In Re Justin Paul Di Rezze Md

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 2025
Docket370615
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Justin Paul Di Rezze Md (In Re Justin Paul Di Rezze Md) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Justin Paul Di Rezze Md, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re JUSTIN PAUL DI REZZE, M.D.

DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING AND UNPUBLISHED REGULATORY AFFAIRS, September 17, 2025 10:22 AM Petitioner-Appellee,

V No. 370615 LARA Bureau of Professional Licensing JUSTIN PAUL DI REZZE, M.D., LC No. 22-004852

Respondent-Appellant.

Before: K. F. KELLY, P.J., and PATEL and FEENEY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this professional-discipline action, respondent appeals as of right a final order of the Board of Medicine’s Disciplinary Subcommittee (DSC), part of the Bureau of Professional Licensing (BPL) in the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA), placing him on probation for a period of one day to six months, requiring him to complete 10 hours of continuing education, and imposing a fine of $2,500, for violating MCL 333.16221(a).1 We affirm.

I. FACTS

Respondent is a physician licensed to practice medicine in Michigan, and, at the relevant time, served as the medical director of Wellbridge of Grand Blanc (Wellbridge), a nursing and

1 MCL 333.16221(a) authorizes the DSC to impose sanctions, under MCL 333.16226, for “a violation of general duty,” defined in part as “negligence or failure to exercise due care, including negligent delegation to or supervision of employees or other individuals, whether or not injury results . . . .”

-1- rehabilitation facility. This disciplinary action arose from respondent’s treatment of patient AH,2 an elderly man who had been hospitalized for a urinary-tract infection and sepsis immediately before his admission at Wellbridge; AH was weak, could not walk, needed help with day-to-day activities, and suffered from diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and hypertension. AH was admitted at Wellbridge on the evening of March 14, 2019, but on March 25, 2019, at his family’s insistence, AH was transported to Ascension Genesys Hospital (Ascension), then, that same night, to the emergency department at the University of Michigan (UM) Hospital in Ann Arbor, where he was admitted.

A. COMPLAINT

In May 2019, members of AH’s family filed a complaint with the BPL, and an investigation into respondent’s treatment of AH at Wellbridge was conducted. In January 2020, petitioner served an administrative complaint on respondent. Petitioner alleged that AH had been hospitalized for sepsis, following a urinary-tract infection, before he was transported to Wellbridge “for rehabilitation and care.” Petitioner asserted that, upon admission to Wellbridge, AH had three pressure ulcers, or bedsores—two on his coccyx and one on his left heel, “all noted and present at the time of admission to the facility.” Petitioner also asserted that respondent completed AH’s intake history and examined AH, but documented no rashes or ulcers and otherwise “failed to note and document a detailed description of the patient’s current wounds,” and that, on the same day, staff was directed to monitor AH’s left heel, but no orders addressed the wounds on his coccyx.

Petitioner also alleged that, on March 18, 2019—four days after AH’s admission to Wellbridge—a physician’s assistant (PA) had examined AH and noted wounds on his right heel and buttocks, but “failed to note the wound on the patient’s left heel and failed to document a detailed description of the patient’s wounds;” and on the same day, staff was directed to monitor and treat AH’s coccyx wounds twice daily. Petitioner also alleged that, one week later, the PA again examined AH, and again noted the presence of wounds on the right heel and buttocks, but, as before, “failed to note the wound on the patient’s left heel and failed to document a detailed description of the patient’s wounds.”

Petitioner also stated that its retained expert opined that respondent “was negligent and failed to conform to minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing practice” by: (1) failing to properly document AH’s wounds upon admission, (2) failing to properly supervise the PA, (3) failing to issue orders to address AH’s wounds until four days after admission, (4) discontinuing AH’s use of an external catheter, and (5) failing to order “multiple modalities” to care for AH’s wounds. In Count I, petitioner alleged that respondent’s conduct violated general duty by way of “negligence or failure to exercise due care, including negligent delegation to or supervision of employees or other individuals,” in violation of MCL 333.16221(a). In Count II, petitioner alleged that respondent’s conduct demonstrated incompetence, in violation of MCL 333.16221(b)(i).

B. ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE HEARING

2 Initials have been used throughout these proceedings to protect the patient’s identity.

-2- In October 2022, a hearing was held before an administrative law judge (ALJ), during which the ALJ heard testimony from a BPL investigator, an expert witness from both parties, and respondent.

The petitioner’s expert witness, Madeline Krissoff, M.D., was qualified as an expert in internal medicine and geriatrics, including pressure wounds and ulcers. Dr. Krissoff asserted that respondent violated the Public Health Code (PHC), MCL 333.1101 et seq., by failing to diagnose and treat AH’s wounds, leading to a decline in his condition and resulting in his admission to the UM Hospital. Dr. Krissoff stated that a reasonably prudent medical doctor would have seen and documented AH’s pressure ulcers during his history and physical (H & P). Dr. Krissoff also stated that the first reference to treatment of AH’s coccyx wounds was not made until four days after AH arrived at Wellbridge, and AH’s care plan was generated by the nursing staff with no indication that a doctor had any input into it. Dr. Krissoff further testified that the “progress notes” created by the PA, and signed by respondent, noted a wound on AH’s buttock, but also noted a wound on his right heel rather than his left heel. Dr. Krissoff opined that, if a physician signs a PA’s note as an author, the physician has the responsibility to ensure that the note is accurate.

The respondent’s expert witness, Iris Boettcher, M.D., was qualified as an expert in internal and geriatric medicine. Dr. Boettcher acknowledged that respondent’s documentation of his initial assessment of AH “could have been better,” but stated that “it was certainly within the minimal standard of care.” She testified that a skilled nursing facility, such as Wellbridge, provides “team- based care,” in which the physician “is responsible for writing the orders and care plan oversight.” In her opinion, respondent exercised appropriate oversight and issued appropriate orders for AH’s care plan. Dr. Boettcher did not believe that AH’s condition worsened during his stay at Wellbridge. She also stated that she had no concerns regarding respondent’s oversight in this case, explaining that, although there was an error regarding the location of a heel wound, it had no significant impact on the overall care the PA provided, which met the “minimal standards.”

Respondent testified that he was the medical director and sole attending physician at Wellbridge, as well as the chief executive officer of Theoria, which he described as “a post-acute care health technology, as well as medical management organization.” As for AH’s arrival at Wellbridge, respondent testified that he was completing his rounds at 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. when a nurse asked him to evaluate a “new arrival.” He described AH as extremely sick, with multiple comorbidities, and stated that, when he examined AH, he focused on the chief complaint for which he was admitted to Ascension, and made sure that AH had appropriate antibiotics and sepsis screening.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Justin Paul Di Rezze Md, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-justin-paul-di-rezze-md-michctapp-2025.