Giles v. Brookwood Health Services, Inc.

5 So. 3d 533, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 134, 2008 WL 2554287
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 27, 2008
Docket1060883
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 5 So. 3d 533 (Giles v. Brookwood Health Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giles v. Brookwood Health Services, Inc., 5 So. 3d 533, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 134, 2008 WL 2554287 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

COBB, Chief Justice.

Veronica D. Giles seeks the reversal of a summary judgment entered by the Jefferson Circuit Court on her claims alleging medical malpractice, failure to obtain informed consent, and spoliation of evidence against Brookwood Health Services, Inc. (“Brookwood”), the entity that operates Brookwood Medical Center, Dr. Jon Ad-cock, Dr. C. Paul Perry, and OB-GYN South, P.C. (“OB-GYN South”). We affirm.

Facts

A. Giles’s medical history, the surgical procedure, and the subsequent medical treatment

In July 2001 Giles visited Advocate South Suburban Hospital in Chicago, Illinois, where an ultrasound was performed on her pelvis. The following note is contained in that ultrasound report:

“There is a mild solid enlargement of the left adnexal area measuring 4.5 cm and probably due to a hemorrhagic cyst, endometrioma, or malignancy. Gynecological consult recommended. ... The right adnexum[ 1 ] is not remarkable.”

*538 On August 28, 2001, Giles was seen by Dr. Adcock, a gynecologist with OB-GYN South. At Dr. Adcock’s office Giles underwent another ultrasound. The second ultrasound report states that the “[ultrasound revealed left ovarian complex mass. ... Right ovary is normal.”

Dr. Adcock’s notes regarding Giles’s August 28, 2001, visit state that Giles

“presented to [Dr. Adcock] with pain in her ovaries. An ultrasound revealed an ovarian mass. She is status-post hysterectomy. ... She states that she feels a yanking feeling that comes and goes. It is increasing [in] frequency. She has felt it twice in the last two weeks. The left side is greater than the right.”

At the conclusion of the notes for the August 28 visit, Dr. Adcock wrote that his “assessment” was “[l]eft ovarian complex mass that is persistent and recurrent with pain.” He described his “plan” as follows: “We will proceed with diagnostic laparos-copy and probable left oophorectomy.”

The procedure was scheduled; an “O.R. Journal” note in the record indicates that a request was made on August 28, 2001, to schedule an operating room at Brookwood Medical Center for a “left oophorectomy” for Giles. 2 However, Giles’s insurance company would not agree to pay for the procedure, and the procedure did not go forward as originally scheduled.

On October 3, 2001, Giles consulted another doctor, Dr. Emig, 3 who practiced at a different clinic than Dr. Adcock. Dr. Emig’s notes from Giles’s October 3 visit to Dr. Emig’s office state:

“The patient had an [ultrasound] today to reevaluate her left adnexa. [Ultrasound] revealed a persistent complex left ovarian cyst.... Her records from Dr. Adcock in Brookwood were reviewed and this cyst is consistent with measurements of a complex left ovarian cyst obtained in his office in August of 2001. The patient reported that she was essentially pain-free at the time she saw me on September 21st, but since then has had some intermittent pain on her left side. ... We plan to schedule an operative lap with possible left ovarian cystec-tomy in November.”

On October 31, 2001, Giles returned to Dr. Adcock for another appointment. On this date, she had another ultrasound, which indicated that the left ovarian mass had increased slightly in size since the August 28, 2001, ultrasound. The October 31, 2001, ultrasound report indicated “0” adnexal masses on the right side.

At 5:32 p.m. on November 6, 2001, Dr. Adcock dictated the following notes:

“Veronica [Giles] is a 45-year-old married female, para 2-0-0-2 who came to me in August noting to have a complex ovarian cyst. She is status post hysterectomy in the past. She denies any significant complaints other than some mild pain in that area. An ultrasound in August revealed a complex cyst measuring 3.2 x 2.6 x 2.9 and follow-up two months later revealed a slightly enlarged ovarian cyst with continued complexity. She was unable to proceed with surgery at the time of evaluation due to the fact that her insurance would not *539 pay. She has no other GYN complaints ....
“PAST SURGICAL HISTORY: Cesarean section X2 and hysterectomy in 1995.
“PHYSICAL EXAMINATION: .... Tender in the left adnexa — greater than right....
“ULTRASOUND: Revealed the above noted complex ovarian cyst.
“IMPRESSION:
1. Complex ovarian cyst that is persistent.
“PLAN
1. laparoscopic bilateral salpingo-ooph-orectomy on 11/7/01.”

“Pre-admit” orders sent to Brookwood from Dr. Adcock’s office requested a permit for “L[eft] oophorectomy” and listed “complex ovarian mass” as the diagnosis. However, the words “L[eft] oophorectomy” on those orders were crossed out and underneath them were written the words “Right oophorectomy B.G.” Bonnie Green, a Brookwood nurse, stated in her deposition that she was the person who revised the order. Nurse Green stated that she believed she changed the order at Dr. Adcock’s direction after she consulted him in an effort to resolve the fact that the order for a “left oophorectomy” differed from Dr. Adcock’s November 6, 2001, notes indicating a planned “laparoscopic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy.” However, under oath, Dr. Adcock denied that he told Nurse Green to change the pre-admit orders from “L[eft] oophorectomy” to “Right oophorectomy” or that he knew anything about how or why the pre-admit orders were changed.

A Brookwood “pre-anaesthetic interview” form indicates that, on November 6, 2001, a nurse interviewed Giles in preparation for a “L[ef]t oophorectomy.”

On November 7, 2001, Giles went to Brookwood Medical Center for the surgery. At 8:50 a.m. on November 7, 2001, Giles signed a “Consent for Surgery and/or Anesthetics or Special Diagnostic or Therapeutic Procedures,” which included the following language:

“Your doctor has recommended the following operation or procedure: Laparo-scopic Right Oophorectomy. By signing this form you authorize and consent to this operation or procedure. You also agree and consent to the administration of such anaesthesia, monitoring, venous, and arterial access as your doctor(s) deem necessary for the operation or procedure. The operation or procedures will be performed by your doctor(s) Ad-cock and with assistants he/she selects.
... Any different or further procedures, which in the opinion of your doctor may be indicated due to any emergency, may be performed on you. During the course of the procedure, unforseen conditions may be revealed that necessitate the extension of the original procedure(s) than those explained to you by your doctor [sic].

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Bluebook (online)
5 So. 3d 533, 2008 Ala. LEXIS 134, 2008 WL 2554287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-v-brookwood-health-services-inc-ala-2008.