Heffern v. University of Cincinnati Hospital

753 N.E.2d 951, 142 Ohio App. 3d 44
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 2001
DocketNo. 00AP-1060, No. 00AP-1061, No. 00AP-1063 Regular Calendar.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 753 N.E.2d 951 (Heffern v. University of Cincinnati Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heffern v. University of Cincinnati Hospital, 753 N.E.2d 951, 142 Ohio App. 3d 44 (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Bowman, Judge.

In these three cases, consolidated for purposes of trial and appeal, defendant, the University of Cincinnati Hospital, and plaintiffs, David Russell, Lori Riddle, and Robert Heffern, cross-appeal from the judgments of the Ohio Court of Claims.

The University of Cincinnati (“UC”) operates a medical school and the University of Cincinnati Hospital (“UC Hospital”). In 1991, Heffern, Riddle, and Russell were examined at UC Hospital by a man they knew as Dr. Thomas West. Plaintiffs later learned that West was not a physician. Thomas West was convicted of several crimes related to his examinations and treatment of Heffern, Riddle, and Russell, including impersonating a physician, practicing medicine without a license, and battery. Plaintiffs filed the instant civil lawsuit against UC Hospital. In essence, plaintiffs argue that UC Hospital’s negligence provided West with access to the hospital’s emergency department and examination rooms, and gave West the opportunity to examine the plaintiffs.

The following evidence was presented during a bench trial in the Court of Claims. West testified that he received a bachelor’s degree in biology and applied unsuccessfully to medical school. Although he was never enrolled as a student, in 1986 West started attending classes at the UC medical school. He also read materials from the UC medical school library and tested his knowledge periodically by using computer study programs on the computers in the library. In this fashion, West completed the coursework for the first two years of medical *47 school. West then attended teaching rounds, where he observed inpatient medical procedures at UC Hospital. Throughout this period, West did not inform any of the instructors that he was not a medical student. Rather, West tried to blend in and pass himself off as a medical student.

From approximately 1987 until 1991, West pretended that he was a physician at UC Hospital. He made efforts to look like a physician. West testified that he took lab coats with embroidered UC insignia from coat racks in the doctors’ lounges and wore them in the hospital. West also occasionally wore scrubs, including some that he obtained from locker rooms and changing rooms at UC Hospital. He purchased and wore a stethoscope.

West testified that he never had a UC Hospital identification badge. Rather he had found and altered a non-photographic badge from nearby Providence Hospital, and had obtained a non-photographic badge from nearby Children’s Hospital. West testified that he may have worn the Providence Hospital badge while he was at UC Hospital. However, he also testified that there were times that he did not wear an identification badge while he was at UC Hospital, as he considered the white lab coat with the embroidered UC insignia to be adequate identification.

West testified that the UC Hospital staff eventually recognized him and called him Dr. West. He testified that he had received hand-delivered mail at UC Hospital and that he had been paged over the hospital intercom system. Although West could not open certain doors that required a UC Hospital badge swipe, he testified that he obtained access by asking other employees to swipe their own badges or by following others after they opened the doors. West also testified that he was able to get into a locked hallway with plaintiff David Russell because a hospital employee recognized West and buzzed him in.

West testified that, during this four-year period, he basically had access at UC Hospital as would any physician. West stated that he never took any extraordinary measures to avoid the security measures employed at UC Hospital. When he examined the plaintiffs at UC Hospital, he had no difficulty obtaining medical instruments and medicines from treatment rooms. Although he posed as a physician at other hospitals in the Cincinnati area, West testified that he spent about seventy-five percent of his physician-impersonating time at UC Hospital.

During the time that West was posing as a physician, plaintiff David Russell was a police officer for the city of Cincinnati. Russell testified that his beat included UC Hospital and, accordingly, he visited the UC Hospital emergency room on a daily basis. Russell testified that, while he was on duty as a police officer, he saw West in the UC Hospital emergency department between fifty and one hundred times. According to Russell, when West was in the emergency department he was dressed like other doctors in blue hospital scrubs with black *48 UC lettering and a white lab coat with a red UC emblem. Russell observed that the physicians and nurses at UC Hospital referred to West as Dr. West. Russell testified that he never saw anyone at UC Hospital question West’s credentials.

Russell first spoke to West at a Cincinnati-area bar called the Glass Menagerie. Because Russell recognized West from the UC Hospital emergency department, Russell introduced himself. West introduced himself as “Dr. West.” Over time, Russell and West became friends. Russell and West were at a restaurant one day when Russell told West that he had a skin lesion on his leg. West suggested that Russell should see a dermatologist. Russell testified that, due to his work schedule, he had difficulty scheduling an appointment with a dermatologist.

When West was at Russell’s home one day, West offered to look at the skin lesion. West advised Russell that the lesion was probably nothing to worry about, but he offered to remove it. West and Russell arranged to meet at UC Hospital one day when Russell was not working. Russell testified that they met in the parking lot outside the ambulance entrance to the UC Hospital emergency department. Russell accompanied West into the emergency department. A UC Hospital employee pushed a button to allow Russell and West to gain entry to a hallway that led to an examination room.

Russell testified that West examined the skin lesion, left the examination room, and returned with a product that West called an acid. West applied the product to the lesion and told Russell that it would likely kill the lesion and cause it to fall off. West told Russell that, if the procedure were unsuccessful, West would have to operate to remove the lesion. West bandaged the area, left the examination room, returned with a tube of cream, and advised Russell to apply the cream to the lesion the next day. A couple weeks later, West used a scalpel to remove the lesion. It is undisputed that West performed the second procedure at a different hospital, unaffiliated with UC Hospital.

Russell admitted that he did not register at UC Hospital or fill out any admissions paperwork on the day that West examined and treated his skin lesion. West testified that he did not recall Russell offering to pay for West’s services. Russell testified that he told West that he had health insurance that would pay for West’s services and offered to fill out insurance forms, but West responded that, since they were friends, Russell would not have to pay. Russell never completed insurance forms, and he never received a bill from West or from UC Hospital.

Plaintiff Lori Riddle was friendly with David Russell. Riddle testified that Russell introduced her to West in April 1991. Riddle began socializing at bars and restaurants with a circle of friends that included Russell and West.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
753 N.E.2d 951, 142 Ohio App. 3d 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heffern-v-university-of-cincinnati-hospital-ohioctapp-2001.