Fragogiannis v. Sisters of St. Francis Health Services, Inc.

2015 IL App (1st) 141788
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 5, 2016
Docket1-14-1788, 1-14-2706 cons.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (1st) 141788 (Fragogiannis v. Sisters of St. Francis Health Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fragogiannis v. Sisters of St. Francis Health Services, Inc., 2015 IL App (1st) 141788 (Ill. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

2015 IL App (1st) 141788 No. 1-14-1788 and 1-14-2706 (cons.)

SECOND DIVISION December 31, 2015 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT _________________________________________________________________________________

TED FRAGOGIANNIS, as Special Administrator ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of the Estate of Georgia Tagalos, deceased, ) of Cook County. ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ) v. ) No. 08 L 5238 ) SISTERS OF ST. FRANCIS HEALTH ) SERVICES, INC. and DR. PERRY ) MARSHALL, D.O., ) ) Honorable Lorna Propes Defendants-Appellants. ) Judge Presiding

JUSTICE SIMON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Pierce and Justice Hyman concur in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 This is a medical malpractice and wrongful death case. The appeal is taken following a

jury verdict in plaintiff's favor. The hospital appeals arguing that the judgment against it should

be reversed outright because it cannot be liable, and the doctor appeals arguing that he is entitled to

a new trial. We affirm.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 On July 9, 2006, plaintiff Ted Fragogiannis, accompanied by his mother, Georgia Tagalos, No. 14-1788 & 14-2706 (cons.)

went to visit a friend in Bourbonnais, Illinois. Tagalos was a long-time sufferer of asthma.

During the car ride home, Fragogiannis noticed that his mother began wheezing and gasping for

air. She used two different inhalers, but her condition failed to improve and she was in respiratory

distress. Fragogiannis called 911 and arranged for an ambulance to meet them on the highway

and take his mother to the hospital. According to the paramedics' protocol, Tagalos was taken to

Saint James Hospital, the nearest hospital.

¶4 Tagalos arrived at the hospital at 1:45 p.m. and at that point she could no longer speak, but

she was still responsive. Jennifer Mullen, a nurse, met the ambulance upon its arrival and began

the process of emergency care. Defendant, Dr. Perry Marshall, was the emergency room's

attending physician that day. He was summoned by the nurse to address what had become a

respiratory emergency. Dr. Marshall was at Tagalos's bedside within minutes, but the parties

disagree about how many minutes elapsed. Dr. Marshall instructed Dr. Julie Mills, a fourth year

emergency resident, to see Tagalos and indicated that Tagalos might need to be intubated. Dr.

Mills assessed the patient and determined that an emergency intubation was required. At 1:56

p.m., eleven minutes after arriving at the hospital and while Dr. Mills was preparing for intubation,

Tagalos became unresponsive.

¶5 When Dr. Mills attempted to intubate Tagalos, the patient vomited. Upon seeing how

much vomit there was, which would prevent the necessary visual to complete the intubation, Dr.

Marshall called for an anesthesiologist, an expert in establishing airways, to assist. The vomit

was suctioned away and, five minutes after the first attempt, a second intubation attempt was

made. At some point around this time, Dr. Marshall also summoned surgery in case they needed

to surgically create an airway. The vomiting continued and the second intubation attempt was

-2- No. 14-1788 & 14-2706 (cons.)

unsuccessful. It was now 2:01 p.m. At that point, Dr. Marshall made an attempt to intubate

Tagalos and, between the anesthesiologist and another attending physician, three or four more

intubation attempts were made. All of them failed. Dr. Marshall ordered a cricothyrotomy—a

surgical incision in the trachea to create an airway. Sometime between 2:07 and 2:10 p.m., the

cricothyrotomy was performed, establishing an airway. Nonetheless, Tagalos suffered cerebral

hypoxia, a complete deprivation of oxygen to the brain. Tagalos was effectively brain dead and

she was taken off life support and died three days later.

¶6 Tagalos's son, as the special administrator of her estate, filed this case for medical

malpractice and wrongful death. Tagalos's position is that Dr. Marshall and the hospital were

negligent because they took approximately 25 minutes before establishing an airway despite the

fact that the patient arrived with a respiratory emergency. The hospital and Dr. Marshall's

respective positions were that they complied with the standard of care.

¶7 At trial, Plaintiff's expert, Dr. Richard Sobel testified that defendants deviated from the

standard of care in numerous ways. Dr. Sobel testified that the doctors waited too long to initially

attempt intubation and that, when they did attempt to intubate Tagalos, they failed to administer

sedation or properly oxygenate her prior to the attempts. Sobel testified that Dr. Marshall should

have concluded after the first failed attempt that Tagalos had a failed airway and ordered a

cricothyrotomy at that time. Overall, he concluded that the failure to establish an airway while 26

minutes of respiratory failure persisted constituted a deviation from the standard of care leading to

Tagalos's death. Sobel also testified that the nurse was negligent because she failed to properly

alert Dr. Marshall to the exigency of the situation. Sobel claimed that the delay to get a doctor

involved and administer prompt care was a cause, if not the cause, of Tagalos's death.

-3- No. 14-1788 & 14-2706 (cons.)

¶8 Dr. Sobel's testimony was challenged by the testimony of Dr. Marshall and his expert, Dr.

Timothy Rittenberry, and by the hospital's expert Dr. James Walter. These doctors testified that

Marshall and the hospital complied with the standard of care. These witnesses maintained that a

complete inability to intubate is rare and that Dr. Marshall acted properly by repeatedly trying to

intubate because performing a cricothyrotomy before those attempts were made would have been

inconsistent with common practice. They concluded, based on the fact that there was little

improvement in oxygenation even after the cricothyrotomy was performed, that the problem was

not the lack of an airway. But most important to this appeal is the way in which these doctors

were examined by plaintiff's counsel.

¶9 Each of the doctors was questioned relatively extensively about the Manual of Emergency

Airway Management, a treatise about managing airways in emergency respiratory situations. The

treatise advances a particular "failed airway algorithm" that proposes what action should be taken

when particular symptoms are present. Plaintiff's counsel questioned the defense witnesses by

reading them sections of the book and asking the witnesses whether they agreed with the contents.

Plaintiff's counsel also questioned the defense witnesses about their failure to bring and present

contrary authoritative literature on the subject. The parties dispute the propriety of that

questioning.

¶ 10 Plaintiff's theories at trial were that he could recover against Dr. Marshall individually

for his individual negligent acts, and that he could recover against the hospital because the nurse

was negligent or because the doctor was an apparent agent of the hospital. After a seven day trial,

the jury returned a general verdict in plaintiff's favor and against the hospital and Dr. Marshall for

$4.7 million. These appeals are taken from that final judgment, but include considerations arising

-4- No. 14-1788 & 14-2706 (cons.)

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Fragogiannis v. Sisters of St. Francis Health Services, Inc.
2015 IL App (1st) 141788 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2016)

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