Gregg v. National Medical Health Care Services, Inc.

699 P.2d 925, 145 Ariz. 51, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 488
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 12, 1985
Docket2 CA-CIV 5140
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 699 P.2d 925 (Gregg v. National Medical Health Care Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregg v. National Medical Health Care Services, Inc., 699 P.2d 925, 145 Ariz. 51, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 488 (Ark. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

HOWARD, Judge.

Appellant sued, inter alia, Gila General Hospital, Dr. McLaren Ruesch and Dr. Anthony Forte, alleging that the hospital’s independent negligence and/or the negligence of Drs. Ruesch and Forte caused her husband to die of a heart attack. The hospital moved for summary judgment on the grounds that any independent negligence on its part was not a proximate cause of Donald Gregg’s death and that neither Drs. Ruesch nor Forte were' agents or employees of the hospital. The trial court granted appellees’ motion.

Gila General Hospital, located in the Globe-Miami area, is owned by Gila County and is managed by National Medical Health Care Services, Inc. On August 1, 1979, Gregg went to the emergency room of the *53 hospital at 3 a.m. after having three episodes of crushing substernal chest pain accompanied by nausea and vomiting. The emergency room physician diagnosed a possible heart attack, administered an electrocardiogram (EKG) and admitted Gregg to the intensive care unit.

Dr. McLaren Rueseh, a family practitioner who had staff privileges at the hospital, was Gregg’s attending physician. He asked Dr. Anthony Forte, a cardiologist from Tucson with staff privileges at the hospital, to see Gregg in consultation. Dr. Forte examined Gregg and interpreted the EKG tracing taken in the emergency room. He found the tracing to be normal. He thought Gregg’s pains might have been caused by esophagitis (inflammation of the esophagus) with spasms or beginning pericarditis (inflammation of the membrane around the heart). Dr. Forte thought that it was unlikely that Gregg had suffered a myocardial infarction (death of the heart muscle). Dr. Forte ordered daily EKGs and he did not see Gregg again.

The next day, after reading the August 2 EKG, Dr. Rueseh moved Gregg from the intensive care unit, ruling out a myocardial infarction as the cause for Gregg’s August 1 chest pains. On August 3, after reviewing the third EKG tracing, an additional laboratory report, and x-rays of the gastrointestinal tract which revealed the existence of a hiatal hernia, Dr. Rueseh advised Gregg that the probable cause of his pain was the hiatal hernia. However, because Gregg's family history demonstrated a proclivity for coronary problems, Dr. Rueseh advised Gregg that he might have coronary artery disease and made an appointment for him with Dr. Forte for treadmill testing, angiographing, and any other testing which Dr. Forte felt was indicated.

Gregg’s August 2 and 3 tracings were mailed by the hospital to Dr. Forte’s office in Tucson. They arrived on August 7 and were read by Dr. Forte that day. Though there were some changes in the tracings, Dr. Forte did not believe the changes were medically significant and called his report into the hospital for transcription into Gregg’s chart.

On August 8 and 9 Gregg again experienced severe chest pains and on August 9 he collapsed at home and was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital. The autopsy report indicated that Gregg had suffered from extensive heart disease and concluded that he died of a massive myocardial infarction.

The record shows that Dr. Forte had been going to Globe since November 1973. The hospital needed a cardiologist to run the cardiac clinic and to act as a consultant to the doctors for patients who were in the hospital. They paid him $300 per week to visit once a week. He was the only cardiologist with staff privileges at the hospital. He was also paid seven to ten dollars each for interpreting the cardiograms. When he went to the hospital he stayed there for approximately five hours. Dr. Forte did not go to Globe when he was on vacation or when he had to go to a medical meeting. When he was away from his office in Tucson and could not interpret the cardiograms, he had one of his colleagues in Tucson do so. In order to have staff privileges at the hospital he had to show proof of malpractice insurance, which insurance he paid for himself. The hospital billed the patients that he saw there and in turn paid the money to Dr. Forte.

For the purposes of the summary judgment only, both sides conceded negligence on the part of Drs. Forte and Rueseh. In resisting the hospital’s motion for summary judgment, appellant contended that the hospital was liable on two grounds: first, that Dr. Forte was an employee or agent of the hospital, thus subjecting it to liability based upon the doctrine of respondeat superior and, second, that the hospital was independently negligent for its failure to establish appropriate rules and regulations concerning the care and treatment of suspected cardiac patients.

I.

On the issue of the independent negligence of the hospital, in opposing the mo *54 tion for summary judgment, appellant relied on the affidavit of Dr. Abraham J. Kauver. He had extensive experience in the field in the enactment of hospital rules, regulations and protocols. It was his opinion that the care given by the hospital was substandard because it had failed to adopt regulations or protocols which would have required daily and/or immediate transmission, reading and reporting by cardiologists of electrocardiograms on patients presenting signs and symptoms of acute coronary artery disease and requiring the transmission of the opinions of such cardiologists to the treating physician on a daily basis.

Dr. Kauver further believed that the conduct of the hospital was substandard by not providing regulations and protocols for the referral of patients presenting signs or symptoms of acute coronary disease to other facilities and/or to specialists properly skilled and trained to deal with such problems.

Dr. Kauver did not state anywhere in his affidavit that the failure of the hospital to adopt these rules, regulations and protocols was the proximate cause of Gregg’s death. Ordinarily, expert medical testimony is required to establish proximate cause and make out a prima facie case of medical malpractice unless a causal relationship is readily apparent to the trier of fact. Monahan v. Weichert, 82 A.D.2d 102, 442 N.Y.S.2d 295 (1981). In order to establish a prima facie case of medical malpractice in the case sub judice it was necessary for appellant to establish, by expert medical opinion, that there was a causal connection between the lack of rules, regulations and protocols and Gregg’s death. See Monahan v. Weichert, supra, where the court held that the trial court was correct in dismissing appellant’s action against appellee hospital because there was no expert medical testimony establishing a causal link between the hospital’s alleged failure to keep proper medical records on the patient and his injuries.

The record here shows that Gregg was in fact referred to a cardiologist and that the cardiologist read Gregg’s x-rays two days prior to the time Gregg died. The record shows that even if the hospital did have rules, regulations and protocols requiring immediate reading and the immediate rendering of an opinion to the attending physician, nothing different would have occurred since Dr. Forte did not believe there were any significant abnormalities in the EKGs. Furthermore, Dr. Gordon Ewy, a cardiologist, reviewed the records in this case and testified in his deposition that in his opinion he had no reason to believe, based upon his review of the matter, that any delay which occurred in transmitting the EKG reports to Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
699 P.2d 925, 145 Ariz. 51, 1985 Ariz. App. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregg-v-national-medical-health-care-services-inc-arizctapp-1985.