District of Columbia v. Wilson

721 A.2d 591, 1998 D.C. App. LEXIS 230, 1998 WL 875866
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1998
Docket96-CV-1394
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 721 A.2d 591 (District of Columbia v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District of Columbia v. Wilson, 721 A.2d 591, 1998 D.C. App. LEXIS 230, 1998 WL 875866 (D.C. 1998).

Opinion

SCHWELB, Associate Judge:

On July 28, 1992, Russell Brown, who was serving a sentence as a youthful offender 1 at the Lorton Youth Center, died of asthma. On July 27, 1993, Brown’s mother, Linda Wilson, brought this action against the District of Columbia, pursuant to the wrongful death 2 and survival 3 statutes, alleging medical malpractice and other negligence. The case went to trial on March 25, 1996, and on April 2, 1996, the jury returned a verdict in the plaintiffs favor in the amount of $277,-418. 4 On August 22, 1996, the judge denied the District’s post-trial motion to set the verdict aside. The District now appeals, claiming evidentiary insufficiency and instructional error. We affirm.

I.

THE SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

A. Russell Brown’s illness and death.

The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, see, e.g., District of Columbia v. Watkins, 684 A.2d 395, 401 (D.C.1996), reveals that the decedent had suffered from asthma since birth. At the time of his death, Brown had been incarcerated at the Youth Center for approximately one year. There was evidence that Brown had suffered four attacks of asthma during the summer of 1991 and four more in 1992.

On July 12, 1992, following one of these attacks, Brown was treated at D.C. General Hospital. The physicians at that institution recommended that Brown’s prior treatment with Theophylline, a bronchodilator, 5 be continued, and that he should also receive Pred-nisone, an anti-inflammatory steroid, which had been beneficial to him in the past. Brown was returned to the Youth Center, but Prednisone was not administered to him.

During the night of July 27-28, 1992, Brown suffered another, and more severe, asthma attack. After some delay, which the plaintiff ascribed to allegedly inadequate training of correctional personnel and negligence on the part of unlicensed foreign medical graduates who were assisting in his treatment, but which the District attributed to Brown’s own negligence, Brown was taken to the Youth Center’s infirmary, where he collapsed. Brown was then transported by ambulance to the nearest emergency facility, DeWitt Army Hospital at Fort Belvoir, but he died on the morning of July 28 -of bronchial asthma. He was twenty-three years old.

B. The expert testimony.

(1) Dr. Michael D. Cohen

At trial, the plaintiff introduced the expert testimony of Michael D. Cohen, M.D., a board-certified pediatrician 6 with extensive experience in the provision of health services at correctional facilities. 7 According to Dr. Cohen,

*594 the management of [Brown’s] asthma essentially from the time he entered the facility until he died was inadequate and that both in terms of the chrome management of his asthma throughout the little more than one year he was there was not effective or adequate and in particular the management of his more serious asthma attacks which occurred during the weeks preceding his death was inadequate and the management of his severe, life-threatening asthma attack on the morning of July 28 was inadequate and as a consequence he died.

Dr. Cohen testified that asthma is “one of the more common chronic illnesses, particularly in young people, and is the cause of a significant amount of morbidity and mortality that public health authorities feel is preventable through more aggressive treatment.” He explained that the unfavorable effects of asthma can generally be controlled, and that the applicable standard of care 8 therefore required a proactive and preventive approach to the treatment and management of the disease. Dr. Cohen found no evidence, however, that such a proactive approach had been used at the Youth Center in the treatment of prisoners who were suffering from asthma. On the contrary, the care provided to Brown and others was entirely reactive.

Dr. Cohen pointed out that the treatment protocol which was in use at the Youth Center made no provision for the care of asthma patients “at times other than when they’re having what’s been called an acute asthma attack.” Indeed, the medical staff at the Youth Center

did not appear to be taking a preventive approach at all. You know, I tried to distinguish between what I would call episodic care, where care is provided only when the patient is sick or seeks help, versus what I would call continuous care, where the health service, particularly with a chronic asthmatic who is having recurrent and severe attacks, seeks to follow the patient closely, adjust [his] medication in such a way as to achieve the optimum benefits that are possible from the available types of medication and assesses the response to treatment, both clinically by listening to the chest and objectively by obtaining peak-flow rates. None of this was done at this facility.

According to Dr. Cohen, the standard of care in effect in 1992 9 required correctional institutions to have “specific times when patients with serious chronic illness[es] are seen and evaluated according to a specific protocol.” In particular, “[t]here should be regular scheduled follow-up of every serious asthmatic. At least every three months if they’re stable. Certainly more often if they’re not stable.” Brown, however, “was seen apparently only at his own initiative, and specific care was supplied only at those times.” Moreover, Brown’s medical records contained little or no information reflecting “any education of the patient regarding the nature of his disease or how to control it, or the seriousness of it, or how to use his medication, or opportunities for additional treatment that might be available.” Dr. Cohen’s apparent point was that the lack of patient education predictably inhibited the exercise of initiative on Brown’s part.

Dr. Cohen testified that the lack of a preventive treatment plan was further reflected by the absence from Brown’s medical records of any “detailed history regarding the severity of his illness, whether he had been hospitalized, whether he needed intensive care, whether he’d ... needed steroid prescriptions in the past, no history regarding the possibility of an allergic component, no history regarding what types of circumstances precipitated his attacks or made his asthma worse.” Dr. Cohen explained that a complete history is essential as “a guideline for the treating health professionals as to the severity of the individual’s disease,” and be *595 cause it “gives them their first essential information about how to manage the patient’s disease.”

Another critical factor in the management of asthma, according to Dr. Cohen, is “the objective measurement of the severity of the airway narrowing” in the lung.

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Bluebook (online)
721 A.2d 591, 1998 D.C. App. LEXIS 230, 1998 WL 875866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbia-v-wilson-dc-1998.