Harris v. New York Life Insurance Co.

516 S.W.2d 303, 1974 Mo. App. LEXIS 1380
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1974
DocketNo. KCD 26729
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 516 S.W.2d 303 (Harris v. New York Life Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. New York Life Insurance Co., 516 S.W.2d 303, 1974 Mo. App. LEXIS 1380 (Mo. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Presiding Judge.

Respondent recovered judgment in this court-tried case for $25,000.00, plus $5,500.-00 interest, on his action against appellant for the proceeds of an accidental death policy of insurance issued by appellant upon the life of Mrs. Marceil A. Harris, respondent’s wife. The basic question is whether Mrs. Harris’ death was proximately caused by the negligence of her physician so as to be an accidental death within the terms of the policy.

It is respondent’s theory that the death of his wife, who had been, since about 1962, afflicted with a mild diabetic condition, was accidental within the terms of the policy, and was proximately caused by the negligence of her physician in failing to administer insulin to her prior to, during and after the removal of a goiter.

The insuring agreement of the policy provides that appellant would pay “THE BENEFITS provided under the Benefit provisions of this policy, subject to the provisions, conditions, exceptions and limitations stated in the policy, for loss, as specified in said Benefit Provisions, that results from accidental bodily injury which occurs while this policy is in force and which causes the loss directly and independently of all other causes (referred to in this policy as ‘covered injury’).” The exception upon which appellant relies is: “This policy shall not cover any loss which is caused or contributed to by one or more of the following: (a) infirmity of mind or body, or any illness or disease other than a bacterial infection occurring in consequence of accidental injury on the exterior of the body.”

Dr. Roy Drake had been Mrs. Harris’ physician since 1966 when she was hospitalized, tested, and found to have been a [305]*305mild diabetic. He put her on the anti-diabetic drug, Orinase, two per day. When she was admitted to Baptist Memorial Hospital on July 9, 1969, it was known that she was a mild diabetic, and the admission laboratory test showed that she had a four plus sugar without acetone. Dr. Drake acknowledged that the sugar was a large amount, the highest that the laboratory test equipment used would measure. On July 12, 1969, the nurse’s notes indicated “Clini-test, Four plus, acetone very large.” Dr. Drake acknowledged that to mean that Mrs. Harris was having incomplete metabolism of her sugar, but that he did not see the nurse’s notation. In fact, he noticed the notations only when he was going over the chart after Mrs. Harris’ death. His position was: “There’s no written thing that you have to read the nurse’s notes. As I might mention, they have even quit making notes in some hospitals because it wasn’t very productive.” He testified that if the patient has not been on insulin, but just oral diabetics, it is not given prior to operation.

For respondent, Dr. Ralph Hall, physician and Director of Medical Education and Research at St. Luke’s Hospital, and a specialist in endocrinology, testified, using Mrs. Harris’ hospital records, which were in evidence. On July 9, 1969, upon her admission, according to the records, she had 300 milligrams per cent blood sugar, which could not be controlled by oral medication. Two Orinase tablets taken orally would have been insufficient for the amount of diabetes she had. The 348 milligrams per cent of blood sugar, on July 10, 1969, before she went to surgery, was moderately high. If a mild diabetic is controlled, there ought to be a reading of under 150 milligrams per cent. If it is high it is a sign that the patient is not in good control. With a reading of 348 blood sugar, most of the textbooks will state that the patient ought to receive insulin prior to going to surgery, and there would be a question in most physicians’ minds if surgery ought not to be delayed for a day. The next safeguard would be to make continued tests of the blood and urine sugar — urine tests for sugar and acetone four times a day, and blood sugar tests two times a day, on somebody who has diabetes. Insulin was not given to Mrs. Harris before the operation, the day of the operation, or the day after the operation. The clinitest of July 12, 1969, noting “acetone very large” means that the patient is severely out of control and that is a dangerous sign; it means the patient needs immediate attention. With the four plus test result, further tests should have been done to determine specifically how acid the blood was, how much sodium, potassium, carbon dioxide, or bicarbonate were in the blood. None of these further tests were done for Mrs. Harris.

1000c.c. of glucose was given to Mrs. Harris on July 12, 1969, which should not have been done under the circumstances. She should have had normal saline in all probabilities, depending on what the tests showed, or she may have needed bicarbonate rather than saline to raise the alkaline to get rid of some of the acidosis caused by the diabetes, which is the normal textbook standard treatment.

On July 13, 1969, there was a four plus and large acetone test result, again indicating the patient’s diabetes was out of control, and had been for 24 hours prior. In that 24 hour period, “You want to make sure the patient is getting potassium and sodium,” a routine laboratory test, which was not done. Low serum potassium, in a diabetes case, is what stops the heart. No insulin was given to Mrs. Harris until 9:00 p. m. on July 13, 1969, six hours before she died. Only 50 units of insulin was then administered, which was not a sufficient dose — 100 to 200 units should have been given. For the first times, at 11:00 p. m., July 13th, and 1:45 a. m., July 14th, sodium bicarbonate, to correct acidosis, was given, and it was not done in time.

In Dr. Hall’s opinion, the cause of Mrs. Harris’ death was diabetic acidosis and cardiac arrest. The cause of the diabetic acidosis was diabetes. Diabetic acidosis [306]*306occurs when the body cannot utilize sugar that is taken in, and it starts to use fat. The end product of fat metabolism is acid, “and the more the body tries to use the fat as a fuel, the more acidotic the body becomes, and to combat that you try to get sugar into the cell, and get the body to use sugar. That is why you use insulin, so that the body quits using the fat for fuel.” Mrs. Harris’ death certificate states that she died of aspiration pneumonitis, to which diabetic coma was a contributing cause, which in turn was caused by diabetic acidosis. If Mrs. Harris had received the proper amount of insulin before and following the operation, she would not have gone into the diabetic coma. The hospital records showed that Mrs. Harris manifested a hoarseness. There is a test which could have been given, but which was not given, to establish whether she did have a respiratory problem, respiratory acidosis, following the operation. “People with diabetic acidosis have — overbreathe and try to blow off carbon dioxide, because that improves their acidosis a little bit, if they can get rid of carbon dioxide.” Neither would the thyroid condition, nor the thyroid operation, in and of themselves, have caused Mrs. Harris’ death, in Dr. Hall’s opinion. If was further his opinion that the mild diabetic condition which Mrs. Harris had when she entered the hospital, if properly treated, would not in and of itself caused her death. He would not have expected her to die as a result of the surgery.

As to nurses’ notes, Dr. Hall testified that they are kept so that when the physician comes in to make rounds he can find out what had been going on in his absence from the floor and from the patient. When a patient is treated in the hospital, in .the normal course of practice of medicine, physicians should refer to nurses’ records. It was Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
516 S.W.2d 303, 1974 Mo. App. LEXIS 1380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-new-york-life-insurance-co-moctapp-1974.