Dean v. Akron General Medical, Unpublished Decision (12-22-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1999
DocketC.A. No. 18636.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dean v. Akron General Medical, Unpublished Decision (12-22-1999) (Dean v. Akron General Medical, Unpublished Decision (12-22-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dean v. Akron General Medical, Unpublished Decision (12-22-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
This cause was heard upon the record in the trial court. Each error assigned has been reviewed and the following disposition is made:

Following a jury verdict in his favor, judgment was entered for Dr. James Rosser ("Rosser") and against Penny Dean ("Dean") in her medical malpractice case against him.1 The trial judge did not instruct the jury on Dean's medical battery claim against Rosser. During the trial, a directed verdict was entered in favor of Dr. Peter Boutsicaris ("Boutsicaris") on Dean's claims of malpractice and battery. Dean has appealed both the directed verdict in favor of Boutsicaris and the judgment in favor of Rosser.

Dean has assigned as error that the trial court (1) improperly directed a verdict in favor of Boutsicaris with respect to his medical malpractice claim; (2) improperly withheld the claims of technical battery against both physicians from the jury; and (3) transformed the objective standard of care into a subjective one by instructing the jury that the standard was that of a laparoscopic surgeon rather than a board certified general surgeon.2 We overrule all three errors and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I
In August 1993, Boutsicaris performed an emergency surgery on Dean to remove a portion of her colon in which she had perforated diverticulitis.3 Rather than reconnect the two loose ends of her colon together immediately, Boutsicaris pulled the top end through the abdominal wall to create a temporary colostomy.4 He sealed the severed end of the lower portion, creating an internal stump connected to her rectum.

In early January 1994, Boutsicaris recommended that Dean consider laparoscopic surgery5 to reverse the colostomy and to reconnect her colon. He referred her to Rosser, who had performed several similar surgeries. Rosser is a board certified general surgeon and is a specialist in laparoscopic surgery. At the time of the operation, Rosser was the surgeon with the most experience in colorectal laparoscopic surgeries at Akron General Medical Center and he was to perform or supervise all laparoscopic colorectal surgeries at the hospital. After a consultation with Rosser, Dean agreed to proceed with the laparoscopic reconnection. During the consultation, Rosser explained that "if we ha[ve] difficulty to the point where no progress was being made that [she] would be opened and the operation carried out in the opened fashion."6 At Dean's request Boutsicaris agreed to assist in the laparoscopic surgery, but more specifically to be available in case difficulties arose which required conversion to an open surgery.7

Prior to this elective surgery, Dean signed two consent forms, one the night before surgery and a second one on the day of surgery. The forms were identical in all relevant aspects. The forms describe the operation being requested as "laparoscopic takedown and colostomy reversal Hartman's Pouch — possible laparotomy." Rosser and Boutsicaris are both listed as physicians performing the operation. The forms contain an acknowledgment that "unforeseen conditions may be revealed that necessitate an extension of the original procedure or different procedures" and that "the practice of medicine is not an exact science [and] that it may involve the making of medical judgments based upon facts known to the physician at the time[.]" It authorizes the surgeons to perform "such surgery/procedures that are necessary in the exercise of their professional judgment." The space included for Dean to record any exceptions to the above authorization is blank on both forms, as is another section designated "Remarks." The forms also acknowledge that Dean has "had an opportunity to discuss with and have explained to my satisfaction * * * the operation * * * as well as reasonably foreseeable risks."

On January 12, 1994, Rosser and Boutsicaris operated on Dean. During the procedure, they discovered that the stump contained hard fecal matter. Attempts to bypass the hardened stool with the connecting stapler were unsuccessful, and during the process a small tear, approximately three millimeters, appeared in the wall of the stump. Rosser and Boutsicaris sutured the tear and evacuated the stump using a gravity driven stream of water.8 The process took approximately three hours, in part because a piece of equipment broke during the evacuation and had to be repaired before the surgery could be completed. During the process of cleaning out the stump Boutsicaris initiated a conversation with Rosser about whether or not they should revert to an open procedure. Based on Rosser's assessment of the situation, Rosser made the decision to continue laparoscopically. After the stump was cleaned out, the two ends were reconnected and surgery completed. The entire surgery, which was originally estimated to require approximately five hours, lasted ten hours.

Unfortunately, major life-threatening complications occurred following the surgery. A leak developed at the anastomosis9 that permitted fecal matter to leak into the abdominal cavity. All parties agree that the devastation that followed was caused by that leak. As a result of the massive infection that followed the leak, Dean was forced to undergo several additional surgeries to remove necrotic tissue, to repair fistulae10 that had developed, and to create and reverse two additional colostomies. She spent approximately four months in the hospital, much of it in critical condition oblivious to her surroundings, her abdomen a massive open wound. Although physicians were eventually able to close her abdomen, the muscles in her abdominal wall were destroyed. At the time of the trial she faced additional surgery to create artificial protection for her internal organs.

Dr. Samuel Esterkyn, a board certified general surgeon, testified as an expert on behalf of Dean.11 Currently the "main emphasis" of Esterkyn's California practice is laparoscopic surgery, although he does not do colorectal surgery laparoscopically. Esterkyn agreed that, from the record, it was clear that Rosser was the "head surgeon." He also testified that as an assistant surgeon Boutsicaris' responsibility was that of a "secondary player," although the extent of that responsibility might be somewhat greater in laparoscopic surgery than in an open operation.

At one point, when it was suggested that he did "not have an opinion on" Boutsicaris' care, he agreed. Later, he was asked if "from the time of that surgery until today, you have no criticisms of Dr. Boutsicaris in anything he did, correct?" He responded, "That is correct." He further agreed that nothing Boutsicaris did was "negligent or below the standard of care[.]"

Rosser presented the testimony of two experts. Dr. Moises Jacobs is a board certified general surgeon practicing in Florida. He has extensive experience in laparoscopic colorectal surgery, and has performed somewhere between ten and thirty laparoscopic takedowns of a Hartman pouches. Dr. Thomas Diehl practices in Zanesville. He is also a board certified general surgeon and has done laparoscopic surgery for approximately ten years. He performs both open and laparoscopic colorectal surgery.

II
A. Medical Malpractice Claim against Boutsicaris

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Bluebook (online)
Dean v. Akron General Medical, Unpublished Decision (12-22-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-akron-general-medical-unpublished-decision-12-22-1999-ohioctapp-1999.