Ebarb v. WILLIS KNIGHTON MEDICAL CENTER

33 So. 3d 203, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 3, 2010 WL 22772
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 6, 2010
Docket44,856-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 So. 3d 203 (Ebarb v. WILLIS KNIGHTON MEDICAL CENTER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ebarb v. WILLIS KNIGHTON MEDICAL CENTER, 33 So. 3d 203, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 3, 2010 WL 22772 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinions

MOORE, J.

The father, mother and brothers of 12-year-old Cody Ebarb appeal a jury verdict that rejected their claim of medical malpractice arising from Cody’s death by stroke in the Willis-Knighton Health System Intensive Care Unit. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual Background

Cody suffered from several preexisting medical problems, including Epstein-Barr syndrome (a kind of viral chronic fatigue syndrome), herpes virus of the eye, and suspected Marfan syndrome (a genetic disease of the connective tissue). Cody was also double-jointed and often “popped” various joints. He had spent much time in medical treatment, and his mother described him as not a robust child.

On Sunday, November 4, 2001, the family went to their hunting lease to ride four-wheelers. After an unusually active day for him, Cody said he had “popped” his neck, was feeling dizzy and seeing an unusual light, but he begged not to be taken to the hospital again.

The next morning, Ms. Ebarb was driving Cody to his pediatrician, Dr. Sudha Rao, but stopped to drop off his brother at school. At the school, Cody suddenly said he couldn’t see, then fell to the floor and started moaning. An ambulance carried him to Willis-Knighton South. EMTs noted only that he was having seizures.

Cody reached the ER at 8:30 am. Dr. John Felty, an emergency medicine physician on contract to Willis-Knighton, was on duty. Accounts of events in the ER and ICU varied widely.

| ¡According to Ms. Ebarb, she told Dr. Felty about Cody’s symptoms of the previous night and asked him to call Dr. Rao, but he refused, saying he would not call her until he ran some tests. Ms. Ebarb also testified that even though he could not open his eyes or speak, Cody definitely was aware of his surroundings and communicated with them by nodding his head, notably during a spinal tap procedure. The nurses’ notes at 10:40 am seem to confirm, “Patient responds to verbal stimulus.” Ms. Ebarb testified, however, that Dr. Felty basically abandoned Cody after about 10:30 am, never telling her any test results, and she could not find a nurse to help them.

About 2:00 pm, Dr. Eric Chen, a pediatrician, arrived. Ms. Ebarb tried to tell him the whole story, but he was not interested; he merely glanced at Cody, ordered some Ativan (a widely used sedative and anticonvulsant), and left. Cody’s pediatrician, Dr. Rao, did not arrive until about 5:00 pm, and according to Ms. Ebarb she was irate to find Cody still in the ER, not the ICU; he was promptly transferred. Ms. Ebarb testified that by this time, Cody was much worse: he was unable to move his arms or communicate, and was sweating profusely.

Cody was moved to the ICU around 6:30 pm, at which time Dr. James Kim, a neurologist, and Dr. Giao Do, a pediatric in-tensivist, arrived. According to Ms. Ebarb, Dr. Kim told her Cody was stable and doing fine, and they would run some more tests in the morning.

The next morning, however, while Ms. Ebarb had run home to fetch Cody’s toiletries, Cody went into cardiac arrest and [206]*206“coded.” There was no Rautopsy, but an MRI taken while the boy was on life support showed a dissected basilar artery, a form of stroke. The family took him off life support on November 10.

Dr. Felty agreed that he did not immediately call Cody’s pediatrician, Dr. Rao, but insisted that the standard of care required him first to perform a basic emergency exam. He described running a battery of tests to explore and rule out the normal causes of symptoms like Cody’s: a CT scan, spinal tap and blood chemistries, which were not complete until about 12:15 pm, and were all negative. He also gave Cody a small dose of Ativan to control the seizures. He admitted not performing a full neurological exam because Cody could not communicate and Was flailing his limbs involuntarily. He disputed Ms. Ebarb’s recollection that Cody was calmly nodding in response to questions; nurses’ notes at 3:30 pm confirmed that the patient was “thrashing in bed, continues unresponsiveness.” He also admitted not ordering an MRI, explaining that subspecialists, not ER physicians, normally do so, and that even high-definition MRI images might fail to show an occlusion during the first six hours.

Once the tests were complete, Dr. Felty called Dr. Rao, but she must have been busy because her partner, Dr. Chen, came. Dr. Felty testified that he verbally conveyed Cody’s situation, and entrusted the patient to Dr. Chen at that time. Dr. Felty admitted he did not “chart” all the activities he related at trial, but insisted he did them all, satisfying his standard of care. Finally, he stated that a tear in the basilar artery — which is sheathed by the spine — is exceedingly rare, especially in pediatric patients.

|4Pr. Chen testified that he took the call for his partner, Dr. Rao, came to the ER about 1:30 pm, and got a verbal synopsis from Dr. Felty. He found Cody thrashing, moaning, unresponsive and difficult to examine. Like Dr. Felty, Dr. Chen could make no definitive diagnosis, but he ordered an EEG to test for epilepsy and seizures, a consultation with Dr. Kim, the neurologist, and ordered Cody to the ICU. He was unaware that after this order, Cody spent several more hours lying in the ER. Dr. Chen added that he verbally relayed his findings to Dr. Rao, but did not chart any of his activities. His final involvement in the case was his phone call to Dr. Kim.

Dr. Giao Do, the pediatric intensivist, testified that he saw Cody in the ICU about 7:30 pm. He did not think Cody was showing classic signs of a stroke, so he felt an immediate MRI was not needed. After consulting with Drs. Rao and Kim, he scheduled an MRI and repeat CT scan for the following morning. By the next morning, unfortunately, Cody had coded, and the MRI occurred while he was on life support.

Procedural History

The Ebarbs filed a claim with the commissioner of insurance against Willis-Knighton and the various doctors: Felty, Chen, Do, Rao and Kim. The medical review panel (“MRP”) unanimously absolved all healthcare providers, finding the evidence did not support the conclusion that any of them breached the applicable standard of care. In written reasons, the MRP found no “deterioration of the patient’s condition while in the ER” and that because of the nature of the case, the “most competent general neurologist would not correctly diagnose this condition early on.”

IsThe Ebarbs then filed this suit against Willis-Knighton and Drs. Felty, Chen, Kim and Do. Dr. Rao was not named as a defendant, and Dr. Do was dismissed voluntarily in August 2006. The matter proceeded to a five-day jury trial in August [207]*2072008. The Ebarbs and Drs. Felty, Chen and Do testified as outlined above; Drs. Kim and Rao did not testify.

The Expert Testimony

Dr. Walter Simmons of Scottsdale, Arizona, testified for the Ebarbs as an expert in emergency medicine with experience in pediatrics. His position was that an MRI performed shortly after Cody arrived in the ER would have shown the basilar artery dissection and improved his chances of survival. He strongly criticized Dr. Felty for failing to consider vascular injury, order an MRI, run a complete workup, or call for consultation sooner, and for keeping an incomplete chart. He testified that an ER doctor’s standard of care was to order an MRI; if Willis-Knighton could not do it, Dr. Felty could have sent Cody to Parkland Hospital in Dallas, which had more advanced equipment.

Dr.

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Ebarb v. WILLIS KNIGHTON MEDICAL CENTER
33 So. 3d 203 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
33 So. 3d 203, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 3, 2010 WL 22772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ebarb-v-willis-knighton-medical-center-lactapp-2010.