Haase v. Garfinkel

418 S.W.2d 108, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 812
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 11, 1967
Docket52396
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 418 S.W.2d 108 (Haase v. Garfinkel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haase v. Garfinkel, 418 S.W.2d 108, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 812 (Mo. 1967).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

The widow of Elmer C. Haase, Jr. brought this malpractice action against Dr. Bernard T. Garfinkel for the wrongful death of her husband. A trial jury awarded plaintiff $17,600. The circuit court sustained defendant’s post trial motion for judgment in accordance with his motion for a directed verdict, and plaintiff appealed.

The petition charged that defendant, a heart specialist, accepted Mr. Haase as his patient, conducted examinations and tests on July 1 and 2, 1965 from which he made a diagnosis of myocardial infarction and arteriosclerotic heart disease, and knew that Mr. Haase was in danger of dying unless treated appropriately, but negligently and unskillfully discharged him from the hospital on July 3 without medication, prescription or advice and omitted to treat him, as a result of which Mr. Haase died on July 4. The case was submitted to the jury on negligent failure to prescribe and give anticoagulant drugs.

The single point on this appeal is that the court erred in its ruling for the reason that the evidence and inferences to be drawn therefrom demonstrate that defendant failed to use and apply that degree of care and skill required of him as a physician in the treatment of deceased.

Plaintiff’s case consisted of her own testimony; that of her daughters and the pharmacist; the hospital records; excerpts from defendant’s deposition, and an interrogatory and answer.

Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, these are the essential facts: On Thursday, July 1, 1965 Mr. Haase awakened and complained to plaintiff of recurring pain in his left arm and chest. He had never made any similar complaints. At lunch time he stated that he thought he ought to see a doctor because he felt that he was having a heart attack. Referred to defendant as a specialist in heart diseases, he talked to defendant on the telephone and by prearrangement they met in the emergency room of Barnes Hospital early on the afternoon of July 1 where Mr. Haase related his complaints of chest pain, left arm pain, shortness of breath and nausea. Defendant accepted him as a patient and became responsible for him. At that time defendant suspected that he had an episode of angina pectoris (pain in the chest due to coronary artery insufficiency). The doctor ordered him hospitalized to rule out or in the possibility of an acute myocardial infarction (necrosis or death of the tissue of the heart muscle as a result of lack of blood supply to the arteries of the wall of the heart muscle). The patient arrived at his assigned room on a stretcher.

Electrocardiograms and a blood chemistry test to determine the concentration of enzymes in the blood stream, as well as several routine tests, were run. One of the EKG’s was not found when this case was investigated, but the available one showed a slow heart rate with some sinus arrythmia (interrupted, abnormal rhythm) but otherwise normal. The only medical interpretation of the EKG was that it was normal. The enzyme test was found to be normal.

Mr. Haase remained in the hospital until 1:30 p. m. July 3, essentially resting and in no distress except for fleeting chest pains. On July 3 defendant discharged him to go home and rest, directing that he leave the hospital in a wheelchair. (There was no such order on the “order sheet” of the *110 hospital records and in fact he walked out.) Mr. Haase was instructed to see defendant at his office the following' Tuesday, July 6.

On Mr. Haase’s departure from the hospital defendant noted in the medical record: “PT [patient] has been comfortable since coming into hospital. Occ [occasional] fleeting chest pains. EKG’s normal. Enzymes normal. We have no ecidence for infarct [infarction]. Though this could be angina it is atypical. Pains are fleeting — not constant. Will allow him to go home to watch. We must assume this man has cor [coronary] insufficiency till proved otherwise though this could all be GI [gastro-intestinal] tract SX [symptoms].” Defendant did not think the trouble was in the gastro-intestinal system, and gave no GI tests because “you don’t take a person who has had a recent attack of pain and put him through a GI series.” Defendant considered that the most likely diagnosis was coronary artery insufficiency. Interne Dr. Smith, however, in writing the discharge summary, made this discharge diagnosis: “Arteriosclerotic heart disease; Myocardial infarction.” When this 'lawsuit was threatened defendant read the records and noted in his handwriting “There is no evidence for this diagnosis.”

The terms coronary insufficiency, coronary artery disease and coronary artery insufficiency, used interchangeably, refer to a condition in which the flow of blood through the coronary arteries to the heart muscle is obstructed; a narrowing of the arteries through arteriosclerosis or blood clots forming in the arteries, cutting off an adequate supply of blood to the heart. Myocardial infarction is a result of coronary artery insufficiency.

Dicumarol, coumadin, nitroglycerine and peritrate are some of the anticoagulant drugs used in the treatment of heart disease to prevent clots from forming in narrowed coronary arteries, or arteries afflicted with arteriosclerosis. They lower and inhibit the clotting ability of blood. There are hundreds of dilator drugs grouped in the anticoagulants which are used to treat coronary insufficiency. Mr. Haase was not given any of these drugs during his 48-hour stay at the hospital, and none of these was prescribed for him at the time of his discharge. He was driven home, where he spent the evening in bed, getting up only for meals. On Sunday morning, July 4 he awakened with pains in his chest and arm. He ate a good breakfast and was sitting in the living room reading a newspaper when he was seized with a severe chest pain. He went to bed with a heavy heart pain, perspiring. Mrs. Haase tried to get a doctor at the hospital. Eventually Dr. Strauss, defendant’s office associate, called her and after she had described the pains he said he was sending two prescriptions. One was a tablet to be kept under his tongue for 5 minutes. (Nitroglycerine.) If that did not relieve the pain the procedure was to be repeated 3 times. If that still did not relieve the pain she was instructed to give him the other prescription. (An analgesic.) Feeling better, Mr. Haase got up and shaved. Thereafter he was seized with the last and most severe pain. Plaintiff called the drugstore, called a neighbor, called the fire department, which gave him two tanks of oxygen, to no avail, and he died. During this period plaintiff had been in telephone communication with defendant, who stated that he should never have let him out of the hospital and advised getting him right back. Finally the drugstore delivered the medicine but by that time Mr. Haase had died.

An autopsy was performed 6 hours after death. The provisional anatomical report listed the cause of death as acute myocardial infarction, with a provisional diagnosis showing that the primary cause of death was “Arteriosclerosis of the coronary artieries (advanced) with focal narrowing; aorta (moderate) with calcification and ulceration ; renal arteries (slight); and cerebral arteries (moderate) with atheroma (history of sudden death in a paroxysm of *111 chest pain),” and 2.

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Bluebook (online)
418 S.W.2d 108, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haase-v-garfinkel-mo-1967.