Immormino v. Lake Hospital System, Inc.

127 F. Supp. 3d 829, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 115345, 2015 WL 5102610
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
DocketCase No. 1:13CV1818
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 127 F. Supp. 3d 829 (Immormino v. Lake Hospital System, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Immormino v. Lake Hospital System, Inc., 127 F. Supp. 3d 829, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 115345, 2015 WL 5102610 (N.D. Ohio 2015).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

CHRISTOPHER A. BOYKO, District Judge:

This matter is before the Court on Defendant Lake Hospital, Ine.’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF # 43). For the following reasons, the Court grants Defendant’s Motion.

Background Facts

Plaintiffs Roberta Immormino’s and Christine Pestello’s Amended Complaint alleges employment discrimination claims brought under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”) 29 U.S.C. § 621-634 and Ohio Revised Code Sections 4112.14 and 4112.99 for disparate treatment. According to the Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs Roberta Immormino and Christine Pestello were employed by Defendant Lake Hospital as nurses in the Obstetrics Department (“OB”). Both Plaintiffs received good or excellent performance reviews during their employment.

While working third shift on the night of January 30-31, 2012,1 Pestello and fellow [832]*832nurse Megan King, Pestello’s supervisor, were prepping a patient for an epidural. King asked Pestello to prepare the operating room for another procedure involving a different patient. King stated she would take over the epidural. King provided the physician the wrong medication which the physician injected into the patient. Pestel-lo finished prepping the other room and returned to check on the epidural patient. She began charting in the patient chart of the epidural recipient. King told Pestello to stop charting because King had made all the necessary notations in the chart. Pestello complied and stopped charting in the epidural patient’s chart.

When the epidural mistake was discovered, Nurse Managers Angie Quirk and Jennifer DiGeronimo began an investigation. They determined that Kang handed the physician the wrong medication and further determined that Pestello had made charting errors. According to the Amended Complaint, Pestello was falsely accused of charting events she did not personally witness.

Plaintiffs contend Defendant’s policy allows nurses to correct charting errors within seventy-two hours of their entry or prior to the time the patient is discharged, whichever period is longer. Furthermore, under the policy, even if Pestello had made the charting errors as alleged, Pestello should have received only a verbal reprimand or first written warning. Other nurses who committed similar alleged charting errors only received reprimands or written warnings. Pestello was terminated due to her age and was replaced by a younger employee. King who is also not in the protected class was retained.

On February 6-7, 2012, Plaintiff Immor-mino was working third shift as a charge nurse supervising other nurses in the OB. There were several emergency situations that occurred that evening. Quirk and/or DiGeronimo reviewed Immormino’s charting and found “cut and paste” charting errors in the Soarian electronic charting system. These errors were determined to be deliberate falsifications and resulted in Immormino’s termination. The errors were determined to be deliberate falsifications because Quirk was told by a patient that Immormino never performed her rounds that evening and into the next morning. Plaintiffs allege this is not true because Quirk’s earlier report contradicted this statement. Immormino was terminated and replaced by a younger employee who was not a member of the protected class.

Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment

According to Defendant, both Plaintiffs received a number of corrective actions while employed. These included charting errors, for which they received only warnings. However, Defendant determined the charting errors made by Plaintiffs that resulted in their terminations were falsified entries. Defendant contends charting is the one of the most important functions performed by nurses on a daily basis. To facilitate this, Defendant employs the Soa-rian electronic records system. Soarian is a medical records program that allows nurses to chart patients’ vital signs and other date into a computerized medical chart chronicling a patient’s care. These charts are relied on by physicians and can result in changes to patient care. Errors on charts expose hospitals to malpractice liability. Soarian contains a seventy-two hour window in which charting errors may be corrected but nurses are expected to chart within one hour of care. Under no circumstances may charting be done more than four hours after care. Given the seriousness of charting errors, Defendant’s [833]*833policies authorize immediate termination for falsifying medical records. The policies differentiate between falsifying records and inadvertent charting errors or omissions. According to DiGeronimo, “falsification” occurs when a nurse charts something that is not true or is factually incorrect. A charting “error” occurs when a nurse forgets to chart something, misspells something or writes down an incorrect date or time.

According to Defendant, on the night/early morning of February 6-7, 2012, Immormino was working a typical shift as charge nurse at Tri-Point Medical Center, a Lake Hospital facility, in the OB. Quirk was having an informal discussion with a patient who informed Quirk that Immormi-no had rarely been in the room all night and the patient received no assistance with the ultrasound system monitoring their child’s heartbeat. A review of the Soarian system revealed Immormino had failed to take regular measurements of the patient’s vital signs. Under Defendant’s policies a nurse is expected to take a patient’s pulse every thirty minutes, blood pressure every two hours and temperature every four hours. Immormino’s chart entries for the entire night were made one hour after her shift had ended. Furthermore, and more problematic for Immormino, the vital sign entries appeared to be copied across each time slot showing that on each hour, the pulse, temperature and heart rate were all identical throughout Immormino’s twelve hour shift. According to Defendant, Im-mormino admitted copying and pasting these entries in the patient’s chart.

As if that were not serious enough, Defendant contends Immormino’s copied and pasted vitals did not accurately reflect the true vital sign readings when compared to Defendant’s Watchchild Fetal Monitoring System. This computerized medical surveillance system records and archives a labor patient’s and child’s vital signs during labor and delivery. When Quirk compared the Watchchild data with Im-.; mormino’s charting entries she found disjlr crepancies in the patient’s vital signs readings.

Quirk then went back over Immormino’s prior charting and found similar occurrences on six different occasions. Quirk consulted with Defendant’s Human Resources department and then terminated Immormino.

Defendant further contends Pestello’s employment was terminated for false and misleading charting as well. Defendant does not dispute that on the night of January 30-31, 2012, Pestello was assigned to care for an epidural patient but charge nurse Megan King instructed her to prep another room and not chart for the epidural patient since King would assume responsibility for the patient.

However, according to Defendant, after Pestello left the epidural patient around 7:10 p.m., Pestello continued charting at 7:30, 7:45 and 8:10 in the evening. These entries do not match documentation and the timeline King entered for the procedure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 F. Supp. 3d 829, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 115345, 2015 WL 5102610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/immormino-v-lake-hospital-system-inc-ohnd-2015.