First Nobilis Surgical Center, LLC D/B/A First Street Surgical Center and Michael Ciaravino, M.D. v. Patricia Phillips

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 2019
Docket14-18-00772-CV
StatusPublished

This text of First Nobilis Surgical Center, LLC D/B/A First Street Surgical Center and Michael Ciaravino, M.D. v. Patricia Phillips (First Nobilis Surgical Center, LLC D/B/A First Street Surgical Center and Michael Ciaravino, M.D. v. Patricia Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nobilis Surgical Center, LLC D/B/A First Street Surgical Center and Michael Ciaravino, M.D. v. Patricia Phillips, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 31, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-18-00772-CV

FIRST NOBILIS SURGICAL CENTER, LLC D/B/A FIRST STREET SURGICAL CENTER AND MICHAEL CIARAVINO, M.D., Appellants V.

PATRICIA PHILLIPS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 164th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2017-63372

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this interlocutory appeal, Appellants, First Nobilis Surgical Center, LLC d/b/a First Street Surgical Center (“First Street”) and Michael Ciaravino, M.D., challenge the trial court’s denial of their motions to dismiss the healthcare liability claims of Appellee, Patricia Phillips, on the grounds that the expert reports1 Phillips

1 See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 74.351(b). served do not satisfy the expert report requirements under the Texas Medical Liability Act. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Phillips had breast implant surgery in 2005. On September 25, 2015, Dr. Ciaravino, a plastic surgeon, replaced Phillips’s saline breast implants with silicone breast implants at First Street. On October 1, 2015, Phillips developed tenderness and redness on her right breast. She contacted Dr. Ciaravino’s office and was prescribed oral ciprofloxacin and oral fluconazole. Dr. Ciaravino saw Phillips on October 2, 2015, and referred her to First Street for intravenous antibiotic treatment.

On October 5, 2015, Dr. Ciaravino removed Phillips’s implants, and a wound culture was taken from her breast during the surgery. The next day, she was discharged with oral antibiotics (ciprofloxacin). By October 8, 2015, Phillips noted continued redness and drainage from her left breast, so she went to Memorial Hermann Hospital. She was hospitalized for treatment of cellulitis in both breasts.

At the time, wound cultures were obtained from her right and left breasts by an infectious disease doctor at the hospital. The cultures were positive for Klebsiella oxytoca. The cultures obtained on October 5 were positive for Serratia marcescens. These bacteria identified from her breast wounds are normally found in the human colon.

On October 14, 2015, Phillips required surgery to drain her left breast hematoma and her right breast was treated with a washout procedure. She was treated with Levofloxacin, a broad-spectrum oral antibiotic. She was discharged from Memorial Hermann Hospital on October 17, 2015.

Phillips sued Dr. Ciaravino and First Street on September 25, 2017. She alleged Dr. Ciaravino was negligent in failing to follow the appropriate standard of

2 care with regard to the medical care provided to her, which caused or contributed to cause her injuries and damages. Phillips alleged:

1. Defendant, CIARAVINO, failed to promptly and timely assess, recognize and/or acknowledge the signs, symptoms and/or evidence of post-surgical infection in Plaintiff, PATRICIA PHILLIPS’ surgical wounds as heretofore described; 2. Defendant, CIARAVINO, failed to promptly and timely implement an appropriate response to the obvious signs of infection presented by Plaintiff, PATRICIA PHILLIPS; 3. Defendant, CIARAVINO, failed to promptly and timely swab Plaintiff, PATRICIA PHILLIPS’ wounds and submit swabs to an appropriate pathology laboratory for culturing, analysis and diagnosis; 4. Defendant, CIARAVINO, failed to prescribe appropriate antibiotics to treat the infection in Plaintiff, PATRICIA PHILLIPS’ surgical wounds resulting in the infection becoming resistant to antibiotics; 5. Defendant, CIARAVINO, failed to properly treat Plaintiff, PATRICIA PHILLIPS’ post-surgical infection; 6. Defendant, CIARAVINO, failed to timely consult and/or refer Plaintiff, PATRICIA PHILLIPS, to an infectious disease specialist for a higher level of medical care and treatment; and 7. Defendant, CIARAVINO, failed to treat for serratia and/or the actual infection, ESBL Klebsiella. Phillips asserted a medical-negligence claim against First Street and stated:

1. FIRST STREET Defendants2 failed to sterilize and decontaminate the operating room surfaces to remove bacterial, viral, fungal, and/or any nosocomial infection, including but not limited to, ESBL Klebsiella and other multi-drug resistant organisms. 2. FIRST STREET Defendants failed to properly maintain for physician use sterile equipment/instruments and/or avoid cross- contamination to prevent ESBL Klebsiella and other multi-drug 2 “FIRST STREET Defendants” includes Appellant, First Nobilis Surgical Center, LLC d/b/a First Street Surgical Center, as well as other entities that were named as defendants but are not relevant to this appeal.

3 resistant organisms. 3. FIRST STREET Defendants failed to sterilize and decontaminate the surgical instruments/equipment used in the surgical procedure and/or avoid cross-contamination, prevent ESBL Klebsiella and other multi-drug resistant organisms. 4. FIRST STREET Defendants failed to maintain the sterilization of the breast implant device and/or permit cross-contamination by ESBL Klebsiella and other multi-drug resistant organisms. 5. FIRST STREET Defendants failed to supervise the operating room nursing staff’s hygiene to avoid bacterial, viral, fungal, and/or any nosocomial infection and/or cross-contamination as a result of ESBL Klebsiella and other multi-drug resistant organisms. 6. FIRST STREET Defendants failed to provide employees with proper supervision and failed themselves to render medical care in a manner that met the applicable standard of care. 7. FIRST STREET Defendants failed to meet the duty to provide for the safety and care of Plaintiff, PATRICIA PHILLIPS. First Street filed its original answer on October 30, 2017, and Dr. Ciaravino filed his original answer on November 2, 2017. Phillips served expert reports from (1) Drs. Tyler Curiel and Rathel Nolan on First Street on February 26, 2018, and (2) Dr. Lincoln Miller on First Street and Dr. Ciaravino on March 1, 2018. Both First Street and Dr. Ciaravino filed objections to the three expert reports and motions to dismiss in March 2018.

On April 11, 2018, Phillips filed a motion for a 30-day extension to provide supplemental reports to meet the objections of First Street and Dr. Ciaravino; attached to Phillips’s motion was a revised report by Dr. Miller dated April 6, 2018. First Street and Dr. Ciaravino filed objections to Dr. Miller’s revised report on April 30, 2018.

The trial court held a hearing on June 4, 2018. First Street argued the reports of Drs. Curiel and Nolan were deficient, and Dr. Miller’s reports were untimely

4 served or, alternatively, deficient. Phillips argued the reports of Drs. Curiel and Nolan were not deficient and adequately addressed only First Street. Phillips admitted that Dr. Miller’s report was “filed late as to First Street.” She acknowledged Dr. Miller’s original report “could be done better” but argued that Miller’s revised report of April 6, 2018 is “solid” and cures the original report. Phillips argued she served the revised Miller report to demonstrate the original report “is a curable report” warranting the grant of a 30-day extension.

At the hearing on June 4, 2018, the trial court granted an extension to “try and fix” the reports of Drs. Curiel and Nolan but was concerned that Dr. Miller’s report was late with regard to First Street. The trial court would not allow Phillips to cure the expert reports from Drs. Nolan and Curiel with a report from Dr. Miller unless caselaw supported Phillips’s argument that a plaintiff is not limited to the original experts to cure deficiencies but is allowed to cure an expert report with her choice of a new expert. The trial court also granted an extension without limitation regarding Dr. Ciaravino, stating “so if there’s issues, you got 30 days.”

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First Nobilis Surgical Center, LLC D/B/A First Street Surgical Center and Michael Ciaravino, M.D. v. Patricia Phillips, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nobilis-surgical-center-llc-dba-first-street-surgical-center-and-texapp-2019.