Estate of Hendrickson Ex Rel. Hendrickson v. Genesis Health Venture, Inc.

565 S.E.2d 254, 151 N.C. App. 139, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 722
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJuly 2, 2002
DocketCOA01-604
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 565 S.E.2d 254 (Estate of Hendrickson Ex Rel. Hendrickson v. Genesis Health Venture, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Hendrickson Ex Rel. Hendrickson v. Genesis Health Venture, Inc., 565 S.E.2d 254, 151 N.C. App. 139, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 722 (N.C. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

Plaintiffs filed their complaint in this action asserting claims for negligence, breach of contract, and negligent infliction of emotional distress against Genesis Health Venture, Inc., Meridian Health, Inc., Genesis ElderCare Network Services, Inc., Genesis ElderCare Rehabilitation Services, Inc., and Meridian Healthcare, Inc. The claims arise out of the death of Doris Hendrickson on 30 October 1996 while she was a resident at the Salisbury Center, a nursing home facility in Rowan County. Plaintiffs sought actual and punitive damages. Defendants filed an answer in which they denied the material allegations of the complaint. Prior to trial, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for a bifurcated trial and ordered that the issues with respect to defendants’ liability, if any, for compensatory damages be tried separately from the issue of defendants’ liability, if any, for punitive damages.

The evidence at trial tended to show that Doris Hendrickson suffered a massive stroke while she was a patient at Rowan Regional Medical Center in the summer of 1996. The stroke left her totally dependent on others for her daily care. After Mrs. Hendrickson was discharged from the hospital, she was admitted to Salisbury Center, a nursing home, which was operated by defendant Genesis ElderCare Network Services, Inc. Mrs. Hendrickson remained in the nursing home from 8 August 1996 to 11 August 1996, when she was hospitalized again, and she returned to the nursing home on 30 August 1996 and remained there until her death on 30 October 1996.

While Mrs. Hendrickson was a patient in the Salisbury Center, her husband, Larry Hendrickson, and her two daughters, Angela and Loretta Miller each visited her daily. Dr. Yuthapong Sukkasem was *143 Mrs. Hendrickson’s treating physician while she was at the Salisbury Center. Dr. Sukkasem ordered that Mrs. Hendrickson’s bed be equipped with “side rails times two for positioning and safety.” He testified that he did not consider the side rails on Mrs. Hendrickson’s bed to be restraints, explaining that side rails are restraints if they inhibit a patient from doing what the patient wants to do. Since Mrs. Hendrickson could not get out of bed by herself, the side rails were not obstructing her and therefore, he did not consider them to be restraints.

During their numerous visits, none of the plaintiffs noticed any hazardous or unsafe condition with respect to the side rails on Mrs. Hendrickson’s bed, nor were there any indications that she could move herself sufficiently to injure herself in connection with them. In fact, both Mr. Hendrickson and Loretta Miller testified that when they found a side rail down on Mrs. Hendrickson’s bed, they would either pull the rail up or advise the staff and have them pull the rail up. When Loretta Miller was asked if the side rails on her mother’s bed were restraints, she stated “I feel like she needed that. I didn’t want her to fall out of bed.” She indicated that the side rails were for her mother’s safety.

The evidence conflicted with respect to Mrs. Hendrickson’s ability to move on her bed while in the nursing home. Mrs. Hendrickson’s stroke left her paralyzed on the right side so she was unable to move her right arm and leg. Angela Miller testified that occasionally her mother would hold onto the nearest side rail with her left hand. Angela Miller saw her mother “wiggle” some and move her left leg and arm some but never saw her move from side to side on the bed. Mr. Hendrickson and Loretta Miller agreed with Angela that while in their presence, Mrs. Hendrickson never moved on her own to any significant degree. However, other evidence showed that Mrs. Hendrickson often slid to the left side of the bed, and would get caught between the side rail and the bed, so that the nursing assistants would have to reposition her. According to Dr. Sukkasem, Mrs. Hendrickson could move her left hand and left leg. He testified that Mrs. Hendrickson could hold on to something with her left hand and pull herself toward a side of the bed, and he presumed that Mrs. Hendrickson could slide some in her bed since he saw her in different positions when he examined her. However, Dr. Sukkasem testified that he had never actually seen Mrs. Hendrickson move around in her bed.

While at the Salisbury Center, Mrs. Hendrickson never progressed to the point of being able to talk but she was able to make whispering *144 sounds. Because she was unable to swallow, she had to be fed by a feeding tube. Additionally, the entire time Mrs. Hendrickson was in the nursing home, she remained incontinent of bowel and bladder. When questioned about the prospects for Mrs. Hendrickson’s improvement considering her age and medical problems, Dr. Sukkasem stated that had she lived, she could have possibly been able to feed herself and sit in a wheelchair, but would be incontinent of her bladder, still unable to move on one side, and would require total care for everything else.

Due to their dissatisfaction with the quality of care Mrs. Hendrickson was receiving at the Salisbury Center, her husband and daughter had planned to remove her from the nursing home to their home on 2 November 1996, and to provide care for her themselves. On the evening of 29 October 1996, Mr. Hendrickson visited his wife and stayed with her until she went to sleep. When he left, Mrs. Hendrickson was in the middle of the bed, with pillows on each side of her. Mr. Hendrickson testified that he thought his wife was in a safe position. At 12:00 or 12:15 a.m. on 30 October 1996, Ginger Ferguson, a CNA, was in Mrs. Hendrickson’s room, trying to calm her roommate down. Ms. Ferguson observed that Mrs. Hendrickson was resting on her left side with her eyes closed and with pillows propped up against her back to help support her at a 35 to 40 degree angle with her head raised so that she would not aspirate fluids with the feeding tube in her stomach. Ms. Ferguson further testified that Mrs. Hendrickson’s mattress appeared to be evenly spaced and normal.

Between 1:00 and 1:15 a.m., Ms. Ferguson went into Mrs. Hendrickson’s room again while making rounds and found that although Mrs. Hendrickson’s body was still on the mattress, her head was wedged between the mattress and the adjacent bed rail. Ms. Ferguson observed that the mattress was pushed up against the bed rail on the opposite side of the bed. Ms. Ferguson immediately called for assistance, and Mrs. Hendrickson was removed from the position in which she had been found. Mrs. Hendrickson had no vital signs. CPR was not initiated because Mr. Hendrickson and two physicians had signed a “Do Not Resuscitate” form.

Mrs. Hendrickson’s family was notified of the death and went to the nursing home. When Angela Miller saw her mother, “she was cleaned up. She had on a gown. She was positioned up in the bed. She was like she was asleep ....” Angela also noticed a substance that she thought was saliva on the floor directly below where her mother’s *145 head had been. There was a large bruise on Mrs. Hendrickson’s neck. Since the family had questions concerning the manner in which Mrs. Hendrickson had died, Dr. Sukkasem attempted to re-create what he thought had occurred by actually getting in the bed and placing his left arm and head in the gap between the mattress and the bed rail. After conversing with Dr. Sukkasem, the family decided not to have an autopsy performed on Mrs. Hendrickson’s body.

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Bluebook (online)
565 S.E.2d 254, 151 N.C. App. 139, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hendrickson-ex-rel-hendrickson-v-genesis-health-venture-inc-ncctapp-2002.