Brookwood Health Services, Inc. v. Borden

207 So. 3d 1, 2015 Ala. LEXIS 147
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 13, 2015
Docket1131284
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 207 So. 3d 1 (Brookwood Health Services, Inc. v. Borden) 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
Brookwood Health Services, Inc. v. Borden, 207 So. 3d 1, 2015 Ala. LEXIS 147 (Ala. 2015).

Opinion

WISE, Justice.

The remaining defendant below, Brook-wood Health Services, Inc., d/b/a Brook-wood Medical Center (“Brookwood”), appeals from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, Wilfred Borden and Pam Borden. We reverse and render a judgment for Brookwood.

Facts and Procedural History

On September 8, 2010, Dr. Thomas A. Staner, a board-certified neurosurgeon and neurologist, performed a lumbar laminec-tomy on Wilfred at Brookwood Medical Center. Wilfred was released from the hospital on Friday, September 10, 2010. On the evening of Saturday, September 11, 2010, Wilfred was at home lying in bed. According to Wilfred, when he rolled over and sat up on the side of the bed, he suddenly had excruciating pain up and down his lower back and legs; his legs felt like they were on fire; and his feet felt like somebody was sticking him with pins and needles. Wilfred called for his wife, Pam. Pam and his daughters went to the bedroom. After he told Pam what was going on, he asked her to massage his legs. Although Pam and his daughters were massaging Wilfred’s legs, he could not feel it.

Pam telephoned Dr. Staner around 7:30 p.m. After she and Wilfred had both talked to him, Dr. Staner told them that Wilfred needed to get to the Brookwood Medical Center emergency room (“ER”) right away. Pam called an ambulance because Wilfred could not feel his weight on his feet and did not trust that he could stand up. An ambulance arrived and took Wilfred to the ER, and Pam drove to the ER in her vehicle.

Dr. Ricky Phillips saw Wilfred in the ER, and he consulted with Dr. Staner by telephone. In his notes, Dr. Phillips indicated that he saw Wilfred at 9:10 p.m.; that Wilfred had lost sensation, primarily in his left foot; that Wilfred was not able to “wiggle” his ankles; that Wilfred said he could not wiggle his toes; and that sensation was nearly absent in Wilfred’s feet. However, his notes indicated that Wilfred was able to lift both legs off the gurney individually; that Wilfred was continent; and that Wilfred's distal pulses were normal. Dr. Staner testified that Dr. Phillips told him that Wilfred was able to lift both of his legs off the gurney and that Wilfred was continent.

[3]*3A CT scan was performed on Wilfred. Dr. Greg Jackson, a radiologist, reviewed the CT scan, and Dr. Staner reviewed it from home as well. Dr. Phillips’s notes indicated that the CT scan “show[ed] a small hematoma, but no obvious acute change.” Dr. Phillips discussed Wilfred with Dr. Staner, and they decided upon the following plan: “[B]ed the patient down, pain medication and Dr. Staner will take over management of the patient.” Dr. Phillips entered the admission orders for Wilfred, which called for a neurovascu-lar check every two hours. Additionally, the orders provided: “CALL ADMITTING PHYSICIAN FOR ANY QUESTIONS, PROBLEMS, CHANGE OF STATUS OR FOR FURTHER ORDERS.” (Capitalization in original.)

Wilfred was subsequently admitted to 4 Main, which is an orthopedic floor at Brookwood Medical Center. Tonya Tol-bert, a registered nurse who worked on 4 Main, received Wilfred around midnight. Around 12:15 a.m., Tolbert performed an initial baseline assessment on Wilfred and a neurovascular check. When Wilfred arrived on the floor, he was wet, and the nursing notes Tolbert prepared after Wilfred arrived indicate that he was incontinent. Tolbert’s notes also indicate that Wilfred could not move his legs and that his pedal pulses, i.e., the pulses on his feet, were weak or faint.

At 7:00 a.m. on September 12, 2010, Amy Jeffers, a registered nurse who worked for Brookwood at that time, started her shift on 4 Main. When she came on shift, she received a detailed report from Tolbert regarding her patients, including Wilfred. She testified that, according to the doctor’s admission orders, she performed a neurovascular check on Wilfred every two hours.

At 10:00 a.m. on September 12, 2010, Dr. Staner came to the hospital and saw Wilfred. Dr. Staner testified that, when he saw Wilfred, Wilfred had a lot of pain in his back and legs but that the pain might have been some better than earlier. Dr. Staner asked Wilfred to move his legs, but Wilfred said that he could not. When Dr. Staner assisted Wilfred in moving his legs, Wilfred barely moved his legs an inch under great pain and effort. Dr. Staner testified that that was a big difference from the night before when Dr. Phillips indicated that Wilfred had moved his legs in the ER. Dr. Staner later found out that Wilfred had become incontinent of urine and stool, which also was a major change from his condition when Dr. Staner had talked to Dr. Phillips. Dr. Staner testified that no nurse at Brookwood Medical Center had telephoned him and notified him that Wilfred had lost the ability to move his legs and had become incontinent.

Subsequently, Dr. Staner ordered a my-elogram CT. In the myelogram, he saw a hematoma or blood clot that was causing compression of the cauda equina, a collection of nerves that travel through the spine and then exit the spinal canal at different levels. Virtually all the nerves that go into the legs, bladder, rectum, and genital areas are contained within the cauda equina. At 2:00 p.m., Dr. Staner performed another surgery to evacuate the hematoma. He testified that, if he had been notified of Wilfred’s condition at 12:15 a.m., when Wilfred was received on 4 Main, he would have come to the hospital at that time and ordered the myelogram CT, and, if the results of the myelogram warranted, he would have performed surgery on Wilfred between 4:00 a.m. and 5:00 a.m.

Wilfred suffered damage to the cauda equina as the result of the compression caused by the hematoma. Dr. Saran Ros-ner, a board-certified neurologist, testified that cauda equina syndrome is where there is a common path of pain, weakness, [4]*4and numbness of the nerves that goes into the legs. There can be various causes for cauda equina syndrome, including a hema-toma resulting from surgery. Dr. Rosner testified that Wilfred suffered a postoperative complication after the lumbar laminec-tomy of the lower back, which was a hema-toma or blood clot that was squeezing or compressing the cauda equina. As a consequence of that complication, Wilfred developed cauda equina syndrome. Dr. Ros-ner testified that, in his opinion, Wilfred had significant and substantial cauda equi-na syndrome. He stated:

“Well, his manifestations of the cauda equina syndrome were basically virtually a full-blown picture of what can happen if the cauda equina gets compressed. In other words, those nerves are under pressure and they stop working. So we had weakness, first in his ankles, moving his feet either up or down or side to side. Couldn’t move them in any direction. Later, he developed more nerves being affected by the pressure of the clot. He had difficulty or inability to lift his legs. He had numbness in his legs. He also had terrible pain down his legs. When you start squashing those nerves with a big blood clot, it causes pain, causes very severe pain. You can imagine if someone pressed on a raw nerve or a whole bunch of raw nerves, it’s going to cause some very substantial pain. He had pain. He has weakness. He has numbness and also had some impairment of his ability to urinate normally and control his bladder function.”

Dr. Rosner testified that, in Wilfred, who had a postoperative symptomatic epidural hematoma, cauda equina syndrome presented a neurosurgical emergency. He also testified that surgical timing is a critical factor with regard to the type of hema-toma Wilfred suffered.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
207 So. 3d 1, 2015 Ala. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookwood-health-services-inc-v-borden-ala-2015.