Chaskes v. Gutierrez

116 So. 3d 479, 2013 WL 1980214, 2013 Fla. App. LEXIS 7822
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 15, 2013
DocketNos. 3D11-3127, 3D11-1967
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 116 So. 3d 479 (Chaskes v. Gutierrez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaskes v. Gutierrez, 116 So. 3d 479, 2013 WL 1980214, 2013 Fla. App. LEXIS 7822 (Fla. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

WELLS, Chief Judge.

Robert Jeffrey Chaskes, D.O., Sandra Saint-Eloi, A.R.N.P., and their employer Vohra Health Services, P.A., appeal from a final judgment in this medical malpractice action for the negligent treatment of a sacral decubitus ulcer (a bedsore). The defendant doctor and nurse treated then eighty-eight-year-old Dilia Jaquez over a period of- two weeks while she was at Miami Gardens Nursing Center following transfer from Memorial West Hospital where Jaquez had undergone surgery for a broken hip. During her stay at Memorial West, Jaquez developed the sacral ulcer which had deteriorated by the time she [481]*481was released to Miami Gardens to a stage IV bedsore.1 On April 8, 2009, Gutierrez, as personal representative of Jaquez’s estate, bought suit claiming that Dr. Chaskes’s and Nurse Saint-Eloi’s care and treatment of Jaquez’s bedsore while at Miami Gardens fell below the standard of care and was a legal cause of damage for which they and Vohra Health were liable.2 Gutierrez chose not to seek relief from Memorial West where the bedsore developed and initially deteriorated, nor from several of the other medical institutions or individuals which or whom subsequently treated Jaquez, but limited her claim to Dr. Chaskes, Nurse Sain1>-Eloi, and Vohra Health. The defendants alleged Gutierrez’s comparative fault and subsequently joined Memorial Hospital West and Miami Gardens Nursing Center as Fabre3 defendants.

The case was tried before a jury in April of 2011. At the close of the evidence and shortly before the jury retired, the court below dismissed Memorial West from the action. Defendants’ motion for a directed verdict on proximate causation grounds was denied,4 and the jury returned a verdict in Gutierrez’s favor apportioning fault 65% to Dr. Chaskes, 25% to Nurse Saint-Eloi, 0% to plaintiff Gutierrez, and 10% to Fabre defendant Miami Gardens Nursing Center. The jury awarded $13,000, for past medical bills and expenses and $337,000. for past pain and suffering, for total damages of $350,000. Defendants moved to set aside the verdict and enter judgment in accordance with their motions for directed verdict. Alternatively, defendants moved for a new trial or remittitur. The trial court denied the post-trial motions and entered a final judgment against defendants for $315,000 according to the jury’s apportionment of fault. A final judgment of $138,650 also was entered against the defendants for attorney’s fees and costs.

Because we agree with defendants’ position that Gutierrez failed to satisfy the standard established in Gooding v. University Hospital Building, Inc., 445 So.2d 1015, 1018 (Fla.1984), as to either this doctor or nurse, we reverse the final judgment rendered in Gutierrez’s favor and remand for entry of judgment in favor of Dr. Chaskes, Nurse Saint-Eoli and their employer Vohra Health. We also reverse the fees and costs order in Gutierrez’s [482]*482favor which followed the final judgment. This analysis makes it unnecessary to address the remaining points argued by the defendants.5

FACTS

On April 30, 2008, Dilia Dolores Jaquez, then age eighty-seven, fell and broke her hip. According to Gutierrez, before her fall, Jaquez had been reasonably healthy, living at home with Gutierrez, travelling alone long distances by air, and taking no medications.

Following her fall, Jaquez was transported to Memorial West Hospital and admitted for hip surgery. Although she tolerated the surgery well, she subsequently suffered a number of set-backs and generally deteriorated during her hospital stay. In addition to suffering from anemia, which required a blood transfusion, her white blood cell count shot up, she developed a urinary tract infection, hematuria (bloody urine), and acute renal failure. She also lost her appetite and was found to be suffering from significant erosive gastritis, a hiatal hernia, and duodenitis. Additionally, she was unable to engage in meaningful therapy to get back on her feet, and from time to time she became disoriented and confused. As one of her physicians noted the day before she was discharged, “[f]rom a functional standpoint ... [Jaquez’s] progress has been very slow. She still requires maximum assistance for bed mobility, total assistance with transfers, and standing balance is dependent.” In part because of this immobility, Coumadin, an anti-coagulant was prescribed to prevent “deep venous thrombosis ... and pulmonary embolism.”6 She also developed a large pressure ulcer (bedsore) at the base of her spine which had deteriorated to stage IV by the time she was discharged from Memorial West to Miami Gardens on May 23, 2008.

At discharge, Memorial West prescribed for Jaquez, among other things, “continued wound care as [per] pressure ulcer protocol [with] Accuzyme7 and Lyofoam8, [and] cleans[ing] with normal saline daily.” Dr. Jesus Gonzales, Jaquez’s primary treating physician at Miami Gardens, ordered continuation of this treatment when Jaquez was admitted to Miami Gardens late in the evening on that same day. He also ordered a wound consultation with Vohra Health, an entity which provides wound care to nursing home residents. ■

The following day, Dr. Chaskes, a Vohra Health employee, ordered discontinuation of the Accuzyme treatment prescribed for Jaquez’s bedsore and prescribed instead Santyl,9 a medication he found more effective for enzymatic debridement of bedsores. Dr. Chaskes also ordered contin[483]*483ued cleaning of Jaquez’s ulcer on a daily basis.

Two days later, on May 26, Dr. Chaskes and Nurse Sainb-Eloi (also a Vohra Health employee), visited Jaquez. By that time, Dr. Gonzales had noted that although the bedsore had no odor, it was producing a small amount of purulent10 discharge. He also noted that the sore was not granulating11 but instead was covered by dead tissue or slough. During their visit, Dr. Chaskes and Nurse Saint-Eloi surgically debrided the bedsore, applying a topical anesthetic (benzocaine) and using a scalpel to cut out dead muscle and other tissue. But because of the threat of excessive bleeding stemming from Jaquez’s anti-coagulation (Coumadin) therapy, they were unable to remove all of the necrotic tissue that they found and opted to treat the remaining small amount of necrotic tissue with enzymatic debridement (with Santyl) followed by removal of any remaining necrotic tissue at their next weekly visit. As before, they ordered daily cleansing of the sore, and to further promote healing, they ordered treatment with Mycolog, an anti-fungal agent, and packing with calcium alginate.12 They also recommended a pressure mattress for Jaquez’s bed, that she be turned or repositioned every two hours, a gel cushion for her chair and that she be allowed to sit up no more than one hour at a time, all to lessen pressure on the sore.

Two days later, Jaquez was transported to the emergency room at Jackson Memorial Hospital to address a Coumadin overdose. While there, her sacral ulcer was evaluated and described to be much as it was when Dr. Chaskes and Nurse Saint-Eloi treated it on May 26. It had no odor although it was producing a moderate amount of purulent discharge. And while it still had some white/yellow slough, it had begun to show signs of granulation.

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116 So. 3d 479, 2013 WL 1980214, 2013 Fla. App. LEXIS 7822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaskes-v-gutierrez-fladistctapp-2013.