Goldhammer v. Lincoln Anesthesiology Group

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 7, 2020
DocketA-19-447
StatusPublished

This text of Goldhammer v. Lincoln Anesthesiology Group (Goldhammer v. Lincoln Anesthesiology Group) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldhammer v. Lincoln Anesthesiology Group, (Neb. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

GOLDHAMMER V. LINCOLN ANESTHESIOLOGY GROUP

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

TIM GOLDHAMMER, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS SPECIAL ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF WILLIAM GOLDHAMMER, DECEASED, APPELLANT,

V.

LINCOLN ANESTHESIOLOGY GROUP, P.C., APPELLEE.

Filed July 7, 2020. No. A-19-447.

Appeal from the District Court for Lancaster County: DARLA S. IDEUS, Judge. Affirmed. Ronald J. Palagi, of Law Offices of Ronald J. Palagi, P.C., L.L.C., for appellant. William L. Tannehill and Elizabeth Ryan Cano, of Wolfe, Snowden, Hurd, Ahl, Sitzmann, Tannehill & Hahn, L.L.P., for appellee.

PIRTLE, BISHOP, and ARTERBURN, Judges. BISHOP, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION William Goldhammer (William) arrived at Saint Elizabeth Regional Medical Center (Saint Elizabeth) in Lincoln, Nebraska, for surgery to correct his deviated nasal septum and chronic sinusitis issues in December 2012. William died in connection with complications that occurred during the administration of preoperative anesthesia. In 2014, William’s father, Tim Goldhammer (Goldhammer), in his personal capacity and as special administrator of the Estate of William Goldhammer (the estate), filed this lawsuit in the Lancaster County District Court against Saint Elizabeth and Lincoln Anesthesiology Group, P.C., the entity that had served as the provider of anesthetic care. Prior to trial, Saint Elizabeth was dismissed with prejudice from the case pursuant to a settlement agreement with Goldhammer. After trial, a jury returned a verdict in favor of

-1- Lincoln Anesthesiology Group. On appeal, Goldhammer challenges the district court’s decision to not admit exhibit 50, an alleged “code blue” document, despite repeated attempts to offer the exhibit through various witnesses. He also argues that the district court’s definition of the word “pecuniary” in a jury instruction was erroneous. We affirm. II. BACKGROUND In December 2012, Lincoln Anesthesiology Group was a provider of anesthetic services for some patients hospitalized at Saint Elizabeth. At that time, William was 21 years old. According to his medical records, William had a history of asthma and some environmental allergies, but no known drug allergies. He had a deviated nasal septum, chronic ethmoidal sinusitis, and chronic maxillary sinusitis. His otolaryngologist, Dr. Michael Rapp, scheduled William to receive outpatient surgery to correct those nasal conditions after a different doctor determined that William was at a low risk for surgical complications and was expected to tolerate the septoplasty procedure without difficulty. The surgery was intended to straighten out William’s nose, debride his sinus area, clear up his airway, and make it easier for him to breathe. On December 17, 2012, William entered Saint Elizabeth for the outpatient septoplasty operation. The operation required anesthesiology to be performed at the outset. Lincoln Anesthesiology Group employee, Todd Smith, a certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA), recalled intubating William without difficulty after administering various medical drugs to him. However, upon completion of the intubation, Smith discovered that William was not receiving oxygen. Smith said he would have told Nancy Christy, a registered nurse for the hospital who was also in the operating room, that William was “having trouble ventilating, may be a bronchospasm.” The record reflects that a bronchospasm refers to a restricted airway. Christy agreed with Goldhammer’s counsel that 1 to 2 minutes after Smith did the intubation, Smith said, “[W]e have trouble.” Christy said she then walked over to William and saw that his lips were blue and his skin was gray; she said that meant he was receiving little or less than a normal amount of oxygen. Christy asked Smith what was wrong. Christy thought that Smith told her “it could be a bronchospasm.” Smith disagreed that William’s lips and skin were those colors at that time. Smith indicated that he believed that the process of “preoxygenation” before he had “gotten [William] off to sleep” helped William maintain a pulse and a blood pressure for some time following intubation. Smith described preoxygenation as providing a reserve of “100 percent oxygen” into a patient’s lungs. Smith described taking a variety of initial actions to determine why he was unable to ventilate William. Smith then directed Christy to call a four-digit telephone number to reach one of the head anesthesiologists. Christy related that she followed that instruction but the person who answered the call said that particular anesthesiologist was busy. Smith then directed Christy to call another four-digit telephone number to reach a different head anesthesiologist. Christy indicated that she followed that instruction as well, saying she called anesthesiologist Dr. John Varvel and asked for help. After Dr. Varvel received Christy’s call, he headed to the operating room. When Dr. Varvel walked in the room, William, Smith, Christy, and a scrub nurse were there. Dr. Varvel asked what was happening. Smith said he had intubated William and was unable to ventilate him. Dr. Varvel

-2- had not had any exposure to William before then; Smith told the doctor about William’s history and what Smith had done so far. Dr. Varvel said he confirmed that William had a pulse and then proceeded to determine the cause of the inability to ventilate. According to Dr. Varvel, when he got to the operating room, William’s skin was not gray and his lips were not blue. The doctor said that gray skin would indicate a lack of a “cardiac output” or a pulse. Smith stated that Dr. Varvel performed some of the same checks that Smith had done but also did some things that he had not yet done. Christy said Dr. Varvel tried to ascertain the steps Smith had gone through to “check to see, so we could eliminate sources of the lack of oxygen.” At some point, Smith and Dr. Varvel prepared to give William intravenously a medical drug called epinephrine. Dr. Varvel indicated that they were preparing to do so because they had “ruled out” all of the “typical mechanical obstructive causes for failure to ventilate and were left with bronchospasm as the most likely diagnosis.” According to Smith, as they were preparing to administer the epinephrine, William lost his pulse and entered cardiovascular collapse. In response, epinephrine was administered and chest compressions were given. Smith said William’s complexion started to turn gray around that time. Smith indicated that while William was receiving chest compressions, Christy called the “code blue.” Smith said that Dr. Varvel was the one to tell Christy to call the code blue. Christy said that she was told to call the code at some point when she asked how William’s heart was doing and learned that his heart rate was starting to decrease; she then called the code blue team. Christy testified that prior to being directed to call the code blue, she had asked Smith at least two times whether to call a code but that both times he told her no. Smith agreed that prior to when the code blue was directed to be called, Christy had asked whether anyone wanted a code to be called, but Smith said that at that earlier point “it was still just an airway and unable to ventilate problem” as opposed to a “cardiovascular collapse problem.” Smith had items on his anesthesia “crash cart” to deal with the airway problem. A cardiovascular collapse would be “why you would call a code in the hospital outside of the [operating room].” Dr. Varvel did not recall Christy asking whether she should call a code. Dr. Varvel said that epinephrine was not given sooner because the bronchospasm diagnosis was not made until “seconds” before William had a cardiac arrest.

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Goldhammer v. Lincoln Anesthesiology Group, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldhammer-v-lincoln-anesthesiology-group-nebctapp-2020.