Einaugler v. Supreme Court of NY Kings County

918 F. Supp. 619, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3030, 1996 WL 106310
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 8, 1996
Docket95 CV 1051
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 918 F. Supp. 619 (Einaugler v. Supreme Court of NY Kings County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Einaugler v. Supreme Court of NY Kings County, 918 F. Supp. 619, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3030, 1996 WL 106310 (E.D.N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KORMAN, District Judge.

Alida Lamour died on May 24,1990, at the age of seventy-eight. The primary cause of death, as determined by the medical examiner, was “chemical peritonitis following infusion of liquid feeding supplement through [a] peritoneal dialysis catheter placed for treatment of renal failure due to essential hypertension.” Tr. 589-90. Other “contributory factors to the cause of death” were “arterio-sclerotic cardiovascular disease ... commonly known as hardening of the arteries” and diabetes mellitus. Tr. 590.

Six days before she died, Ms. Lamour had been transferred from Interfaith Hospital, where she had been treated for end-stage renal disease, to the JHMCB Nursing Home located across the street. End-stage renal disease “means that the kidneys stop functioning [permanently] and you need dialysis.” Tr. 487. “In dialysis the functions of the kidneys, which include removing waste products from the body and regulating the chemical and water balance, are taken over by a machine.” American Medical Ass’n, Family Medical Guide 551 (Charles B. dayman ed., 3d ed. 1994).

There are two forms of dialysis. One, hemodialysis, filters waste products from the blood. “To do this, blood from an arm or leg artery is passed along a thin tube to the [hemodialysis] machine, through its filter (called an artificial kidney), and back along another tube into an adjacent vein. A standard treatment, which lasts four hours and is repeated two or three times a week, is enough to control levels of waste products and excess water” in the body. Id.

Until a few weeks before her death, Ms. Lamour had been receiving hemodialysis treatment at Interfaith Hospital while a resident at the JHMCB Nursing Home. Ultimately, her cardiovascular system could no longer tolerate this form of dialysis. “This was a debilitated elderly lady who had some heart failure and her level of [blood] pressure was not very great and it would not keep the vessels open so we could not continue hemo-dialysis in the normal way and consequently we switched her over to peritoneal dialysis.” Tr. 199.

The switch to peritoneal dialysis involved the permanent placement of a thin plastic tube, known as a Tenehkoff catheter, in a cavity inside the abdomen called the peritoneal space (the space between the inner and outer layers of the sac lining the abdominal walls). Tr. 488. “A special fluid flows slowly though the tube and fills the peritoneal space. Waste products seep from the blood vessels that line the abdomen into the fluid, which is then drained out along with water. This process takes several hours.” Family Medical Guide, supra, at 551. While some patients perform this procedure for themselves, Ms. Lamour was unable to do so. The plan of treatment was to transfer her from Interfaith, where the catheter had been inserted, back to the nursing home, and to move her periodically back to Interfaith for the dialysis procedure. Tr. 206.

Ms. Lamour was the first peritoneal dialysis patient ever to be a resident at the JHMCB Nursing Home. When she was admitted, the nursing home had no protocols in place for the care of such a resident, and the staff was not trained in the “care of the peritoneal dialysis tube, and how the nurse should change the dressing and a whole list of things to be done_” Tr. 419-20. The transfer to a nursing home that was “not equipped to deal” with her was the beginning of the end of Ms. Lamour’s life.

When she returned to the nursing home on Friday, May 18, 1990, Ms. Lamour was seen by Dr. Gerald Einaugler, who was an attending physician there and who would ultimately be held criminally responsible for her death. Dr. Einaugler observed the peritoneal dialysis tube in Ms. Lamour’s abdomen. Unfortunately, he mistook it for a gastrointestinal *622 feeding tube and issued orders for Ms. Lam-our to be given Isoeal, a feeding solution, via that tube.

Dr. Einaugler would testify at his trial to several circumstances that influenced his appraisal of the situation. A Tenchkoff catheter, with which he had no experience, is similar in appearance to a kind of tube used for feeding known as a PEG, with which he was more familiar. Tr. 824-25. The placement of the tube was consistent with prudent placement of a feeding tube so as to avoid sear tissue. Tr. 52, 840-41. Although the patient’s transfer form indicated that the patient had a Tenchkoff catheter, it also said “Tenchkoff catheter placed for IPD,” and “intermittent peritoneal dialysis,” which led Dr. Einaugler to believe that the patient was being treated with a form of intermittent dialysis in which a new tube is inserted and removed each time the procedure is done. Tr. 837-38. In addition, the form did not indicate that the patient, who required a special diet, was to be fed by mouth rather than by tube. Tr. 838-39.

Dr. Einaugler’s negligent error was compounded by a staff that was not trained in caring for patients with end-stage renal disease. Thus, the effort to carry out Dr. Ei-naugler’s order continued even after the first nurse who attempted to comply with it was unable to connect the feeding apparatus to the patient’s tube because the openings were not compatible. With the assistance of another nurse and a supervisor a plastic cap was removed from the dialysis tube to make it compatible with the feeding tube and the feeding commenced on Friday evening. Tr. 1297-99.

Although the feeding of Alida Lamour proceeded at regular intervals over the weekend, it was not until approximately 5:30 a.m. on Sunday morning, May 20, 1990, that a nurse noticed that the patient was having-difficulty breathing, her abdomen was distended, and she had previously vomited. Tr. 47-49, 295. The nurse realized what had happened and notified her supervisor. The nurses then drained about 2,000 cc’s of feeding solution from the catheter by rolling the patient over and rocking her back and forth. At that point, the breathing difficulty subsided, Ms. Lamour’s vital signs were normal, and she rested quietly. Tr. 50.

At approximately 6 a.m., the nurse supervisor notified Dr. Einaugler of his mistake and described Ms. Lamour’s condition. Dr. Einaugler then called Dr. Dunn, who was the Chief of Nephrology at Interfaith Hospital and who had treated Ms. Lamour during her last stay. Dr. Einaugler testified that he “told Dr. Dunn that I had inadvertently ordered to feed tubing through a catheter that was in essence a peritoneal catheter. I misjudged it for a PEG. I told him the nurses had fed the patient but they told me that they had drained out most of the fluid, the patient was stable, she had no peritoneal abdominal signs and did not seem to be in any distress.” Tr. 844-45. According to Dr. Einaugler, Dr. Dunn told him “don’t get panicky. Don’t worry, it doesn’t seem like any emergency the way you are describing it to me. If she’s stable, send her to the hospital on Monday, and then we can evaluate her for dialysis and lavage.” Tr. 845.

After his telephone conversation with Dr. Dunn, Dr. Einaugler testified that he went to the nursing home to examine the patient. She was stable and showed no early signs of an adverse reaction. Tr. 846. Dr. Einaugler testified that he called Dr. Dunn after examining Ms. Lamour and “told him my findings ... she seems to be in no distress, bowel sounds are present, there is no fluid percussion that I can feel.” Tr. 846. Dr. Dunn, according to Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
918 F. Supp. 619, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3030, 1996 WL 106310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/einaugler-v-supreme-court-of-ny-kings-county-nyed-1996.