Chosak v. Alameda County Medical Center

63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 184, 153 Cal. App. 4th 549
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 27, 2007
DocketA113318
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 184 (Chosak v. Alameda County Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chosak v. Alameda County Medical Center, 63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 184, 153 Cal. App. 4th 549 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*555 Opinion

MARGULIES, J.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 1975, the Legislature enacted the Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act of 1975 (MICRA), legislation designed to lower medical malpractice insurance premiums by limiting malpractice litigation. Several provisions of MICRA, including Code of Civil Procedure 1 section 340.5, are made applicable to litigation against “health care providers,” a phrase the statutes define as including persons who are licensed or certified by the state to practice medicine. In this appeal, we must decide whether the term “health care provider,” as so defined, includes a medical student lawfully practicing medicine under a statutory exemption to those licensing requirements. We conclude that it does.

Defendant Lynn Valdez, an optometry student at the University of California, injured plaintiff Eve Chosak’s ankle in a mishap during preparation for an eye examination. When the injury failed to improve over the next two weeks, plaintiff was examined in an emergency room by defendant Michelle Dhanak, a licensed physician. Dhanak diagnosed the injury as a sprain without ordering further tests and sent plaintiff away without treatment.

Nearly two years later, plaintiff filed a malpractice action against Valdez and Dhanak, among others. The trial court dismissed the action as barred by the statute of limitations on the authority of section 340.5, which requires a medical malpractice plaintiff to file an action within one year of the date the plaintiff discovered, or should have discovered, his or her injury. Plaintiff appeals the dismissal in favor of these two individual defendants, arguing that Valdez is not covered by section 340.5 because she was an unlicensed medical student and that Dhanak’s negligence could not have been discovered until a date within one year of the filing of the action. We affirm.

II. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff’s first amended complaint alleges that on June 5, 2003, she visited defendant Eastmont Wellness Center (Eastmont) for a routine eye examination. She was initially seen by Valdez. Valdez was not a licensed optometrist *556 but a student at the University of California’s school of optometry, serving her internship. Valdez sat plaintiff in an examination chair and actuated the chair’s controls. As Valdez “started the machine . . . Plaintiff’s head began to lower and her feet began to rise. There was a stationary metal arm attached to an eye examination device fixed horizontally above Plaintiff’s legs. As the chair rose, Plaintiff’s foot became jammed underneath the arm of the eye examination device and her ankle was painfully compressed between the arm of the eye examination machine and the chair.” When Valdez was unable immediately to release the chair, “Plaintiff had to throw herself to the ground with enough force to twist her foot free from the machine, leaving her shoe wedged between the two metal pieces.” The injury was immediately painful.

Again according to the first amended complaint, when plaintiff’s ankle did not heal over the next two weeks, she went to the emergency room at defendant Highland Hospital (hospital) for treatment. There, on June 20, 2003, plaintiff was examined by Dhanak, a physician practicing at the hospital. Dhanak diagnosed plaintiff’s injury as a sprain, ignoring plaintiff’s request for an X-ray or other diagnostic test. She sent plaintiff away without ordering any further therapy or treatment.

Over two years later, in August 2005, plaintiff arranged for an MRI to be taken of her ankle. The MRI revealed that a bone spur had formed at the site of the injury. According to the complaint, the bone spur “was stated to be a likely cause or contributing factor to Plaintiff’s long continuing symptoms.”

On March 10, 2005, plaintiff filed a medical malpractice action against the University of California, the hospital, Valdez, Dhanak, and another professional. After an initial round of demurrers, which were granted with leave to amend, plaintiff filed the amended complaint quoted above. Dhanak demurred again on statute of limitations grounds. In her motion papers she included a claim form submitted by plaintiff on December 5, 2003, to the Alameda County Medical Center, which oversees the hospital. In the attachments to the claim form, plaintiff provided more information about her injury. According to the claim form, her injury was examined at Eastmont on the day of the accident. She was not given a clear diagnosis, and no tests were performed. After two weeks with little healing, she visited the hospital’s emergency room. There Dhanak told her that “ankle sprains can take weeks to heal” and gave her some literature regarding ankle sprain care. In the claim form, plaintiff stated that “[s]ix months later [after Dhanak’s examination], my ankle’s condition has worsened. In addition to being sore all the time, swollen, and somewhat difficult to walk on it is now unstable.”

Valdez and other defendants associated with the University of California also filed a demurrer on grounds of statute of limitations. The demurrer of *557 Valdez and other University of California defendants was sustained without leave to amend under the one-year statute of limitations of section 340.5. Dhanak’s demurrer was sustained under the same statute with leave to amend “to allege, if possible, facts that show compliance with the applicable statute of limitations, or to show why the statute does not apply.”

Plaintiff filed a second amended complaint. According to the allegations of the amended claim against Dhanak, “[Dhanak] diagnosed Plaintiff’s June 5, 2003 injury as an ankle sprain and sent her home with general literature on ankle sprains and general instructions on how to care for a sprained ankle and indicating that with a severe sprain the pain could persist for many months and even years. Plaintiff followed the instructions for the care and treatment of her ankle given her by [Dhanak] and reasonably believed that the continuing pain and soreness she had was in the normal course of events for the . . . injury she had sustained.” The second amended complaint further alleged that when the pain worsened in February 2004, plaintiff attempted to get an appointment to have the ankle examined at the Alameda County Medical Center but was unable to secure an appointment before April. As an alternative, plaintiff visited a chiropractor in March 2004. At that time, plaintiff alleged, she “for the first time, [began] to understand and discover the cause” of a new injury to her ankle. Her “continued and worsening pain was due to [Dhanak’s] failure to properly diagnose and treat [plaintiff’s] June 5, 2003 injury, including [Dhanak’s] failure to refer Plaintiff for physical therapy or to be examined by an orthopedic specialist for proper diagnosis and immediate treatment.” The chiropractor concluded that because plaintiff’s injury had continued for nine months without proper treatment, her condition “is permanent. Her prognosis is one of chronic permanent pain and dysfunction on the left ankle.”

Dhanak again demurred, submitting the same claim form.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 Cal. Rptr. 3d 184, 153 Cal. App. 4th 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chosak-v-alameda-county-medical-center-calctapp-2007.