and out of displacement as a result of movement, that such movement could injure the cord, that symptoms of injury would appear immediately or within a few hours, and that the change manifested on the 29th was probably related to the movement of the plaintiff.

Feeling has returned to his right leg and functional control has returned to that leg, but not the left. He can stand with support and can walk moderate distances (80 to 100 feet) with a walker. The prognosis is that his right leg will continue to improve, that the long leg brace on his left leg with which he was fitted at the Memphis VA Hospital can be replaced with a short leg brace, which will enable him to walk with limitations. His ankylosing spondylitis has caused him pain for many years prior to the accident, and his walking is made more difficult because of that condition, since due to that condition he has a spine that has no movement within it from the hips up to his head. That fact cuts down on his balance or his ability to swing his legs through, and adds to his general instability.

His medical diagnosis is that of paraparesis, or partial paralysis of the lower extremities, and not paraplegia, or total paralysis.

Plaintiff left the VA Hospital on June 16, 1977. Between that date and the date of the trial, he was in the Memphis VÁ Hospital on two occasions, in the Spain Rehabilitation Hospital in Birmingham on two occasions for therapy, and in the VA Hospital when the rods were removed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
484 F. Supp. 986, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brazil-v-united-states-alnd-1979.