Gloria Pittman, as Administrator of the Estate of Erriel Marie Jones v. Memorial Hospital at Gulfport

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 30, 2020
DocketNO. 2019-CA-00888-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Gloria Pittman, as Administrator of the Estate of Erriel Marie Jones v. Memorial Hospital at Gulfport (Gloria Pittman, as Administrator of the Estate of Erriel Marie Jones v. Memorial Hospital at Gulfport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gloria Pittman, as Administrator of the Estate of Erriel Marie Jones v. Memorial Hospital at Gulfport, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2019-CA-00888-COA

GLORIA PITTMAN, AS ADMINISTRATOR OF APPELLANT THE ESTATE OF ERRIEL MARIE JONES

v.

MEMORIAL HOSPITAL AT GULFPORT APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/16/2019 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ROGER T. CLARK COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: DOUGLAS L. TYNES JR. COURTNEY PARKER WILSON ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: ROLAND F. SAMSON III NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/30/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE CARLTON, P.J., GREENLEE AND McCARTY, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Prior to her death, Erriel Jones filed a complaint for medical negligence against

Memorial Hospital at Gulfport. Erriel alleged that she suffered both a fractured shoulder and

a stage II bedsore on her buttocks while in Memorial’s care.

¶2. Following a bench trial, the trial court found for the hospital, holding that Erriel failed

to prove her case by a preponderance of the evidence. Erriel’s mother, acting as

administrator of her estate, now appeals the trial court’s decision. Because the trial court was

not manifestly wrong and did not apply the wrong legal standards, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY ¶3. Erriel Jones suffered from a number of debilitating diseases prior to her death in

2017.1 Aside from a sickle cell anemia diagnosis shortly after birth, the disabilities pertinent

to this case include stroke-induced quadriplegia at age seven, a severe case of osteoporosis,

and a hardening of her muscles that stiffened her upper body. She also suffered from a

brittle-bone disease that progressively killed her bone tissue and had chronic arthritis in her

left shoulder. As early as 2010, Erriel had severe left shoulder pain.

¶4. These co-morbities required Erriel to undergo a series of routine blood transfusions

throughout her unfortunately short lifetime. She was also highly susceptible to developing

frequent infections and bedsores.2

¶5. These co-morbities also left Erriel’s entire body stiff and almost completely immobile.

She spent most of her life bedridden, ventilator-dependent, and wheelchair-bound. With the

exception of moving her left arm slightly to complete school work, Erriel was totally

dependent on others to move her body. A port was placed in her right shoulder to facilitate

the administration of the many drugs her body required.

¶6. On April 24, 2015, Erriel was admitted to Memorial for one of her monthly blood

transfusions. The record indicates that upon admission she was in a severe state of muscle

and weight loss and was malnourished, weighing only 103 pounds. After assessing Erriel,

1 After the events in this case, Erriel died at 27 from pre-existing medical complications unrelated to the hospital’s alleged breach of care during her hospitalization. Her mother did not seek recovery in this case under a theory of wrongful death. 2 Erriel’s history of bedsores began in 2001, and she was treated for them in 2010 and 2011. Additionally, Erriel developed a stage III bedsore when she was diagnosed with end- stage liver disease in 2016. The bedsore never healed and a stage IV bedsore followed when she was in hospice.

2 the hospital personnel found that she was suffering from the severe infection of sepsis. They

determined that the port in her chest was likely causing the infection. The hospital personnel

decided that Erriel would need to have the port surgically removed.

¶7. On April 27, 2015, before removing the port, the nurse or nurses responsible for

Erriel’s care recorded she did not have a “[skin] breakdown at [that] time per nursing

assessment.” In other words, the nurse did not detect any ulcers or unusual lacerations on

Erriel’s body after evaluating her skin that day.

¶8. Due to Erriel’s condition and history with ulcers, the hospital offered a specialty

bed—an alternating pressure mattress that shifted its pressure every 10 to 15 minutes to

safeguard against the development of pressure sores. Erriel’s mother, Ms. Gloria Pittman,

testified that she initially declined the hospital’s offer because she assumed Erriel would not

be in the hospital for long. When she later learned Erriel would need additional treatment,

she did request the specialty bed.

¶9. Approximately six days later, a hospital record dated May 2, 2015, noted that Erriel

had a pressure sore near her tail bone and gluteal areas that was “in healing stages of [the]

previous pressure areas.” The record further documented a report from Ms. Pittman

informing the hospital that Erriel had that pressure sore since she left home. Scars from

“healed pressure ulcers” were also detected on May 4, 2015.

¶10. Based on the hospital’s policy, the nurses were required to actively turn high-risk

patients like Erriel every two hours to avoid the formation or aggravation of bed sores.

Although the hospital testified that it regularly repositioned Erriel during diaper changes, skin

3 care, baths, and other treatments, it only documented twice in its computer system that Erriel

was turned. However, the records show that the hospital frequently repositioned Erriel with

pillows, which was allegedly another available option to document that a patient was

repositioned.

¶11. On May 4, 2015, Erriel was scheduled to have the infected port removed from her

arm. After she was taken back to the hospital’s imaging department for the operation, four

of the hospital’s personnel used a draw sheet to move Erriel from her hospital bed to the

procedure table “without incident.” Ms. Pittman testified that Erriel did not complain of arm

pain at that time. During the procedure, the port was removed “without incident.” But when

the personnel transferred Erriel from the procedure table back to her hospital bed after the

operation, Erriel reported pain in her left arm “immediately.”

¶12. Ms. Pittman and the hospital heavily dispute the remaining facts of this case. Ms.

Pittman claims that Erriel’s arm fell to her side during her transfer from the procedure table

to the hospital bed. She further claims that Erriel’s body “slid on top of her left arm” and that

the personnel laid her on that arm. Ms. Pittman testified at trial that Erriel attempted to utter

the words, “wait, wait, wait” before the personnel laid her on top of the hospital bed. Erriel

claimed she heard her arm “pop” at that time.

¶13. After complaining to personnel that her arm was broken and that she was in pain, a

doctor assessed Erriel’s arm with an X-ray machine. He diagnosed her with an “acute left

surgical neck fracture.” At trial, Ms. Pittman’s expert witness identified the fracture as an

“oblique spiral fracture of the left surgical neck,” which typically results from “a twisting of

4 the upper shoulder.” In other words, the fracture was caused by a “spiral break.”

¶14. For its part of the dispute, the hospital claims its trained personnel exercised care

when they transferred Erriel’s body from the table to the bed. One staff member who was

allegedly “in the best position to observe her” during the transfer testified that Erriel’s arm

never fell outside of the draw sheet. In fact, he stated, Erriel’s arms were stiff, immobile, and

“constricted on top of her body” all the time. One of the hospital’s nurses testified that

Erriel’s arms were “across her chest, almost near her waist.” Both hospital staff members

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Gloria Pittman, as Administrator of the Estate of Erriel Marie Jones v. Memorial Hospital at Gulfport, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gloria-pittman-as-administrator-of-the-estate-of-erriel-marie-jones-v-missctapp-2020.