Marti Wilkins, As Of The Estate Of Jerald C. Wilkins Vs. Marshalltown Medical And Surgical Center, Eric J. Stenberg, D.o., David L. Thomas, M.d., Lance M. Van Gundy, M.d., And Mcfarland Clinic, P.c.

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 5, 2008
Docket06–0641
StatusPublished

This text of Marti Wilkins, As Of The Estate Of Jerald C. Wilkins Vs. Marshalltown Medical And Surgical Center, Eric J. Stenberg, D.o., David L. Thomas, M.d., Lance M. Van Gundy, M.d., And Mcfarland Clinic, P.c. (Marti Wilkins, As Of The Estate Of Jerald C. Wilkins Vs. Marshalltown Medical And Surgical Center, Eric J. Stenberg, D.o., David L. Thomas, M.d., Lance M. Van Gundy, M.d., And Mcfarland Clinic, P.c.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marti Wilkins, As Of The Estate Of Jerald C. Wilkins Vs. Marshalltown Medical And Surgical Center, Eric J. Stenberg, D.o., David L. Thomas, M.d., Lance M. Van Gundy, M.d., And Mcfarland Clinic, P.c., (iowa 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 06–0641

Filed December 5, 2008

MARTI WILKINS, as Executor of the Estate of JERALD C. WILKINS,

Appellant,

vs.

MARSHALLTOWN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL CENTER, ERIC J. STENBERG, D.O., DAVID L. THOMAS, M.D., LANCE M. VAN GUNDY, M.D., and MCFARLAND CLINIC, P.C.,

Appellees.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Marshall County, Dale E.

Ruigh, Judge.

Plaintiff appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in

a medical malpractice action. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Erik A. Luthens of Luthens Law Offices, P.C., West Des Moines, for appellant.

Hayward L. Draper and John T. Clendenin of Nyemaster, Goode,

West, Hansell & O’Brien, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee Marshalltown

Medical and Surgical Center.

Steven K. Scharnberg and Thomas J. Joensen of Finley, Alt, Smith,

Scharnberg, Craig, Hilmes & Gaffney, P.C., Des Moines, for appellees

Stenberg, Thomas, Van Gundy, and McFarland Clinic. 2

APPEL, Justice.

This case presents a question regarding the proper application of

the statute of limitations in a medical malpractice action where the

plaintiff’s claim is based on an alleged failure to timely diagnose prostate

cancer. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary

judgment, concluding the claim was filed after the expiration of the

applicable statute of limitations. In light of recent decisions, we reverse and remand this case for further proceedings.

I. Factual and Procedural Background.

Jerald Wilkins was a roving utility pole inspector who resided at a

motel in Marshalltown, Iowa. He did not have health insurance and did

not have a regular, primary care physician after 1982. Like many

uninsured persons, Wilkins occasionally sought medical treatment at the

emergency room of a local hospital.

On September 23, 2001, Wilkins appeared at the Marshalltown

Medical and Surgical Center (MMSC) emergency room complaining of

vague abdominal pain, blood in his urine, and expectoration of blood

from his respiratory tract. Dr. Lance Van Gundy examined Wilkins and

ordered a chest x-ray. Van Gundy determined that the x-ray showed no change from a prior x-ray taken one month earlier. Van Gundy’s

impression was that Wilkins suffered from a number of difficulties,

including inflammation of the kidneys, presence of protein in his urine,

expectoration of blood from the respiratory tract, urinary tract infection,

elevated liver function, abdominal pain consistent with gastritis induced

by heavy alcohol consumption, and tobacco abuse. Van Gundy’s plan

included urgent follow up at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

(UIHC). Wilkins was discharged from the emergency room later that

same day. 3

The next day, September 24, Dr. Kraig Kirkpatrick, a radiologist,

reviewed Wilkins’s chest x-ray. Kirkpatrick compared an x-ray of

Wilkins’s chest taken more than five years earlier in May 1996 with his

current image. In doing so, Kirkpatrick observed a “diffuse increase in

the density of a midthoracic vertebral body.” Kirkpatrick noted that

diagnostic possibilities for this change included, but were not limited to

“Paget’s disease, lymphoma and sclerotic metastasis.” According to Kirkpatrick, the most common source of sclerotic metastasis in Wilkins’s

age group would be prostate cancer. Kirkpatrick’s x-ray report was

approved by Dr. Mitchell Erickson and made part of Wilkins’s file.

Also on September 24, Wilkins returned to the MMSC emergency

room. He now complained of “increasing upper abdominal pain.”

Wilkins was seen by Dr. Eric Stenberg. Stenberg ordered a computed

tomography (CT) scan of Wilkins’s chest, abdomen, and pelvis. Dr.

Erickson, the same physician who approved Kirkpatrick’s report

indicating Wilkins may be suffering from prostate cancer, read the CT

scan. Erickson noted that there are “no comparison studies” and made

no reference to Kirkpatrick’s report.

Wilkins was transferred to UIHC that same day for follow-up studies. While eighteen pages of medical records were forwarded to

UIHC, the Kirkpatrick report indicating that Wilkins may have prostate

cancer was not included. Wilkins was subsequently discharged from

UIHC two days later “without any symptomatic complaints.” In a letter

dated October 10, Dr. Lisa Antes informed Van Gundy that Wilkins’s

condition had improved at UIHC and that his pain had “completely

resolved” by the end of his stay. Her diagnosis was alcohol-induced

gastritis. 4

After his discharge from UIHC, Wilkins next presented himself to

the MMSC emergency room on February 27, 2002. At that time, Wilkins

complained of “difficulty with urination, frequency, urgency and burning

as well as some chills and a headache over the course of the past three

or four days.” MMSC’s records indicate Wilkins experienced pain in his

“bladder area.” The diagnosis by physician’s assistant, Larry Conley, and

his supervisor, Stenberg, was “[u]rinary tract infection by history and physical.” They prescribed an antibiotic for the infection. They also

advised Wilkins to increase his fluids and follow up with the provider of

his choice should there be no improvement over the next forty-eight

hours. Wilkins did not follow up with a provider, however, stating that

his condition did seem to improve over the next couple of days.

Wilkins returned again to the MMSC emergency room on

March 25, June 19, July 6, July 7, and August 9. On these occasions,

he was seen by Stenberg, Van Gundy, and Dr. David Thomas. His

complaints included low back pain, neck pain, and difficulty urinating.

The physicians assessed Wilkins as having low back, cervical, or lumbar

strain and provided him with prescriptions for pain relief and muscle

relaxation. On August 9, MMSC medical records show that Wilkins was advised that he would not receive further injections of pain relief

medicine or samples “because he had failed to follow up” with other

medical providers. Van Gundy recommended that Wilkins “follow up”

with the Primary Health Clinic in the immediate future to seek a

potential pain clinic referral to UIHC.

On August 14, Wilkins was brought to the MMSC emergency room

via ambulance. Wilkins could not feel or move his legs. MMSC’s records

indicate suspicion of prostate cancer with metastases to the lumbar

spine and secondary paralysis. On that same day, Wilkins is, for the 5

first time, informed of the possibility of prostate cancer. The physicians

recommend transfer to UIHC for a higher level of care.

On February 27, 2004, Wilkins filed a petition against MMSC,

Stenberg, Thomas, and Van Gundy alleging negligent medical care from

February 27, 2002 onward. Thereafter, plaintiff successfully moved to

amend the petition to name McFarland Clinic, P.C. as a co-defendant.

The petition was later amended to substitute Wilkins’s wife as executor of Wilkins’s estate upon his death.

All defendants denied liability and moved for summary judgment.

Each asserted that Wilkins’s claims were barred by the relevant statute

of limitations. MMSC additionally asserted that it had no legal

responsibility for the actions of the emergency room physicians as they

were employees of McFarland and not the hospital.

The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on

statute-of-limitations grounds.

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Marti Wilkins, As Of The Estate Of Jerald C. Wilkins Vs. Marshalltown Medical And Surgical Center, Eric J. Stenberg, D.o., David L. Thomas, M.d., Lance M. Van Gundy, M.d., And Mcfarland Clinic, P.c., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marti-wilkins-as-of-the-estate-of-jerald-c-wilkins-vs-marshalltown-iowa-2008.