DePrizio v. The MacNeal Memorial Hospital Association

2014 IL App (1st) 123206
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 28, 2014
Docket1-12-3206
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2014 IL App (1st) 123206 (DePrizio v. The MacNeal Memorial Hospital Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DePrizio v. The MacNeal Memorial Hospital Association, 2014 IL App (1st) 123206 (Ill. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

2014 IL App (1st) 123206 No. 1-12-3206 Opinion filed May 28, 2014 Third Division ______________________________________________________________________________

LOUISE DEPRIZIO, Plenary Guardian of the ) Estate and Person of LISA DEPRIZIO, a Disabled ) Person, ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Plaintiff and Cross-Appellee, ) of Cook County. ) v. ) ) No. 09 L 6426 THE MacNEAL MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ) ASSOCIATION, ) ) The Honorable Defendant-Appellee and Cross-Appellant ) Eileen Mary Brewer, ) Judge, presiding. (Other Defendants; ) ) (KEITH A. HEBEISEN, )

Contemnor-Appellant)). ______________________________________________________________________________

PRESIDING JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Neville and Pucinski concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 The confidentiality privilege set out in the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities

Confidentiality Act (the Act) (740 ILCS 110/1 et seq. (West 2010)) comes before us after

plaintiff’s counsel, for the second time, takes a “friendly” contempt. His refusal, unrelated to the

earlier appeal, regards various records about the treatment of plaintiff's cognitive impairment

reviewed by independent expert witnesses that plaintiff identified as testifying at trial. The issue

involves the effect of Rule 213(f)(2) disclosures on the exercise of the confidentiality privilege

created by the Act. Ill. S. Ct. R. 213(f)(2) (eff. Jan. 1, 2007). MacNeal Memorial Hospital 1-12-3206

Association cross-appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in limiting the extent of the

disclosure of Deprizio's mental health records. We find no error and affirm.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 Plaintiff Lisa Deprizio alleges she suffered from a lithium overdose as a patient at

MacNeal Memorial Hospital in September 2002. She filed suit against MacNeal and her doctors

in 2004, alleging medical negligence. In 2005, one of the defendant doctors filed a motion to

compel production of records regarding Deprizio's psychological care in the decade leading up to

her injury. Deprizio refused and claimed the material was protected under the Act. The trial court

denied the motion to compel in part, but granted production of: (i) records pertaining to

Deprizio's prescriptions, levels, and reactions to lithium; and (ii) mental health records from a

defendant doctor who treated Deprizio after her alleged injury.

¶4 Deprizio's attorney, Keith Hebeisen, refused to produce the records, the court held him in

contempt, and he appealed. We affirmed disclosure. Deprizio v. MacNeal Memorial Hospital

Ass'n, No. 1-06-2909 (Sept. 19, 2008) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23). The

supreme court denied Hebeisen's petition for leave to appeal. Deprizio v. MacNeal Memorial

Hospital Ass'n, 231 Ill. 2d 630 (2009) (table).

¶5 On remand, Deprizio filed supplemental disclosures of her three independent expert

witnesses. See Ill. S. Ct. R. 213(f)(2) (eff. Jan. 1, 2007). Dr. Stacy McCarty, a doctor of

rehabilitation medicine, would testify that Deprizio suffered an organic brain injury as a result of

lithium toxicity. McCarty listed Deprizio's symptoms as "impaired memory, impaired cognition,

impaired abstract reasoning, slow processing speed and decline in intelligence." She would

testify that the injury is permanent.

-2- 1-12-3206

¶6 Another expert, Dr. Nancy Landre, a clinical neuropsychologist, would testify on Deprizio’s

neuropsychological evaluation. Regarding the causes, her report stated, “[W]hile depression can

certainly have an adverse impact on cognitive functioning, the timing, level of impairment, and

severity of Ms. Deprezio's [sic] deficits suggest that other factors are also responsible for this

apparent decline. In particular, *** Ms. Deprezio's [sic] episode of Lithium toxicity in 2002

***." (Emphasis added.)

¶7 The third expert, Dr. Shabbir Zarif, a psychiatrist, stated that Deprizio suffers from an

organic brain injury resulting from the 2002 lithium overdose. Specifically, Zarif wrote in his

report that the results of Deprizio's cognitive examination showed that her visual spatial skills,

attention, information processing ability, motor skills, and global cognitive functioning were

more than one standard deviation below normal. He stated:

"This cognitive exam pattern is not necessarily found in patients with bipolar,

depressive or anxiety disorders, esp[ecially] the visio spatial functions and are more

consistent with a schizophrenia process which she clinically does not fit the picture

of. However in light of the relatively recent decline, the history of lithium toxicity,

coma, repeated seizures, she may have an 'organic brain syndrome' from that episode

in 2002." (Emphasis added.)

Zarif further stated that Deprizio's "overall slowness may be related to brain dysfunction and not

just meds but may be related to anxiety and poor concentration." Notably, both Landre and Zarif

discuss the effects of Deprizio's past mental health problems (including depression) on her

cognitive impairment, though it seems neither believes they are wholly responsible for her

cognitive impairment.

-3- 1-12-3206

¶8 Based on these disclosures, MacNeal filed a motion to compel production of all of

Deprizio's mental health records. MacNeal offered two arguments in support: (i) Deprizio placed

her mental condition at issue by introducing her mental well-being as an element of damages;

and (ii) the records were relevant because Deprizio's bipolar disorder or depression might have

caused or contributed to her cognitive impairment.

¶9 The trial court found that Deprizio introduced her mental state as an element of her claim,

and conducted an in camera review of all Deprizio's psychiatric records from 1992 to 2002,

which included records from Dr. Catherine Camilleri at Rush Hospital, among others. After

reviewing the records, the trial court ordered Deprizio to produce all records reviewed by Zarif,

and also redacted portions of records of treatment by Camilleri relating to any cognitive

impairment before 2002. The trial court specified notes from eight sessions with Camilleri in

2000 and 2001.

¶ 10 Hebeisen refused to disclose these records and took a “friendly” contempt appeal.

¶ 11 ANALYSIS

¶ 12 The correctness of a discovery order may be tested through a contempt order, and the

appeal immediately taken. Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(b)(5) (eff. Feb. 26, 2010); Payne v. Hall, 2013 IL

App (1st) 113519, ¶ 10. We review the underlying discovery order. Id.

¶ 13 As to Hebeisen's appeal, we must decide whether the trial court erred in holding that

Deprizio placed her mental condition at issue through her expert witness disclosures. As to the

cross-appeal, we are asked whether the trial court erred in limiting disclosures of Deprizio's

mental health records to those mentioning cognitive defects. We hold that the trial court did not

err in either respect.

-4- 1-12-3206

¶ 14 Our analysis under the Act proceeds in two steps. First we determine whether Deprizio

waived her privilege. If waived, we then must satisfy ourselves that the trial court reasonably

construed the statutory standards in deciding the scope of the records and communications to be

disclosed.

¶ 15 Waiver of Privilege

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