Callistro v. Bebbington

94 A.D.3d 408, 941 N.Y.S.2d 137
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 3, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 94 A.D.3d 408 (Callistro v. Bebbington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callistro v. Bebbington, 94 A.D.3d 408, 941 N.Y.S.2d 137 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County (Howard H. Sherman, J), entered December 7, 2009, dismissing the complaint, affirmed, without costs. Appeal from order, same court and Justice, entered June 24, 2009, which granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment, unanimously dismissed, without costs, as subsumed in the appeal from the judgment.

Plaintiff claims that defendants deviated from good and accepted medical practice by failing to perform a cesarean section during his birth on December 10, 2003, and that this failure caused him to sustain a hypoxic event, which is responsible for expressive and language deficits and a developmental disorder that were diagnosed when he was about 4V2 years old.

The court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment [409]*409primarily on the ground that expert evidence disclosed that no hypoxic event occurred during plaintiffs birth and that plaintiff failed to raise a triable issue of fact because his main expert was unqualified to give an opinion, pursuant to the “locality rule” (see Pike v Honsinger, 155 NY 201, 209 [1898]).

We find that, while the locality rule may not apply here, defendants were correctly granted summary judgment because plaintiff did not raise factual issues as to either a departure or a resulting injury.

Defendants submitted the affirmation of Dr. Mary D’Alton, chairperson of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Columbia University-New York Presbyterian Hospital. Dr. D’Alton, basing her opinion on the medical records and testimonial evidence, a neurological evaluation of plaintiff in July 2008, and the complaint and bill of particulars, opined that defendants did not deviate from good and accepted medical practice, that no hypoxic incident occurred, and that no injury could be reasonably attributed to any act or omission by defendants.

Dr. D’Alton pointed to the postdelivery assessment of arterial and venous umbilical cord blood gases, both of which fell within normal limits. She also noted that plaintiff, whose delivery was complicated by shoulder dystocia and a nuchal cord, was discharged from the hospital three days after his birth, at which time he was “active, alert, voiding and stooling appropriately and feeding on demand.” Dr. D’Alton concluded that the normal cord gas measurements and plaintiff’s speedy discharge were “entirely inconsistent with an alleged hypoxic injury occurring during labor and delivery.” Dr. D’Alton also averred that the fetal monitoring strips, which are in evidence, indicated that any variable decelerations were followed by quick recovery to baseline and that there was no indication of fetal distress.

With respect to the delivery and subsequent treatment, Dr. D’Alton found that defendants effectively managed the delivery complications, including both the shoulder dystocia and the nuchal cord. She noted that Dr. King successfully performed a procedure called a “Wood’s screw maneuver” to address the dystocia and deliver the shoulder, and added that nuchal cords occur in about 25% of all births and have no bearing on whether to perform a cesarean delivery.

Dr. D’Alton also noted that the July 2008 neurological evaluation of plaintiff, who was then about four years and seven months old, was inconsistent with plaintiff’s allegation that he suffers from “Pervasive Developmental Disorder.” The examining physician, Dr. Regina R. DeCarlo, a pediatric neurologist, [410]*410did not detect any focal or motor neurological deficits. Dr. DeCarlo saw evidence of a developmental disorder of receptive and expressive language and a disorder of articulation, but found that plaintiff otherwise performed at the four-to-five-year level.

In opposition, plaintiff submitted affirmations from Dr. Bruce Halbridge, an obstetrician and gynecologist based in Texas, and Dr. Bruce Roseman, a pediatric neurologist practicing in White Plains, New York. Dr. Halbridge found various departures but limited his findings of causation to the following: He opined that once the mother was admitted on the morning of December 9, 2003 and defendants employed a fetal heart rate monitor, defendants should have abandoned their plan for a vaginal birth and instead delivered plaintiff by cesarean section. According to Dr. Halbridge, as of the morning of December 10, the fetal heart rate monitor had shown a “nonreassuring” pattern of late and variable decelerations. Dr. Halbridge contended that plaintiff was delivered in a hypoxic, “depressed” condition, and that, based on a December 11, 2003 sonogram, he had “possible small bilateral grade 1 subependymal hemorrhages.”

Dr. Roseman’s affirmation was based on his own examination of plaintiff in December 2008, just after plaintiff turned five. Like Dr. DeCarlo, Dr. Roseman detected speech and language deficits and an articulation disorder. He stated that he agreed with Dr. Halbridge’s opinion about the etiology of plaintiff’s injuries, and opined that “[tjhere is nothing in the child’s medical history, other than the abnormal labor and delivery, that would account for his deficits in speech and language.”

Contrary to the dissent’s contention, neither Dr. Halbridge’s nor Dr. Roseman’s opinion raises a triable issue as to causation, since each fails to address how the claimed departures could have caused the claimed cognitive delays. Dr. Halbridge failed to rebut Dr. D’Alton’s key assertion that the normal values for plaintiff’s umbilical cord gas were “entirely inconsistent” with hypoxic injury. Dr. Halbridge did not dispute Dr. D’Alton’s opinion that the gas test results completely ruled out hypoxia or the fact that the hospital record attributes the first (low) Apgar score to the nuchal cord. Rather, he ambiguously stated that “loss of beat to beat variability coupled with late decelerations . . . enhancel ] the likelihood that the fetus is undergoing significant hypoxia” (emphasis supplied) and that “[t]his occurred in the present case, notwithstanding the normal umbilical cord blood gas values that were obtained.” Dr. Halbridge’s statement amounted to bare conjecture, which lacks the “reasonable degree of medical certainty” required in an expert affidavit in a [411]*411medical malpractice case (see Burgos v Rateb, 64 AD3d 530, 530 [2009]). Moreover, Dr. Halbridge ignored Dr. D’Alton’s further point that plaintiff’s discharge three days after his birth disproved his claimed injury. Finally, Dr. Halbridge did not explain how the December 11 neurosonogram, which indicated “possible” hemorrhages, could show that the plaintiff suffered permanent brain damage, as Dr. Roseman concluded, since a follow-up neurosonogram performed one month later showed no evidence of hemorrhaging.

Dr. Roseman opined in conclusory fashion that the hypoxicischemic stress and other trauma that occurred during the delivery resulted in permanent brain damage, primarily to the neocortex, which in turn caused plaintiffs speech and language disorder. However, Dr. Roseman failed to support this opinion with a radiological study of plaintiffs brain or any other medical record demonstrating brain damage other than language delay. Dr. Roseman’s assertions that “[t]here is nothing in [plaintiffs] medical history, other than the abnormal labor and delivery, that would account for his deficits in speech and language” and that the deficits resulted from his permanent brain damage are entirely conclusory. In fact, the record shows that plaintiffs cousins suffer from similar language deficits.

As a final matter, summary judgment should have been granted to defendant Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A.D.3d 408, 941 N.Y.S.2d 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callistro-v-bebbington-nyappdiv-2012.