Cochrum v. Costa Vict. Healthcare, LLC

236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 457, 25 Cal. App. 5th 1034
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedJuly 12, 2018
DocketG052934
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 457 (Cochrum v. Costa Vict. Healthcare, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochrum v. Costa Vict. Healthcare, LLC, 236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 457, 25 Cal. App. 5th 1034 (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IKOLA, J.

*1036Harvey Cohoon was diagnosed with a treatable form of cancer and was residing at Victoria Healthcare Center (Victoria Center), a skilled nursing facility, while he underwent treatment and recovered from various injuries he had suffered. For 19 days, Cohoon did well at Victoria Center. On the 20th day, he was observed to have difficulty swallowing thin liquids, and *1037after an evaluation, his diet was changed. Although the evidence is in conflict, plaintiff contends that change was not properly communicated to the kitchen, and that night he was served a dinner that did not comport with his new diet. Less than 20 minutes after being served dinner, a nurse found him in respiratory arrest. The paramedics had to remove large pieces of chicken from his throat before intubating him. More pieces of chicken were removed from his airway at the hospital. He died the following day due to complications from oxygen deprivation to his brain. *460Donna Cochrum, Cohoon's niece, filed the present lawsuit. As personal representative of Cohoon, she asserted causes of action for elder abuse and negligence. As personal representative of Cohoon's estate, Cochrum asserted a wrongful death cause of action. For simplicity, we simply refer to Cochrum as the plaintiff.

A jury returned a verdict in favor of Cochrum on all causes of action. It awarded $15,511.27 in economic damages, $900,000 in noneconomic damages on the elder abuse cause of action, and $350,000 in noneconomic damages for wrongful death. The court subsequently awarded Cochrum over $350,000 in attorney fees pursuant to the elder abuse claim. Subsequently, the court granted a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV), finding insufficient evidence of recklessness to support the elder abuse cause of action. It also adjusted the remaining damages pursuant to Civil Code section 3333.2.1 Cochrum appealed from the amended judgment, contending the evidence supported the elder abuse cause of action. Two of the defendants cross-appealed, contending the court improperly applied the MICRA cap. We affirm the amended judgment.

FACTS

In 2012, Harvey Cohoon was at a restaurant with his niece, plaintiff Donna Cochrum, when he suddenly fell. Later that night, he passed out in the bathroom, fell again, and knocked out multiple teeth. A week later, he visited his doctor, who recommended he be taken immediately to the emergency room at Hoag Hospital, where he was admitted. In the preceding year, Cohoon had been living independently.

*1038The treating physician reported Cohoon was weak, had experienced a lack of appetite, and had lost 40-50 pounds over the course of three months. He also had type 2 diabetes that was being treated with medication, but not insulin.

Cohoon was diagnosed with colon cancer. The cancer was not considered aggressive, and was at stage 2. As a result, his prognosis was relatively good: the doctor believed there was "very high hope" he would live another eight to nine years. Cohoon started a treatment plan involving both chemotherapy and radiation.

While Cohoon was undergoing treatment, he was moved from the hospital to Victoria Center, a skilled nursing facility operated by defendant Costa Victoria Healthcare, LLC (Costa Victoria). This placement was not meant to be long-term-only for the duration of his treatment. Cochrum drove Cohoon to his daily radiation and chemotherapy appointments.

When Cohoon was admitted to Victoria Center, he was malnourished, had a stage 3 pressure ulcer, and had muscle wasting. The staff performed a comprehensive assessment regarding physical therapy, occupational therapy, pain management, and his various medical issues. Additionally, Victoria Center staff performed a social services admission evaluation, an activity admission evaluation, a nutrition risk review, and a dietary admission assessment. Based on those evaluations, the staff prepared an extensive care plan to address problems he was facing, including constipation, risk of falling, skin integrity, visual *461impairment, toileting, activity/recreation, occupational therapy and physical therapy.

For the first 19 days of his stay at Victoria Center, Cohoon improved. His protein levels improved and he was gaining weight, notwithstanding his cancer treatment. Cochrum's husband testified that Cohoon had a positive outlook, was getting stronger, was eating well, and seemed to be doing better than he had been doing at the hospital. Another relative testified it was obvious Cohoon was "getting better day by day."

On December 27, 2012, the day before Cohoon died, a nurse observed Cohoon coughing when ingesting thin liquids and ordered a speech therapist to evaluate him the following day. In the meantime, a short-term care plan was created indicating Cohoon should be checked periodically during meals and monitored for coughing. There is no indication that any other staff observed Cohoon coughing or having trouble with food that day.

The following morning, the speech therapist evaluated Cohoon by performing a "bedside swallow evaluation." Addressing swallowing problems *1039(dysphagia ) is part of the job description of a speech therapist and, in fact, was the majority of what this particular speech therapist did at Victoria Center. The evaluation entailed an examination of various aspects of Cohoon's mouth that are involved in chewing and swallowing. The speech therapist introduced different foods and liquids of varying consistency to determine what Cohoon could safely ingest. The speech therapist concluded Cohoon's swallowing inability was "severe" with regard to liquids. Accordingly, she changed his diet to "pudding thick" liquids. Cohoon was "slow but functional" in chewing mechanical-soft textured food (i.e., food that was pre-cut by the kitchen in half an inch or smaller pieces). The speech therapist changed his food diet to mechanical-soft because he was missing some teeth that are important in chewing and she felt mechanical soft was safest. However, in the food tests the speech therapist did not detect any signs of aspiration (food entering the airway). There is a more severe diet called the "dysphagia mechanical soft" diet, which is more ground up than the standard mechanical soft diet, but the speech therapist felt Cohoon was safe on the standard mechanical soft diet. The speech therapist also recommended Cohoon be "distant supervised" during meals, which meant he was to be checked on two or three times during a meal.

When a speech therapist changes a diet, Victoria Center policy is that the speech therapist fills out a diet change card in duplicate, with one copy going to the kitchen, and the other to the nurses. Cohoon's speech therapist testified that she did so, and the dietary services supervisor testified she received the form from the speech therapist, but neither copy of the diet change form was ever produced. One copy is supposed to be in the nursing chart. Moreover, the dietary services supervisor testified she entered the diet change in her computer, but there was no documentary evidence of the computer entry.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 Cal. Rptr. 3d 457, 25 Cal. App. 5th 1034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochrum-v-costa-vict-healthcare-llc-calctapp5d-2018.