Cruz v. Paso Del Norte Health Foundation

44 S.W.3d 622, 2001 WL 301172
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 16, 2001
Docket08-99-00002-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 44 S.W.3d 622 (Cruz v. Paso Del Norte Health Foundation) 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.

Bluebook
Cruz v. Paso Del Norte Health Foundation, 44 S.W.3d 622, 2001 WL 301172 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

McCLURE, Justice.

This is the tragic story surrounding the birth of Sergio Cruz, Jr. (Sergio). Diana Cruz, individually and as next friend (Cruz), filed a medical malpractice suit against Paso Del Norte Health Foundation fik/a and d/b/a Providence Memorial Hospital (Providence) for injuries to her son allegedly sustained during labor. Following a lengthy trial, a jury found that the alleged negligence of two labor and delivery nurses was not a proximate cause of Sergio’s severe brain injury and the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment in favor of Providence. Cruz brings three *625 issues on appeal complaining that the jury’s adverse findings are against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Fetal Monitoring

Central to this appeal is the science of fetal monitoring. Readings from a fetal heart monitor can reveal, among other things, whether the baby is in danger due to oxygen deprivation, known as hypoxia. In such a case, the readings will show what are referred to as nonreassuring patterns that may reflect fetal response to hypoxia and the continuing depletion of oxygen reserves which could result in brain damage. A warning fetal heart rate pattern includes tachycardia while a nonreassuring pattern includes severe tachycardia. In a fetus, the normal heart rate is somewhere between 110 and 160 beats per minute, almost double the adult heart rate. A heart rate of more than 160 beats per minute is considered tachycardia, and more than 179 beats is considered severe tachycardia. Severe tachycardia reflects an hypoxic fetus who is decompensating. The decompensatory pattern refers to the point at which the baby no longer has placental reserves or the ability to cope with the normal stress of labor and demonstrates an inability to compensate for the stress. Tachycardia per se is not an indication of fetal distress without other non-reassuring signs.

The policies and protocols adopted by Providence characterize tachycardia as 160 beats per minute lasting ten minutes or more and severe tachycardia as 180 beats per minute lasting ten minutes or more. “Bradycardia” refers to a heart rate typically below 120 beats per minute. There are four main periodic changes in the fetal rate. One is described as reassuring, one as benign, and two as cause for concern. Accelerations that are spontaneous due to fetal movement, when occurring in a normal fetus who is not experiencing a decreased oxygen level or asphyxia, will elevate its heart rate for fifteen beats above the baseline for at least fifteen seconds or longer. Other periodic changes in the fetal heart rate are called decelerations. The benign pattern, called an “early deceleration,” is uniform and mirrors the uterine contraction. It typically occurs once labor has become established since it is caused by pressure to the head of the fetus. “Variable decelerations” occur during the contraction cycle and are variable in shape rather than uniform. The cause is generally umbilical cord compression resulting from the cord dropping down or wrapping around the neck. “Late decelerations” typically occur later in the contracting cycle. When the contraction begins, the heart rate decelerates and does not return to the baseline until after the contraction is completed. The cause of late decelerations is uteroplacental insufficiency. According to one expert, “this pattern is ominous and certainly not reassuring.” There are also two types of variability in the fetal heart rate, which will become significant. As one witness explained it:

There is what is called short term variability, or short term changes, where from each heart beat you literally will see changes in — tiny changes. Each of us that are healthy has very small differences in time between each of our heart beats. We don’t just beat like automaton. There is also an aspect of fetal heart rate called long term variability, which over a minute or two in time is reflected in the amplitude or how high and low the heart rate varies, anywhere from five to 15 beats per minute of variance in the heart rate.

*626 Whenever a fetal monitor shows warning signs and nonreassnring patterns, Providence’s protocol requires the repositioning of the patient, hydration, administration of oxygen at the rate of eight to ten liters per minute, vaginal examination, and placement of a scalp electrode if the membrane has been ruptured. These signs also require consultation with a physician.

Presentment

2:58 a.m.-3:55 a.m.

During the early morning hours of September 24,1994, Cruz arrived at the Providence emergency room in labor. At 2:58 a.m., she was admitted to the hospital. Providence considered Cruz a “no-doctor patient” because she had received prenatal care at R.E. Thomason General Hospital and she came to Providence’s emergency room without her medical records. Consequently, the Providence nurses and doctors were unfamiliar with her medical history, including information that she had complained of increased fetal activity on several occasions during the previous three weeks. Within two or three minutes of admission to the Labor and Delivery Department, Nurse Charlotte Graham attached an external fetal heart monitor and took Cruz’s vital signs as well as a medical history. Graham also performed a vaginal exam and then, at 3:08 a.m., changed Cruz’s position onto her left side so that the fetus would have better blood flow.

According to Graham, the fetal heart rate monitor should be run for fifteen to twenty minutes in order to establish the baseline. Initially, Sergio’s fetal heart rate registered in the 140s and 150s and for about the next ten minutes settled into a baseline in the 150s and 160s. Sometime between 3:18 and 3:23 a.m., the baseline heart rate became tachycardic and then at 3:35 it began to rise above 160 to 170 beats per minute. Consequently, at 3:36 a.m., Graham again changed Cruz’s position and administered oxygen. Rather than giving oxygen at the rate of eight to ten liters per minute as required by the protocol, Graham administered only four liters per minute due to her unfamiliarity with Cruz’s cardiac and pulmonary history. Graham explained that if Cruz had cardiac or pulmonary difficulties, she could have experienced respiratory complications from the higher amount of oxygen, presenting a danger to both mother and baby. The fetal heart rate baseline then elevated to 180 beats per minute. At 3:47 a.m., Graham gave Cruz an intravenous (IV) bolus of lactated Ringers 1 pursuant to the protocol, and a few minutes later she again changed Cruz’s position and administered additional oxygen. She performed another vaginal exam at 3:54 a.m. in order to determine whether any progress had been made, and then immediately called an obstetrician, Dr. Rodolfo Tomasino. Graham reported Cruz’s status to Dr. Tomasino, including the baseline, tachycardia, variability, and decelerations recorded by the fetal heart monitor, and she told him of all the steps she had taken thus far. Dr. Tomasino approved Graham’s actions up to that point, including the administration of oxygen at the lower level of four liters per minute and the IV fluids, and he told her to continue with the same procedures. Following this call, Graham administered another bolus of lactated Ringers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.3d 622, 2001 WL 301172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruz-v-paso-del-norte-health-foundation-texapp-2001.