Markell Vanslembrouck v. Andrew Jay Halperin Md

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 2014
Docket309680
StatusUnpublished

This text of Markell Vanslembrouck v. Andrew Jay Halperin Md (Markell Vanslembrouck v. Andrew Jay Halperin 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
Markell Vanslembrouck v. Andrew Jay Halperin Md, (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MARKELL VANSLEMBROUCK, Minor, by and UNPUBLISHED through ERIC BRAVERMAN, Conservator, October 28, 2014

Plaintiff-Appellee, and

KIMBERLY A. VANSLEMBROUCK,

Plaintiff,

v No. 309680 Oakland Circuit Court ANDREW JAY HALPERIN, M.D., and LC No. 2006-754585-NH WILLIAM BEAUMONT HOSPITAL,

Defendant-Appellants. and

MICHIGAN INSTITUTE OF GYNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS, P.C.,

Defendant.

Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and BORRELLO and SERVITTO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

This medical malpractice case arises from Markell VanSlembrouck’s 1995 birth at defendant William Beaumont Hospital. Markell is now 18 years old. She cannot walk, talk, or feed herself, and requires full-time care. After an 18-day trial, a jury attributed Markell’s neurologic injuries to the circumstances surrounding her birth and assessed her damages at $144 million.

The trial evidence centered on the cause of Markell’s neurologic condition and the scientific validity of plaintiffs’ causation theories. Fifteen expert witnesses debated these questions over the course of the lengthy trial. In a nutshell, plaintiffs’ expert witnesses opined that Markell’s traumatic birth caused her disabilities. Defendants’ experts countered that a genetic abnormality called pontine cerebellar hypoplasia (PCH) fully accounts for Markell’s

-1- current condition. Plaintiffs’ experts conceded that important components of Markell’s brain never properly developed. But absent birth trauma, they contended, this abnormality would have caused Markell only relatively insignificant neurological problems.

From start to finish, this case was a battle of experts espousing widely divergent views. Ultimately the jury credited plaintiffs’ negligence and causation explanations. Although the trial was far from perfect, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL OVERVIEW

The underlying record is long and complex, but presents only a handful of factual disagreements. Because most of the appellate issues hinge on evidentiary questions, we describe the medical facts in considerable detail. Although we recite the evidence in the light most favorable to the prevailing parties, we have noted important factual conflicts.

There was no debate about one central fact: Markell’s birth was traumatic. She was an exceptionally large newborn, weighing in at 10.5 pounds. At delivery, Markell was limp, blue, and unresponsive. She did not breathe spontaneously. Her head, trunk, and upper extremities appeared bruised. Her collarbone was fractured during an obstetrical maneuver made necessary when her shoulders became stuck in the birth canal. Markell’s one-minute Apgar score was one; a zero score would have been consistent with her death.

In the days following Markell’s delivery, brain imaging studies displayed the presence of blood in several different cerebral locations. The studies also revealed a striking congenital abnormality: a portion of Markell’s cerebellum was missing, as was part of a brain structure called the pons.

Plaintiffs’ experts acknowledged these abnormalities, and conceded that they contributed to Markell’s abnormal neurological presentation. But in their view, birth trauma markedly worsened any deficits attributable to the absence of these brain components. Plaintiffs’ experts posited that Pitocin-induced hyperstimulation of Kimberly VanSlembrouck’s uterus, combined with Markell’s large size, compressed Markell’s head during the last hour of Kimberly’s labor. According to their theory, head compression resulted in cerebral ischemia (lack of adequate blood flow to the cerebrum), bleeding into the brain itself, and permanent brain damage attributable to the trauma.

Defendants’ experts insisted that Kimberly’s obstetrical care met all applicable standards. Further, they steadfastly maintained that Markell’s neurological problems stem solely from a genetic abnormality called pontine cerebellar hypoplasia, type 2 (PCH-2). PCH-2 is a rare disorder. The children afflicted with it lack substantial portions of the cerebellum and pons, as does Markell. Two medical articles describing children afflicted with PCH-2 portray its victims as neurologically similar to Markell. Defendants’ experts further contended that despite the brain bleeding and the evident trauma to Markell’s head, the substance of her cerebral cortex remain uninjured. The initial indicia of trauma, defendants’ experts claimed, faded quickly and produced no permanent damage.

-2- The trial court conducted a four-day Daubert hearing1 to evaluate the scientific reliability of plaintiffs’ causation theory. At its conclusion, the court found plaintiffs’ experts qualified and their opinions reliable under MRE 703.

A month-long, bitterly contentious trial followed. The jury found in Markell’s favor and awarded the damages her counsel had sought. Defendants’ many appellate challenges focus largely on issues related to causation and damages. All merit considerable discussion, but none persuade us that a new trial is required.

A. PRENATAL EVENTS

Kimberly VanSlembrouck obtained her prenatal care from defendant Andrew Jay Halperin, M.D., an employee of defendant Michigan Institute of Gynecology and Obstetrics, P.C. Kimberly gained approximately 70 pounds during her pregnancy. One week prior to delivery, Kimberly weighed 328 pounds. This weight gain exceeded normal limits.

The medical witnesses agreed that excessive weight gain during pregnancy signals the possible presence of gestational diabetes. Gestational diabetes often leads to large (macrosomic) infants.2 Undisputed evidence established that macrosomia creates a risk of traumatic delivery or the need for a cesarean section. Plaintiffs’ experts opined that Kimberly’s undiagnosed gestational diabetes caused Markell’s excessive growth, and that if Markell’s size had been accurately established prenatally, her delivery would have been accomplished by an elective cesarean section.

The parties further agreed that the standard of obstetrical care includes screening pregnant women for gestational diabetes. Because Kimberly’s initial glucose screening test was abnormal, Dr. Halperin ordered a three-hour glucose tolerance test. The three-hour test entails an analysis of blood samples obtained before and after the patient drinks a liquid containing glucose. If two values are elevated, the patient has gestational diabetes.

One of Kimberly’s blood sample results was elevated; two others were one point below the normal limit. Dr. Halperin viewed this as a negative glucose tolerance test and advised Kimberly to watch her diet. Dr. Jeffrey Soffer, one of plaintiffs’ obstetrical experts, conceded that Kimberly did not meet the “strict criteria” for gestational diabetes, but opined that she should have been classified with the disorder based on the lab results and her weight gain. According to Dr. Soffer, Dr. Halperin breached the standard of care by failing to maintain suspicion of gestational diabetes throughout the pregnancy and by neglecting to carefully monitor the baby’s growth with serial ultrasounds. Had serial ultrasounds been obtained, Dr. Soffer testified, Dr. Halperin would have recognized that Markell was a large baby and that a cesarean delivery was required.

1 Daubert v Merrell Dow Pharm, Inc, 509 US 579; 113 S Ct 2786; 125 L Ed 2d 469 (1993). 2 Macrosomia is defined as newborn weighing more than 4,000 grams, which is 8 pounds, 13 ounces.

-3- Kimberly’s due date was calculated as December 1, 1995. Early that morning (1:25 a.m.), she presented at Beaumont Hospital in early labor. A resident obtained a bedside ultrasound at 1:40 a.m., and calculated the baby’s weight as 3,200 grams.

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