Ekendahl v. Louisiana Medical Mutual Insurance Co.

124 So. 3d 461, 2013 WL 4552323, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1737
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 2013
DocketNo. 48,374-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 So. 3d 461 (Ekendahl v. Louisiana Medical Mutual Insurance Co.) 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
Ekendahl v. Louisiana Medical Mutual Insurance Co., 124 So. 3d 461, 2013 WL 4552323, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1737 (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

DREW, J.

| We review here a judgment dismissing a medical malpractice action. The litigation was brought by Mrs. Elizabeth Ekendahl (“Elizabeth”), the widow of Mr. Carl Eken-dahl (“Carl”), on behalf of herself and her children.1 Defendants are Dr. Kevin Murphy and his insurer.

The suit focuses on Dr. Murphy’s medical treatment provided to Carl on January 25, 2005. As of that date, the physician had worked as a family practitioner for 15 years. He was and is board-certified in family practice.

Elizabeth urges that the defendant violated the appropriate standard of care by: (1) not ordering a culture in response to a negative finding of a Quidel Quick Vue InLine Strep A Test (“QST”) as directed by the manufacturer, and (2) administering a Celestone shot for symptomatic relief for a man who presented with a sore throat and whose two children has just been diagnosed with strep.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

During the last decade of Carl’s life, Dr. Murphy treated him 17 times for minor medical problems, including previous bouts of viral pharyngitis (inflamed tissues lining the pharynx), and other respiratory problems, often occurring during the winter months. Through the years, the doctor had occasionally administered Celestone shots to Carl, without incident. He had never treated Carl for strep.

On his last visit to Dr. Murphy, Carl complained of a sore throat over the previous 86-48 hours as well as a mild headache and chills. The | doctor's notes indicate that Carl reported that his children had been diagnosed with strep throat three to four days earlier.2

Dr. Murphy performed a physical examination, finding:

• Carl’s eyes, ears, nose, sinuses, and lungs were normal;

• no nasal congestion and no postnasal drip were noted;

• Carl exhibited mild erythema (redness) in the tonsillar and posterior pharyngeal region, but without exudate (pus-like material);

• his temperature was normal, and no history of fever was reported;3

[463]*463• other vital signs were normal;

• no skin rashes were observed; and

• he had ulcerations in the posterior pharyngeal region and positive anterior cervical nodes.

Dr. Murphy ordered the QST. The test results were negative. Dr. Murphy further testified that:4

• he did not order a culture,5 contrary to the manufacturer’s recommendation to do so when getting a negative reading from a QST;

• Celestone does suppress the immune system;

Is* had a culture been taken, it would have been sent to a lab in Alabama, resulting in a delay of two or three days in receiving the culture results;

• Carl’s tonsils had previously been removed, which is a factor militating against a diagnosis of strep; and

• an odor associated with strep, often noticed by clinicians, was not present.

The physician made a diagnosis of acute viral pharyngitis.6 Dr. Murphy administered 2 ccs of Celestone for symptomatic relief, prescribing rest and fluids, along with Tylenol or Advil. Carl was told to return if he had any problems or changes in his condition. After that office visit on Tuesday, January 25, 2005, Dr. Murphy had no more contact with Carl.

Elizabeth testified that her husband felt a little better the next day but for the rest of the week he was not “back to normal.” By Friday, January 28, Carl told her that he was not feeling well and that if he was not better by Monday he was going to contact an ENT.

Carl was a talented musician and attorney. On Saturday afternoon, January 29, he left Bossier City to fulfill a prior commitment to play music in DeRidder. After the engagement, he was too sick to make the drive home with his band. He spent the night in DeRidder, where Elizabeth picked him up the next day, Sunday, January 30. She drove him to Willis-Knighton Bossier, where he was admitted on an emergency basis. After 22 days of horrific suffering, he died on February 21, 2005.7 At his death, Carl was 41 Lyears of age. He was survived by Elizabeth and two young children.

Elizabeth filed a petition for a Medical Review Panel (“MRP”) on September 1, 2005.

The MRP found that Dr. Murphy met the applicable standard of care, and explained its reasons at length, concluding:

Dr. Murphy was adherent to a good standard of care and did what the competent average family physician would [464]*464have done. It is unfortunate that Mr. Ekendahl succumbed to Strep bactere-mia but the evidence does not support that Dr. Murphy performed negligently or withheld proper care.
In summary, the panel is of the opinion that Dr. Kevin Murphy did not breach the standard of care in the. treatment of Mr. Carl Ekendahl.

On February 2, 2009, Elizabeth, individually and as tutrix of her two children, filed this lawsuit against Dr. Murphy and his insurer, Louisiana Medical Mutual Insurance Company.

Following a two-day trial on the merits in September 2012, the trial court ruled from the bench, finding that the defendant’s treatment was within the standard of care for treatment of a patient with Carl’s symptoms.

The trial court explicitly found that:

• there was no expert testimony that the failure to do a follow-up culture was below the standard of care;

• even the defense witnesses testified that there was no need to confirm the test with a culture; and

• injecting Carl with Celestone was not. a deviation below the standard of care required of a family practitioner.

In her personal and representative capacities, Elizabeth now appeals the trial court’s judgment on grounds that it is manifestly erroneous.

We affirm.

INEXPERT TESTIMONY

Elizabeth called three experts on her behalf:

1. Douglas Jenkins, M.D., was accepted as an expert in the field of internal medicine, including the equivalent standards of care for family physicians with respect to the treatment of strep and use of corticosteroids.

Dr. Jenkins testified that:

• the standard of care for the diagnosis and treatment of strep is the same for internal medicine practitioners as for family practitioners;

• Dr. Murphy’s January 25, 2005, treatment of Carl was below the standard of care applicable to family practitioners, as to the injection administered;

• it is improper to give an. oral or injecta-ble steroid to a patient who has a noncritical infection;8

• he felt that Carl already had strep on January 25;

• he knew of no case where an injection of 2 ccs of Celestone caused the patient to end up with strep sepsis;

• the manufacturer’s warnings foretold what happened to Carl as a result of the Celestone shot: other infections came into existence, symptoms and infections were masked, the infections worsened, the body’s ability to localize the infection was compromised, and circumstances were created which led to a widespread infection;

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCorkle v. Gravois
152 So. 3d 944 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 So. 3d 461, 2013 WL 4552323, 2013 La. App. LEXIS 1737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ekendahl-v-louisiana-medical-mutual-insurance-co-lactapp-2013.