Hongsathavij v. Queen of Angels/Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center

62 Cal. App. 4th 1123, 73 Cal. Rptr. 2d 695, 98 Daily Journal DAR 3315, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2434, 1998 Cal. App. LEXIS 281
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1998
DocketB108122
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 62 Cal. App. 4th 1123 (Hongsathavij v. Queen of Angels/Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hongsathavij v. Queen of Angels/Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center, 62 Cal. App. 4th 1123, 73 Cal. Rptr. 2d 695, 98 Daily Journal DAR 3315, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2434, 1998 Cal. App. LEXIS 281 (Cal. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Opinion

BOREN, P. J.

Appellant, Dr. Siri Hongsathavij, was a member of the medical staff of respondent, Queen of Angels/Holly wood Presbyterian Medical Center (the Medical Center). After Dr. Hongsathavij was removed from the Medical Center’s emergency room “call panel” (which did not affect his staff privileges at the Medical Center), he had a court-ordered hearing before a hospital judicial review committee (JRC), composed of peer physicians *1128 from the Medical Center staff. The JRC determined that there was insufficient basis to remove Dr. Hongsathavij from the panel and recommended his reinstatement. The Medical Center appealed the matter to its board of directors (acting as an Appeal Board), which determined that the JRC’s findings lacked evidentiary support and that Dr. Hongsathavij was properly removed from the panel and should not be reinstated. Dr. Hongsathavij then filed a petition for a writ of mandate, complaining that the Appeal Board acted improperly. The superior court denied the petition, and we affirm.

Facts

Background

From October 1990 through approximately January 1991, Dr. Hongsathavij was on the call panel of the Medical Center for OB/GYN physicians who served, among others, pregnant patients coming through the emergency room of the Medical Center. The call panel was a rotating list of doctors available to treat patients in the emergency room. Dr. Hongsathavij earned approximately $17,000 a month from the call panel alone. Los Angeles County (the County) had contracted with the Medical Center to provide obstetrical and newborn care for eligible County patients who could not be placed in a County hospital due to a lack of available space. The County also had contracted with Dr. Hongsathavij to provide prenatal, obstetrical and newborn services to patients whose care was then paid for by the County. Many but not all of the patients who entered the Medical Center’s emergency room were County patients.

The Medical Center had only one call panel. There was no separate list of physicians on call to cover the emergency room for non-County patients, as distinguished from County patients. The call panel functioned so that physicians were always compensated. In 90 percent of the cases, payment came either from insurance, from the County (for County patients), or from retroactively authorized Medi-Cal payments. In the remaining 10 percent of cases, the Medical Center itself compensated the doctor at Medi-Cal rates. Physicians at the Medical Center, other than Dr. Hongsathavij, generally understood or agreed that their emergency room services entailed treatment of all walk-in patients, including both County and non-County patients. Many were expressly informed that they had to see non-County patients to participate on the call panel. Some physicians considered treatment of all patients to be a moral obligation and thought it ethically improper to determine payment status before delivering a baby. Others were initially reluctant to treat non-County emergency room walk-ins, but were told it was a requirement if they wanted to be on the call panel.

*1129 However, Dr. Hongsathavij viewed the call panel as a panel only for County patients and did not want to treat non-County patients in the emergency room. He was the only doctor on the call panel who refused to treat non-County patients. He asserted that he understood the call panel was only to service County patients (for which a physician needed no malpractice insurance, as he would be indemnified by the County), and that he thus was not obligated to provide treatment for walk-in deliveries (for which he would need his own malpractice insurance).

The Incident and Removal From the Call Panel

On January 23, 1991, a patient in premature labor arrived in the emergency room of the Medical Center. The patient was 29 years old, had no prenatal care, had active vaginal bleeding, and admitted a history of drug abuse during her first trimester of pregnancy. The emergency room doctor contacted Dr. Hongsathavij, who admitted the patient to the hospital and had her transferred from the emergency room to the labor and delivery floor. She was admitted to the labor and delivery floor, but Dr. Hongsathavij refused to treat the patient because he discovered she was not a County-referred patient.

After Dr. Hongsathavij refused to treat the patient, Medical Center administrator Ronald Dahlgren requested Dr. Boyd Cooper to take the patient under his care. Dr. Cooper was at home and not then on call, but agreed to come to the Medical Center and treat the patient. Before Dr. Cooper accepted the patient, he contacted Dr. Hongsathavij and admonished him about his obligation to treat the patient. Dr. Hongsathavij told Dr. Cooper that he did not want to treat the patient because he did not have medical malpractice insurance. Dr. Cooper stated that he had to have insurance because he was on the hospital staff, and Dr. Hongsathavij replied, “Well, I’m still not going to take the patient.” The Medical Center administrator also that day admonished Dr. Hongsathavij that he had to accept non-County patients. However, he still refused to care for that pregnant patient, and Dr. Cooper delivered her infant later the same day.

Dr. Hongsathavij was subsequently removed from the Medical Center’s emergency call panel by the Medical Center’s administrator. Dr. Hongsathavij filed a mandamus action in superior court seeking reinstatement. In June of 1993, the superior court granted the petition for a writ of mandate, ordered the Medical Center to reinstate Dr. Hongsathavij on what it termed “the County’s admission and referral list,” provided he otherwise qualified, *1130 and directed the Medical Center to conduct a hearing in accordance with the Medical Center’s medical staff bylaws. 1

The Charges Against Dr. Hongsathavij

The Medical Center asked its medical staff’s medical executive committee (MEC) to conduct the court-mandated hearing, pursuant to the medical staff’s bylaws. The MEC impaneled a IRC by appointing five physicians from its ranks, but it refused to issue notice of charges and thus declined to prosecute the case against Dr. Hongsathavij. To comply with the court-ordered hearing, the Medical Center’s administrative risk management staff, on behalf of the Medical Center’s governing body (i.e., its board of directors), assumed the task of issuing a notice of charges and representing the Medical Center at the hearing. 2

The six charges against Dr. Hongsathavij were as follows: (1) abandonment of a patient; (2) failure to evaluate and stabilize the patient, subjecting himself and the hospital to “COBRA” violations; 3 (3) failure to honor the terms of the agreement between the staff OB/GYN physicians and the hospital regarding emergency room coverage; (4) failure to inform the hospital that he did not want to service the emergency room patients; (5) failure to provide documentary proof of medical malpractice insurance to *1131

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Bluebook (online)
62 Cal. App. 4th 1123, 73 Cal. Rptr. 2d 695, 98 Daily Journal DAR 3315, 98 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2434, 1998 Cal. App. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hongsathavij-v-queen-of-angelshollywood-presbyterian-medical-center-calctapp-1998.