LAS PALMAS MEDICAL CENTER v. Rodriguez

279 S.W.3d 413, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 627, 2009 WL 214753
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 2009
Docket08-07-00016-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 279 S.W.3d 413 (LAS PALMAS MEDICAL CENTER v. Rodriguez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LAS PALMAS MEDICAL CENTER v. Rodriguez, 279 S.W.3d 413, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 627, 2009 WL 214753 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID WELLINGTON CHEW, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding money damages in a medical malpractice case. Appellee Fernando *415 Rodriguez (Rodriguez) brought a -wrongful death and survival action against Appellant Las Palmas Medical Center and El Paso Healthcare System, Ltd. d/b/a Las Palmas Medical Center (Las Palmas), alleging negligence which caused the death of his mother, Carmen Rodriguez. After the first trial of the case, the trial court granted a motion for mistrial and ordered a new trial. Following the second trial, the jury found that Las Palmas’s negligence proximately caused Carmen Rodriguez’s death and awarded her son $50,000 damages for her conscious physical pain, $50,000 for her mental anguish, and $10,000 for her burial expenses. No damages were awarded for Fernando Rodriguez’s individual wrongful death claim. The trial court reduced the damage claim for the burial expenses, but otherwise rendered judgment on the jury’s verdict. We affirm.

Carmen Rodriguez suffered from a number of medical ailments including diabetes and hypertension. She had suffered several strokes and had undergone surgery for a broken hip. She had also suffered from severe decubitus ulcers. On October 17, 2001, she was admitted to Las Palmas Medical Center in order to receive oxygen treatments due to a decubitus ulcer on her hip, and to receive treatment for an infection in the wound on her hip. There was evidence that she was awake, but she was not able to follow recommendations or verbal commands. However, there was also testimony from her son that she was coherent and was able to converse with him on the evening before her passing.

At 9:54 a.m. on October 23, 2001, after Carmen Rodriguez had returned from receiving hyperbaric oxygen treatment, she was scheduled to have a surgical procedure performed that afternoon. The patient’s medical chart indicates that Nurse Majorie Day, Rodriguez’s assigned nurse, performed an assessment of Rodriguez. She was not alert, oriented or talking, but her condition was stable. She was moaning, but her breathing was not labored. Rodriguez was suffering from dysphagia, a difficulty with swallowing.

At 10:30, Day noted that Rodriguez had a large amount of drainage from her wound, and she changed the dressings. At 11:30 a.m., Day was cleaning Rodriguez’s mouth when she stopped breathing. Her heart was still beating. The medical chart indicates that Day called a “code.” Her heart rhythm was at a slow rate of 40 per minute. Rodriguez’s code status was “full code,” indicating that she was to be resuscitated in the event of cardiac or respiratory arrest. Day testified that she did not recall what occurred during the code. Furthermore, there is no documentation in the hospital’s records of the details of what occurred during the code. The medical records indicate that the code was stopped by order of Dr. Omar Gonzalez, the attending physician. Rodriguez continued to have “agonal” respirations until 12 p.m., when she was pronounced dead. Her death was caused by two mucus plugs in her lungs. Day testified that her decision not to resuscitate Rodriguez was a violation of hospital policy and was a breach of the standard of care; although she believed the decision not to resuscitate was made by the family as Dr. Gonzalez had told her the family had decided not to resuscitate. The hospital policy did not permit the acceptance of a DNR order over the telephone.

Dr. Gonzalez testified that Day called him to tell him that Rodriguez had stopped breathing, and he instructed her to give him some time to request a DNR, or, do not resuscitate order. He then phoned Fernando Rodriguez and obtained his agreement not to resuscitate his mother. He called Day back and told her not to run the code. He believed that Rodriguez’s *416 condition was terminal or irreversible as she had multiple conditions contributing to her morbidity.

Fernando Rodriguez testified that he did not receive the call from Dr. Gonzalez, and he was unaware that his mother had stopped breathing until he received a call from the hospital informing him that his mother had passed away.

Rodriguez’s chart indicates that when the code was stopped, her heart was still beating. Her respiration continued until 12. She was trying to breathe for forty minutes. Her respirations were agonal.

Various experts testified on behalf of both parties. Nurse Cynthia Stinson testified the nursing care at Las Palmas failed to meet the standard of care due to lack of documentation regarding the purported change in her code status, the failure to document the respiratory care, the failure to document what measures were taken when the code was called, and the failure to follow hospital policy when the telephonic order to stop the code was received.

Nurse Stinson stated that she had no personal knowledge of what occurred in that she was not present when Rodriguez stopped breathing; although the nursing notes indicated that her breathing was ag-onal; that is, she was struggling to breathe. A person in such a circumstance is often gasping for breath, is bluish in color, and often has a helpless look in their eyes. A person utilizing agonal breathing is trying to breathe.

Dr. Hugh Poindexter testified as an expert for Rodriguez. He agreed that the nursing staff breached the standard of care in treating Rodriguez, and that their failure to take resuscitative measures proximately caused her death due to a mucus plug that developed because she did not have a gag reflex. Regarding whether or not Rodriguez was conscious after she stopped breathing, the following exchange occurred:

DEFENSE: Is it also true that you can’t say within reasonable medical probability that Ms. Rodriguez was conscious at any time after the code was called and before her respirations stopped?
WITNESS: We discussed that before, and without documentation I just don’t know. Trying to breathe, I would assume she was conscious but I would just have to assume.
DEFENSE: It’s merely an assumption?
WITNESS: Assumption.
DEFENSE: And you cannot say within reasonable medical probability she was conscious at all during that period of time?
WITNESS: If you’re trying to breathe I think it’s a pretty good assumption that she probably was conscious.
DEFENSE: Well, can you say that with reasonable medical probability, Doctor?
WITNESS: I think so.
DEFENSE: You told me before you couldn’t, wasn’t that true?
WITNESS: I said it was possible. I think I gave you 50/50 on that one, too.
DEFENSE: I asked you on page 144.
WITNESS: Okay.
DEFENSE: So, and reasonable medical probability you can’t say she was conscious during any of that period of time. Answer: They didn’t document anything. Sometimes they can be conscious, sometimes not. There’s nothing documented so we don’t know in this case. We do not know that she was trying to breathe-we do know she was trying to breathe, though. Correct?

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279 S.W.3d 413, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 627, 2009 WL 214753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/las-palmas-medical-center-v-rodriguez-texapp-2009.