Guido v. Fielding
This text of 2020 NY Slip Op 06391 (Guido v. Fielding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Guido v Fielding |
| 2020 NY Slip Op 06391 |
| Decided on November 10, 2020 |
| Appellate Division, First Department |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports. |
Decided and Entered: November 10, 2020 SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION First Judicial Department
Judith J. Gische,J.P.,
Jeffrey K. Oing
Anil C. Singh
Manuel J. Mendez, JJ.
Index No. 302654/11 Appeal No. 11913,11913A Case No. 2019-03487
v
George Fielding, M.D., et al., Defendants-Respondents, Christine Ren-Fielding, M.D., et al., Defendants.
Plaintiffs appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Bronx County (Joseph E. Capella, J.), entered on or about January 4, 2019, which, to the extent appealed from as limited by the briefs, granted defendants George Fielding, M.D., NYU Langone Medical Center, and NYU School of Medicine's motion for summary judgment dismissing the claim of failure to diagnose and repair a bowel perforation intraoperatively. Plaintiffs also appeal from an order, same court and Justice, entered on or about March 27, 2019, which denied plaintiffs' motion for reargument.
Scaffidi & Associates, New York (Anthony J. Scaffidi, Robert M. Marino and Kevin B. Lynch of counsel), for appellants.
Aaronson Rappaport Feinstein & Deutsch, LLP, New York (Elliot J. Zucker of counsel), for respondents.
GISCHE, J.P.
Plaintiff, Maria Guido, suffered a perforation of her bowel during a LAP-Band procedure. The issue on this appeal concerns only her claim that the perforation should have been discovered intraoperatively during the LAP-Band procedure. It is undisputed that the perforation was discovered within days, while she was recovering in the hospital, and corrective surgery was immediately performed thereafter. Plaintiff has additional claims asserted both with respect to the original LAP-Band surgery and subsequent corrective surgery, that are still pending before the trial court.
Defendants moved for summary judgment, relying on: the deposition testimony of Dr. Fielding, medical records, including Dr. Fielding's operative notes, and their expert's opinion. Insofar as relevant to this appeal, the expert's opinion was partly based on Dr. Fielding's deposition testimony that during open LAP-Band procedures, he generally examines a patient's bowel, both visually and through palpitation, before he completes the procedure and closes the patient. During his deposition, Dr. Fielding testified that he did not remember plaintiff, and that he did not have any independent recollection of her particular LAP-Band surgery. Dr. Fielding did independently recall the second corrective surgery he performed on her. Dr. Fielding stated that he had performed hundreds of laparoscopic and other bariatric surgeries over the years. Dr. Fielding testified that this specific surgery had started as a laparoscopic procedure, but then it had to be converted to an open surgery because plaintiff had many adhesions. Dr. Fielding also testified, based upon those same medical records, that plaintiff had undergone numerous prior abdominal surgeries and they had resulted in very dense adhesions where the bowel was stuck to the wound. Still relying on medical records, Dr. Fielding testified that he used scissors to dissect the bowel. He then proceeded to complete the placement of the LAP-Band and that the placement proceeded in the same manner as it would have with a laparoscopic surgery.
When asked to more completely describe the process of dissecting the bowel from the wound, Dr. Fielding testified that he did not remember, but then proceeded to describe his usual custom and practice in doing so, which would have included a visual inspection of the bowel. When asked whether he did anything else to see whether there was damage to the bowel, Dr. Fielding testified that he would have been gently lifting, lysing and feeling the loops of the bowel as he snipped it away from the adhesions and looking for signs of yellow bile coming out of the bowel. Dr. Fielding's intraoperative report concerning the LAP-Band surgery contains no reference whatsoever to whether he visually examined the small intestine or any notation on the presence or absence of bile or other leaking intestinal matter. The medical records relating to the subsequent corrective surgery to remove the LAP-Band and correct a leak from the bowel, however, reflect that "the small intestines were carefully examined" and there is an entry by Dr. Fielding stating that he detected "no evidence of ongoing intestinal content leak . . . ." The corrective surgery operative report also states the discovery of a 0.5 cm incision in the small intestine that had been completely sealed off by the omentum, a thick layer of abdominal fat.
Defendants' expert opined that Dr. Fielding's treatment of plaintiff was proper in all respects and was in accordance with the standard of care at all times. The expert also stated that a perforation of the small bowel is a well-established, known and accepted complication and risk, of all abdominal surgical procedures, including adjustable gastric banding surgery and that in this case it was not the result of any malpractice or negligence committed by the doctor. The expert further opined that there was no deviation from accepted medical practice by Dr. Fielding in failing to detect the bowl perforation during the LAP-Band procedure and that Dr Fielding had utilized appropriate and proper surgical technique while closing the fascia in lysing and retracting the adhesions he encountered using both his hands and scissors under direct visualization. In rendering his opinion, the expert relied on the fact that, "no enteric contents [were] found or yellow bile visualized during the procedure . . . . "
Plaintiffs contend that because Dr. Fielding's deposition testimony regarding his
alleged custom and practice during LAP-Band surgery is not admissible evidence, his expert's opinion that relied on such evidence should have been disregarded.
A defendant makes a prima facie case of entitlement to summary judgment in a medical malpractice action by submitting an affirmation from a medical expert establishing that the treatment provided to the injured plaintiff comported with good and accepted practice or that the plaintiff was not injured thereby (see Mignoli v Oyugi, 82 AD3d 443 [1st Dept 2011]). An expert's opinion must be based upon information personally known to the expert, information in the court record or hearsay material, provided that it is of a kind accepted in the profession as reliable in forming a professional opinion or it comes from a witness that is subject to full cross-examination at trial (People v Goldstein, 6 NY3d 119 [2005], cert denied 547 US 1159 [2006]; Hambsch v New York City Tr. Auth. 63 NY2d 723 [1984]). Here, the only evidence regarding whether Dr. Fielding actually palpitated the bowel during the LAP-Band surgery is the doctor's testimony based on his custom. Dr. Fielding did not have any independent recollection of whether he actually palpated the bowel to rule out perforations during plaintiff's LAP-Band procedure, and nothing in the hospital records indicates that he did so.
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2020 NY Slip Op 06391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guido-v-fielding-nyappdiv-2020.