Breaux v. Thurston

888 So. 2d 1208, 2003 WL 23028311
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 30, 2003
Docket1011655
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 888 So. 2d 1208 (Breaux v. Thurston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breaux v. Thurston, 888 So. 2d 1208, 2003 WL 23028311 (Ala. 2003).

Opinions

Sheila Bailey Thurston filed a medical-malpractice action against Dr. Charles W. Breaux and Jefferson Clinic, P.C., a professional corporation through which a group of doctors, including Dr. Breaux, provided physicians for the staff of Cooper Green Hospital. The case was originally tried before a jury on October 18, 1999, against Dr. Breaux, the Jefferson Clinic, P.C., Cooper Green Hospital, and two surgical nurses, Cynthia Venton and Wylie King. The jury returned a $78,000 verdict against the defendants, but the trial judge, realizing he had committed an error, subsequently ordered a new trial. The defendants appealed, various ones asserting different objections to the grant of a new trial, either on jurisdictional grounds or because different relief was not granted. This Court affirmed the grant of a new trial. Breaux v. Bailey, 789 So.2d 204 (Ala. 2000). When the case was retried on February 19, 2002, only Dr. Breaux and the Jefferson Clinic remained as defendants, Cooper Green Hospital, Venton, and King having settled the claims against them for a total of $100,000. The jury returned a verdict against Dr. Breaux and the Jefferson Clinic in the amount of $300,000. The trial court entered a judgment on the verdict and later denied the defendants' postjudgment motions for a judgment as a matter of law, a new trial, or a remittitur. Dr. Breaux and the Jefferson Clinic again appealed. We reverse and remand.

Ms. Thurston consulted Dr. Breaux in 1994 regarding weight-loss surgery. Dr. Breaux, a board-certified general surgeon and a professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, had many years of experience in bariatric surgery, performed to treat obesity. Ms. Thurston had a number of health problems that were compounded by her obesity. She decided to undergo a bariatric procedure known as gastric bypass. When she first consulted Dr. Breaux she weighed 283 pounds. When the bypass surgery was performed at Cooper Green Hospital a little more than eight months later, on December 21, 1994, she weighed 310 pounds. The surgical incision into Ms. Thurston's abdomen, when "opened up" by the use of retractors, created an opening approximately 8 to 10 inches wide and 10 inches long. The ensuing operation lasted two hours or slightly longer. Testimony presented at trial detailed the step-by-step features of the operation, but they are not relevant to the issues on appeal. In essence, the surgery rerouted portions of Ms. Thurston's intestines to shorten the length available for digestion and absorption, significantly reduced the size of her stomach, and reconnected her stomach to the intestine by a small opening. Dr. Breaux was assisted by Dr. Harris,1 a third-year resident at Cooper Green Hospital, registered nurse Cynthia Venton, functioning as the circulating nurse, and Wylie King, functioning as the scrub nurse or operating-room technician. The hospital's "Operating Room Policies and Procedures" provided, with respect to "Instrument Count," that "[t]he purpose of an instrument count is to prevent the possibility of any foreign object being left in a body cavity." With respect to the safeguards to be employed to accomplish that purpose, the Operating Room Policies and Procedures prescribed the following procedure:

"1. All instruments are counted by [the operating-room technician] and circulating [registered nurse] together prior to operative procedure. Procedure is to count individually each ringed instrument, retractor, tissue forcep, suction, *Page 1211 and knife handle, and record each count on count sheet.

"2. Each additional instrument given the [operating-room technician] during the procedure will be added to the count sheet.

"3. When the peritoneum is being closed, the instruments are again counted: the final count must equal the count prior to operative procedures plus the instruments added during the procedure. Instruments are to be counted by the [operating-room technician] and [a registered nurse] together in the following manner:

"a. Count ring instruments first. Start at back table and work towards sterile field counting each group before proceeding on.

*Instruments are strung up as they are listed on count sheet to facilitate counting.

"b. Count all retractors, tissue forceps, suctions, and knife handles.

"c. Count all special trays (total numbers).

"4. If count is unresolved — recount together in same order.

"5. Unresolved Count:

"a. The [operating-room technician] and circulating [registered nurse] determine which type of instrument is not accounted for and continue to look for instrument.

"b. Notify the surgeon of unresolved count.

"c. Notify Head Nurse.

"d. X-ray is ordered prior to moving patient from operating table.

"e. [The registered nurse] documents the following in nurses notes on circulating sheet:

"1. that count was unresolved

"2. that surgeon is notified

"3. whether or not X-ray was taken

"4. results of X-ray

"5. if count is resolved after X-ray

"6. if body cavity had to be re-opened

"7. any other pertinent information regarding initial unresolved count

"f. Incident report is filled out as needed by [registered nurse] at the end of procedure and given to Head Nurse."

No one contends that Venton and King did not perform the required instrument count immediately before Ms. Thurston's surgery. Dr. Breaux testified that when such a preoperative count is performed, he often has not yet entered the operating room and is in some other part of the hospital attending to other duties or patients. It is undisputed that at the end of the operation, but before Dr. Breaux closed the abdominal incision, Venton and King jointly conducted the required postoperative count and reported to Dr. Breaux that it was "correct," meaning that the postoperative count of each category of surgical instruments matched exactly the preoperative count. Dr. Breaux testified that he did not participate in the counts and that "[t]he nurses actually don't want any interference when they are counting, so that they are not distracted and don't lose count of what they are doing." Dr. Breaux further explained that a surgeon does not make any attempt to count the instruments placed in a patient and then removed, because of the need to concentrate on the performance of the surgical procedure. Before receiving the "correct" postoperative count from the nurses, Dr. Breaux visually inspected that portion of the abdominal cavity then viewable through the surgical opening and saw no *Page 1212 evidence of a retained object.2 After that initial inspection, Dr. Harris used a handheld retractor to successively elevate various portions of the abdominal wall while Dr. Breaux looked and felt within the four abdominal quadrants thus exposed. In the process of "feeling," he pushed down on the various abdominal structures underneath his hand, while pouring in saline solution to irrigate the space created. "[W]hile I'm pressing, I'm feeling and, of course, I'm feeling on the surface of this mesentery, which is a thick omentum which is a thick layer which overrides everything and if I feel anything, then I can pull things aside and then feel with my finger tips." After looking and feeling within each of the four abdominal quadrants, Dr. Breaux switched from saline solution to antibiotic solution and repeated, in reverse order, the exact procedure of pressing and feeling within each of the four quadrants.

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Breaux v. Thurston
888 So. 2d 1208 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
888 So. 2d 1208, 2003 WL 23028311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breaux-v-thurston-ala-2003.