Lo v. Provena Covenant Medical Center - Modified upon denial of rehearing

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 31, 2003
Docket4-03-0175 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Lo v. Provena Covenant Medical Center - Modified upon denial of rehearing (Lo v. Provena Covenant Medical Center - Modified upon denial of rehearing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lo v. Provena Covenant Medical Center - Modified upon denial of rehearing, (Ill. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

NO. 4-03-0175

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

ADOLF LO, M.D.,

         Plaintiff-Appellee,

         v.

PROVENA COVENANT MEDICAL CENTER, a Corporation,

         Defendant-Appellant.

)

)))

Appeal from

Circuit Court of

Champaign County

No. 02L275  

Honorable

Michael Q. Jones,

Judge Presiding.

MODIFIED UPON DENIAL OF REHEARING

JUSTICE APPLETON delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Adolf Lo, is a physician and a member of the medical staff of defendant, Provena Covenant Medical Center, a licensed hospital.  Defendant summarily suspended plaintiff's clinical privilege to perform open-heart surgery, allegedly because an independent peer review had identified problems in his open-heart surgeries and he had expressed an intention to perform more such surgeries without the precautionary measure on which defendant had insisted:  direct supervision by another cardiac surgeon.  Plaintiff sued defendant for breach of contract, and the trial court entered an order temporarily restraining defendant from suspending any of plaintiff's clinical privileges.   Defendant appeals on three grounds:  (1) defendant's decision to summarily suspend plaintiff's clinical privilege violated no bylaw and, therefore, the trial court lacked authority to review the decision; (2) under federal and state law and defendant's bylaws, defendant had ultimate authority over its medical staff, including the authority, on its own initiative, to suspend clinical privileges of a physician who posed an imminent risk of harm to patients; and (3) plaintiff failed to establish the requisites for a temporary restraining order.  Because the summary suspension violated no bylaw, we reverse the trial court's judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

Defendant's owner, Provena Hospitals, has adopted the "Bylaws of Provena Covenant Medical Center Local Governing Board[,] Urbana, Illinois" (hospital board's bylaws), which provide as follows:

" Section 1.1 - Authorization .  The board of directors of PROVENA HOSPITALS has authoriz­ed the establishment of a Local Govern­ing Board ('Hospital Board') to have such authority and responsibilities with respect to the governance of the day to day business and affairs of Provena Covenant Medical Center ('Hospital') as are set forth in these bylaws and as the PROVENA HOSPITALS Board may from time to time delegate.  ***  

* * *

Section 4.1 - Delegated Authority .  The Hospital Board has been delegated authority and responsibility by the PROVENA HOSPITALS Board, for the following functions ***:

(h) To serve as the official governance mechanism of the Hospital to its Medical Staff and to act on recommendations from the Hospital's Medical Staff, to include but not limited to *** clinical privileges ***.

(i) To maintain a liaison with the Hospital's Medical Staff by including the president of the Medical Staff as an ex-officio director of the Hospital Board in order to promote favorable working relationships and exchange information for the improvement of patient care.

Section 8.1 - Medical/Dental Staff Responsibilities .  The Hospital Board shall, in the exercise of its discretion, delegate to the Medical/Dental Staff the responsibility for providing appropriate professional care to all patients of the Hospital, as well as the authority to carry out the designated responsibilities.

The Medical/Dental Staff of the Hospital shall make recommendations to the Hospital Board concerning all matters set forth in the Medical/Dental Staff bylaws and all additional matters referred to it by the Hospital Board.

Section 8.2 - Medical/Dental Staff Bylaws .  There shall be bylaws *** for the Medical/Dental Staff setting forth its organization and governance.  Proposed bylaws *** may be recommended by the Medical/Dental Staff, which shall only become effective upon the adoption thereof by the Hospital Board.

Section 8.3 - Quality of Care Monitoring .  The Hospital Board shall require the Medical/Dental Staff to implement activities and mechanisms for monitoring and evaluating the quality of patient care, for identifying opportunities to improve patient care, and for identifying and resolving problems or deficiencies, and shall regularly report to the Hospital Board on these matters.

Section 8.5 - Delegated Powers .  ***  In all applicable matters, this Article is subject to the policies of PROVENA HOSPITALS, including, but not limited to, ensuring compliance with State of Illinois license requirements[] [and] Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations ***."

Pursuant to section 8.2 of the hospital board's bylaws, the medical staff recommended bylaws, which the hospital board adopted.  The medical staff's bylaws provide:

"[I]t is recognized that the medical staff is responsible for the quality of medical care and must accept and discharge this responsibility, subject to the ultimate authority of the medical center board of directors ***.  ***

ARTICLE 3.

PURPOSES

The purposes of this organization [(the medical staff)] are:

3.3  to serve as the primary means for accountability to the [defendant's] Board of Directors for the appropriateness of the professional performance *** of its members *** and to strive towards the continual improvement of the quality and efficiency of patient care delivered in the Medical Center ***.

3.4  to provide a means through which the Medical Staff may participate in the policymak­ing and planning processes of the Medical Center ***.  

ARTICLE 8.

CORRECTIVE ACTION

8.1  Procedure

8.1.1  Any person may provide information to the medical staff about the conduct, performance, or competence of its members.  Whenever reliable information indicates that the activity or professional conduct of any member of the Medical Staff is considered to be lower than the standards of the Medical Staff, detrimental to public safety or disruptive to the delivery of quality patient care, corrective action against such practitioner may be requested by any officer of the Medical Staff, by the chair of any clinical department, by the chair of any standing committee of the Medical Staff, by the Chief Executive Officer, or by the Board of Directors.  All requests for corrective action shall be made to the Executive Committee in writing, and shall be supported by reference to the specific activities or conduct which constitute the grounds for the request.

8.2  Summary Suspension

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Lo v. Provena Covenant Medical Center - Modified upon denial of rehearing, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lo-v-provena-covenant-medical-center-modified-upon-illappct-2003.