Lackvic, MD v. Littleton Hosp.

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 21, 1996
DocketCV-96-337-SD
StatusPublished

This text of Lackvic, MD v. Littleton Hosp. (Lackvic, MD v. Littleton Hosp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lackvic, MD v. Littleton Hosp., (D.N.H. 1996).

Opinion

Lackvic, MD v . Littleton Hosp. CV-96-337-SD 11/21/96 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Michelle Lackovic, M.D.

v. Civil N o . 96-337-SD

Littleton Hospital Association; d/b/a Littleton Regional Hospital; Littleton Hospital Association Medical Staff; Robert A . Peraino, M.D.

O R D E R

In this diversity action, plaintiff Michelle Lackovic, M.D., brings several state law claims, including breach of contract, defamation, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, against the defendants in connection with the suspension of her Intensive Care Unit (ICU) privileges at defendant Littleton Hospital Association.

Presently before the court is defendants' motion to dismiss Counts I , I I , and V of the complaint for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), Fed. R. Civ. P. Plaintiff has filed an objection to the motion as well as a motion to amend the complaint to add additional defendants and to clarify certain claims. Background1 In 1989 plaintiff Michelle Lackovic, M.D., a physician trained in internal medicine in Pennsylvania, was recruited by defendant Littleton Hospital Association (the Hospital) to establish a family practice and weight clinic in Whitefield, New Hampshire. D r . Lackovic and the Hospital entered a Physician Recruitment Agreement. Under the Agreement, D r . Lackovic was to establish an internal medicine practice in Whitefield, while at the same time maintaining active medical staff and clinical privileges in internal medicine at the Hospital. Although she was required to make a good-faith effort to use the Hospital for services, she retained the right to admit or refer her patients elsewhere under certain circumstances.

In July of 1990 D r . Lackovic opened her office in Whitefield in a building owned by the Hospital. She also applied for and obtained privileges at the Hospital, which required her to provide coverage of the ICU at the Hospital, a duty shared by D r . Emil Pollak, a cardiologist, and D r . Robert Peraino, a

nephrologist. Each of the three physicians was "on call" at the ICU every third week on a rotating basis. The on-call physician was required to be available 24 hours per day for patients

1 In keeping with the duty imposed by Rule 12(b)(6), the court will take all allegations of the plaintiff's complaint as true for the purposes of resolving defendants' motion to dismiss.

2 needing admission to the Hospital or who had no regular physician, and was also required to assume complete care of the other two physicians' ICU patients from 5:00 p.m. Friday until 8:00 a.m. Monday. In March of 1992, D r . Lackovic purchased another office building in Whitefield and relocated her practice because the building owned by the Hospital had deteriorated. In her new office, she established a successful family practice, as well as a weight-loss clinic required by the Recruitment Agreement. She also bought blood chemistry equipment and gave her patients the option of having their testing done by her, the Hospital, or elsewhere. Her patients tended not to choose the Hospital, which sometimes charged as much as 100 percent more than elsewhere. According to the complaint, the Hospital resented this turn of events and terminated the Physician Recruitment Agreement three months early, on the baseless ground that D r . Lackovic's practice had primarily developed into a weight-loss clinic and she was not fulfilling her ICU obligations.

The complaint also alleges that D r . Peraino believed that Dr. Lackovic, as a woman and a new physician, should

unquestioningly follow his recommendations and that he resented her because she sometimes exercised her independent judgment when it differed from his. In addition, D r . Peraino wanted additional

3 on-call hours to enhance his income and viewed D r . Lackovic as a competitor. During the week beginning January 2 1 , 1994, two patients (one suffering from a perforated duodenal ulcer and another in post-cardio-respiratory arrest) were transferred to the ICU when Dr. Lackovic was on call. D r . Peraino was scheduled to cover the ICU for the weekend and assumed responsibility for the care of both patients, although he was allegedly unhappy about the prospect of caring for two complex medical conditions during the weekend.

On January 3 0 , 1994, D r . Peraino submitted a letter to D r . Pollak, Director of the ICU, requesting the immediate suspension of D r . Lackovic's ICU privileges. He claimed that D r . Lackovic's treatment of the patients had placed them in imminent danger and leveled a total of 28 charges of malpractice and misconduct against her. D r . Peraino hand delivered the letter to D r . Lackovic at her home the next day.

Dr. Peraino soon met with D r . Pollak and Parker A . Towle, M.D., Chief of Medical Services at the Hospital, and discussed the charges against D r . Lackovic. Without speaking to D r . Lackovic or otherwise investigating the matter, D r . Towle summarily suspended D r . Lackovic's ICU privileges pending review by the Executive Committee, which was scheduled for February 3 ,

4 1994. Following the Hospital's bylaws, D r . Towle formed an ad hoc committee comprised of himself, D r . Pollak, and D r . Kathleen Smith, a family practitioner. The committee met with D r . Lackovic on February 1 , 1994, but she could not address the issues raised by D r . Peraino because she did not have all of the relevant medical records. Over the next few days, members of the committee met with Drs. Lackovic and Peraino, reviewed the medical charts, and reviewed D r . Lackovic's detailed written rebuttal to each of the charges made by D r . Peraino. D r . Peraino, however, presented no medical literature or other evidence to support his allegations.

On February 8 , 1994, the committee issued its findings and recommendations and forwarded them to the executive committee of the medical staff as required by the bylaws. That committee found evidence to support 3 of the 28 charges of substandard care, but no evidence to support the remaining 25 charges. D r . Peraino was not reprimanded or disciplined by the committee for bringing the baseless charges. The committee did, however, recommend that D r . Lackovic's ICU privileges be restored only on the condition that she obtain 20 hours of continuing medical education credit in critical care medicine and that her treatment of ICU patients be monitored and approved by Drs. Peraino and Pollak for a three-month period. During such period, she could

5 admit patients to the ICU only by obtaining the signature of the on-call physician. Six days later, a special meeting of the executive committee was convened, at which it accepted the recommendations of the ad hoc committee and notified D r . Lackovic of its decision. The executive committee advised D r . Lackovic that if she accepted the recommendation, the Hospital would not have to file a report with a national databank and/or the State Board of Medical Examiners, which could have potential adverse effects on her ability to practice medicine.

As the findings of neither committee could support the summary suspension of her ICU privileges, D r . Lackovic could not accept the proposed conditions for the restoration of her ICU privileges. She particularly found it unreasonable that she be supervised by D r . Peraino, who had filed false charges against her, as well as by D r . Pollak, who unquestioningly accepted such charges.

Over the next few weeks, D r . Lackovic made repeated requests that her ICU privileges be restored without condition and also requested that the matter be referred to a peer review committee of the New Hampshire Medical Society to determine the reasonableness of the findings and conditions imposed by the executive committee.

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