Cook Children's Medical Center and Cook Children's Health Care System -AND- Cook Children's Physician Network and Jose Olarte-Motta, M.D. v. C.R. and A.B., Individually and as Natural Guardians and Next Friends of G.R., a Minor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 2019
Docket02-18-00248-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cook Children's Medical Center and Cook Children's Health Care System -AND- Cook Children's Physician Network and Jose Olarte-Motta, M.D. v. C.R. and A.B., Individually and as Natural Guardians and Next Friends of G.R., a Minor (Cook Children's Medical Center and Cook Children's Health Care System -AND- Cook Children's Physician Network and Jose Olarte-Motta, M.D. v. C.R. and A.B., Individually and as Natural Guardians and Next Friends of G.R., a Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Cook Children's Medical Center and Cook Children's Health Care System -AND- Cook Children's Physician Network and Jose Olarte-Motta, M.D. v. C.R. and A.B., Individually and as Natural Guardians and Next Friends of G.R., a Minor, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-18-00248-CV ___________________________

COOK CHILDREN’S MEDICAL CENTER AND COOK CHILDREN’S HEALTH CARE SYSTEM -AND- COOK CHILDREN’S PHYSICIAN NETWORK AND JOSE OLARTE-MOTTA, M.D., Appellants

V.

C.R. AND A.B., INDIVIDUALLY AND AS NATURAL GUARDIANS AND NEXT FRIENDS OF G.R., A MINOR, Appellees

On Appeal from the 141st District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 141-293532-17

Before Gabriel, Pittman, and Bassel, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Pittman MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this accelerated interlocutory appeal, Appellants Cook Children’s Medical

Center (CCMC) and Cook Children’s Health Care System (the System) (collectively,

the Hospital) and Appellants Cook Children’s Physician Network (the Network) and

Jose Olarte-Motta, M.D.1 appeal from the trial court’s denial of their motions to

dismiss the healthcare liability claims filed against them by Appellees C.R. and A.B.,

Individually and as Natural Guardians and Next Friends of G.R., a Minor. Because

we hold that C.R. and A.B.’s expert report satisfies the statutory requirements, we

affirm.

BACKGROUND

I. G.R. Develops Brain Injury at CCMC.

In July 2017, G.R.’s father, C.R., and mother, A.B. (Parents), sued the Medical

Defendants after G.R. suffered permanent injury to her brain while a patient in the

Hospital’s pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Parents’ live pleadings alleged the

following facts.

On May 10, 2015, Parents took G.R. to the Hospital after she fell head-first

into a bucket that held a cleaning solution containing bleach. The Hospital admitted

G.R. and performed a diagnostic procedure that revealed mild irritation of her

1 We will refer to all four Appellants collectively as “the Medical Defendants.”

2 stomach and esophagus. By May 12th, she had some vomiting but was eating and

drinking satisfactorily, and so the Hospital discharged her.

On May 15th, because G.R. was experiencing increased vomiting and diarrhea

and decreased eating and drinking, Parents took her to the Hospital’s emergency

department. She was admitted to the general pediatric ward, where she was able to

eat and drink satisfactorily but continued to vomit intermittently.

On May 20th, she had an episode thought to be a seizure. She improved with

ventilation, was administered medication to stop the seizure, and was admitted to the

PICU. She continued to have seizure-like activity between May 23rd and May 24th,

for which she was treated with medication. Just after midnight on May 25th, G.R.

had an unplanned extubation2 or dislodgement of her endotracheal tube. She was

given oxygen via a nasal cannula until 5:20 p.m., at which time she was reintubated

with an endotracheal tube and started on a different seizure medication.

2 Endotracheal intubation is the placement of a flexible plastic tube into the trachea, “either orally or nasally[,] for airway management.” Yeliz Şahiner, Indications for Endotracheal Intubation, in Tracheal Intubation, 59, 59–60 (Rıza Hakan Erbay ed., 2018), available at http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.76172 (last visited Feb. 26, 2019). The endotracheal tube forms an open passage in the upper airways, and the tube is connected to a mechanical ventilator to provide continuous respiration to the patient. Id. Unplanned extubation occurs when an endotracheal tube is accidentally removed or is removed by a patient. Tae Won Lee, et al., Unplanned Extubation in Patients with Mechanical Ventilation: Experience in the Med. Intensive Care Unit of a Single Tertiary Hosp., 78 Tuberculosis & Respiratory Diseases 336, 336 (2015), available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4620326 (last visited Feb. 26, 2019).

3 G.R.’s vital signs were normal when measured at 9:00 p.m. on May 25th. At

the next recorded measurement of her vital signs at 9:40 p.m., her heart rate and

oxygen saturation were dangerously low. A measurement of her exhalation carbon

dioxide level suggested that her endotracheal tube had again become extubated or

dislodged, so it was removed, and she was given mask bagged ventilation. G.R. was

given atropine and epinephrine for her heart, but it was unsuccessful, and CPR was

administered. After multiple rounds of epinephrine and CPR, her spontaneous

circulation returned. She was reintubated and a hypothermia protocol (used to reduce

brain injury from oxygen deprivation 3) was initiated. At 10:05 pm, her vital signs

returned to satisfactory levels. However, because of the oxygen deprivation, G.R.

developed hypoxic/ischemic encephalopathy.4

3 See Shlee S. Song, M.D. & Patrick D. Lyden, M.D., FAAN, FAHA, Overview of Therapeutic Hypothermia, Current Treatment Options in Neurology, Dec. 2012, at 1 (stating that therapeutic hypothermia “improves neurological recovery and reduces mortality after global ischemia, such as in patients with cardiac arrest, and in infants with moderate or severe hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy”), available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3519955/pdf/nihms-410186.pdf (last visited Feb. 26, 2019). 4 “Encephalopathy refers to ‘any degenerative disease of the brain.’” Anderson v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., 131 Fed. Cl. 735, 739 n.9 (2017) (quoting Dorland’s Illustrated Med. Dictionary 614 (32d ed. 2012)). Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy “is defined as an ‘encephalopathy resulting from asphyxia.’” Thomas v. Sec’y of Dept. of Health & Human Servs., No. 01-645V, 2007 WL 470410, at *10 n.10 (Fed. Cl. Jan. 23, 2007) (quoting Dorland’s Illustrated Med. Dictionary 611 (30th ed. 2003)).

4 II. The Medical Defendants Move for Dismissal.

Parents served the Medical Defendants with the expert report of Dr. Bruce

Greenwald, chief of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College

and the Director of the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at New York Presbyterian

Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical Center. Dr. Olarte-Motta and Network moved to

dismiss Parents’ claims, objecting that the initial report was inadequate with respect to

standard of care, breach, and causation. The Hospital also filed objections and moved

to dismiss. The Hospital raised the same objections as Dr. Olarte-Motta and the

Network and further objected that the report did not establish that Dr. Greenwald

was qualified to render standard of care opinions regarding the nursing staff and non-

physician personnel of the Hospital.

Parents filed a supplemental expert report in the form of an affidavit from Dr.

Greenwald. After further objections from the Medical Defendants and a hearing

before the trial court, Parents filed a second supplemental expert report (the Report)

from Dr. Greenwald, to which the Medical Defendants also objected. The trial court

denied the Medical Defendants’ motions to dismiss, and they now appeal.

EXPERT REPORT REQUIREMENTS UNDER TEXAS CIVIL PRACTICE AND REMEDIES CODE SECTION 74.351

A claimant asserting a health care liability claim is required to serve each

defendant with one or more expert reports meeting the requirements set out in Texas

Civil Practice and Remedies Code section 74.351. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.

5 § 74.351. Both the standards for such reports and the standard by which we review a

trial court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss a claim for failure to file a compliant report

are well-established. See id. § 74.351(a), (b), (r)(6); Baty v.

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