Kimberly Giddens v. the Medical Center of Central Georgia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 12, 2020
DocketA19A2439
StatusPublished

This text of Kimberly Giddens v. the Medical Center of Central Georgia (Kimberly Giddens v. the Medical Center of Central Georgia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimberly Giddens v. the Medical Center of Central Georgia, (Ga. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION BARNES, P. J., MERCIER and BROWN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules

February 12, 2020

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A19A2439. GIDDENS v. THE MEDICAL CENTER OF CENTRAL GEORGIA.

BROWN, Judge.

Following a craniotomy to remove an arachnoid cyst, Kimberly Giddens

suffered a brain infection, resulting in permanent neurological injuries. Giddens sued

Dr. Hugh F. Smisson, III, and The Georgia Neurological Institute, P.C., for

professional negligence, and The Medical Center of Central Georgia for professional

and ordinary negligence, alleging that MCCG’s nurses and mid-level providers

violated accepted medical practices by not following Smisson’s order to administer

a pre-operative antibiotic. The trial court granted summary judgment to MCCG on all

claims, concluding that MCCG did not employ the nurse anesthetist and that it was

her job to administer the pre-operative antibiotic. Giddens appeals from that order. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to MCCG on

Giddens’ ordinary negligence claim, but reverse the grant of summary judgment to

MCCG on Giddens’ professional negligence claim.

Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact

and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. OCGA § 9-11-56 (c).

In reviewing a grant or denial of summary judgment, we owe no deference to the trial court’s ruling and we review de novo both the evidence and the trial court’s legal conclusions. Moreover, we construe the evidence and all inferences and conclusions arising therefrom most favorably toward the party opposing the motion.

(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Swint v. Alphonse, 348 Ga. App. 199, 199-200

(820 SE2d 312) (2018). So viewed, the evidence shows that on December 16, 2014,

Giddens underwent a craniotomy at MCCG performed by Smisson. Giddens arrived

at the hospital at 6:14,1 and was taken to the operating room at 11:36, where she was

met by Smisson, anesthesiologist Dr. Alvin Sewell, circulating nurse Tamakia

Brooks, scrub nurse Kelly Canez, physician’s assistant Audrey Cabe, and certified

registered nurse anesthetist (“CRNA”) Susan Anderson. Giddens was prepped for

surgery, a process that Smisson and MCCG staff deposed would have taken at least

1 All times are in military time.

2 60 to 90 minutes, and at 12:40, Anderson administered 1 gram of the antibiotic Ancef,

pursuant to Smisson’s written order dated December 15, 2014, which instructed that

Giddens be given 1 gram of Ancef “within one hour before surgery.” On a checklist

prepared by Brooks before the start of surgery, Brooks handwrote, “Ancef one gram

at 1240.” There is some dispute as to when the surgery began. According to one

anesthesia record, the “incision time” for Giddens’ surgery was “1305,” but another

anesthesia record reflects that the time was 12:05.2 And, one of the entries on the

medical chart created during the surgery reflects a start time of “12:05:00.”

Brooks, however, who was in charge of “charting” or “documenting” Giddens’

electronic medical record during the surgery, deposed that she mistakenly

documented the start time of the procedure as 12:05, when it should have been 13:05.

Brooks explained that her manager, Rhonda Beeland, alerted her to the error on

January 5, 2015, and told her to change the time. At her deposition, Brooks testified

2 CRNA Anderson averred that at the time of Giddens’ surgery, she was employed by American Anesthesiology of Georgia, LLC, and not MCCG, and that it was her responsibility to administer the antibiotic to Giddens. Anderson further averred that: (1) she administered the antibiotic at 12:40 per Smisson’s order, which was within one hour before surgery; (2) the incision occurred at 13:05 based on her manual entry on the anesthesia records; and (3) “[i]t [was] impossible that incision occurred at 12:05pm . . . based upon [her] manual entries . . . in the anesthesia records.”

3 that Beeland told her about this lawsuit and that her “belief [from speaking to

Beeland] was . . . that there was going to be a lawsuit about this particular event[.]”

In an errata sheet after her deposition was complete, Brooks clarified that she does

not remember Beeland telling her to make the change because of a lawsuit, but

“assumed [that fact] because there is now a lawsuit.”3 Brooks agreed with Beeland

that she had made an error, and changed the start time from 12:05 to 13:05.4 Brooks

stated that her decision to change the chart was based upon her “charting,” and not

because Beeland told her to change the entry. Brooks explained that the chart shows

that she updated Giddens’ family at 13:09, something that she does routinely “after

incision is made”; she would not wait a whole hour to update the family. Brooks

3 Brooks’ errata sheet does not erase from the record her original deposition testimony. See J.H. Harvey Co. v. Reddick, 240 Ga. App. 466, 473-474 (2) (522 SE2d 749) (1999). 4 Given how long it takes to prepare a patient for surgery, Smisson testified that it was “impossible” for the surgery start time to have been 12:05. Smisson explained that it takes an hour or more after a patient enters the operating room before the patient is registered “in the brain lab,” which Beeland confirmed was the mapping machine used on Giddens to find the cyst. Canez, the surgical scrub technician present during the surgery, also averred that it was impossible for the incision to have occurred at 12:05 because “[t]here is no possible way that the operating team could prep a patient for this craniotomy in 29 minutes[;] prep for a craniotomy takes at minimum 45 minutes to one hour from the time the patient enters the operating room to incision time.”

4 pointed out additional indicators throughout the chart that supported the 13:05 start

time, including that she “started charting around 1310” as evidenced by the “first

wound class entry” made at 13:10, as well as a discussion about the patient’s allergies

which occurred at 13:11, and the administration of a beta blocker at 13:14. As to the

discrepancy in the anesthesia records, an MCCG system analyst averred that the

incorrect time of 12:05 entered by Brooks into Giddens’ computer medical chart

automatically populated in the demographic bar of the anesthesia record, but that

CRNA Anderson already had manually typed into the anesthesia record the correct

incision time of 13:05; when Brooks subsequently corrected the incision time, it did

not auto-correct in the anesthesia record because that document already had been

finalized. The surgery ended at 14:29, and Giddens was discharged from the hospital

the following day.

On January 5, 2015, twenty days after the surgery, Giddens presented to

Smisson’s office, complaining of drainage from the surgery wound, and was told by

Smisson that she had a suture abscess. Smisson advised her to use Neosporin and

shampoo the site. The same day, Beeland received an email from a quality assurance

nurse working with “the anesthesia group,” which stated as follows:

5 Can you please review an incision time on case performed 12/16/14? Kimberly Giddens . . . I have spoken with Amy Greene AA and she states that the anesthetist incision time listed as 1305 is correct.

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