Martinez v. Upmc Susquehanna

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 22, 2022
Docket4:19-cv-00327
StatusUnknown

This text of Martinez v. Upmc Susquehanna (Martinez v. Upmc Susquehanna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinez v. Upmc Susquehanna, (M.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ZEFERINO MARTINEZ, M.D., No. 4:19-CV-00327

Plaintiff, (Chief Judge Brann)

v.

UPMC SUSQUEHANNA,

Defendant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

NOVEMBER 22, 2022 Plaintiff Zeferino Martinez, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon, sues his former employer, Defendant UPMC Susquehanna, for discriminating against him on the basis of his age. He alleges that UPMC discriminated against him when it terminated him, failed to rehire him, and replaced him with a younger surgeon when he was sixty-nine years old. UPMC had concerns about Martinez’s performance when it acquired his previous employer, but it could not substantiate those concerns on the records available at the time. However, after hiring Martinez, UPMC learned that he failed to properly replace a patient’s hip, requiring one of UPMC’s other surgeons to perform a corrective procedure. Due to the failed operation, UPMC terminated Martinez pursuant to a mutual no-cause termination provision in his contract. UPMC now moves for summary judgment in its favor on Martinez’s discrimination claims. For the following reasons, its motion will be granted. I. BACKGROUND A. UPMC’s Acquisition of Lock Haven Hospital

In October 2016, Martinez began his employment with the Lock Haven Hospital as an orthopedic surgeon.1 He was sixty-eight years old at the time.2 In September 2017, Susquehanna Health acquired the Hospital, and then was immediately itself acquired by UPMC.3 Matthew McLaughlin was UPMC’s

Executive Director of Musculoskeletal Services and accordingly served as the non-physician administrator of UPMC’s orthopedic practice.4 After the acquisition, he was Martinez’s indirect supervisor.5 He indirectly reported to Mellissa Davis, the

Chief Operating Officer at Susquehanna Health.6 Following UPMC’s acquisition, McLaughlin was responsible for evaluating the performance of Martinez’s orthopedic surgical practice.7 His partner, an orthopedic surgeon named Ron Disimone, M.D., was responsible for evaluating Martinez’s work as a surgeon.8

Prior to UPMC’s acquisition, McLaughlin recalls learning of “several patients in [UPMC’s offices]” who previously underwent “procedures [Martinez] performed that were not up to [UPMC’s] accepted quality standards.”9 Other members of

1 Martinez Physician Employment Agreement, Doc. 36-3 at 1. 2 See Dep. of Zeferino Martinez, M.D., Doc. 35-5 at 5:18-24. 3 Dep. of Matthew McLaughlin, Doc. 35-1 at 17:6-21. 4 Id. at 11:14-25. 5 Id. at 13:16-18. 6 Id. at 14:3-14. 7 Id. at 19:20-25. 8 Id. at 20:1-3, 28:6-9. UPMC’s orthopedic team, such as physicians Jack Bailey, M.D., and Mark Rakish, M.D., “voiced concern about [Martinez] prior to the acquisition.”10 They “saw some

of his patients for follow-ups following unsuccessful surgeries prior to [his] employment.”11 Bailey was concerned that “the quality of [Martinez’s] work was not up to

[UPMC’s] standards” and “had seen several patients that he thought had poor surgical outcomes.”12 He shared these concerns with McLaughlin, although McLaughlin cannot recall how often Bailey did so or any other specifics regarding Martinez’s past operations.13 Rakish shared similar concerns.14 Rakish, Bailey, and

Disimone continually expressed their concerns to McLaughlin, starting when UPMC announced its acquisition, and continuing through the deal’s closing.15 But McLaughlin never shared the physicians’ concerns with Martinez.16

Instead, McLaughlin asked Daniel Glunk, UPMC’s Chief Quality Officer, “to look at the Lock Haven Hospital records [and] the peer review, to find if there were any issues outstanding” with Martinez’s work.17 Glunk did not find any.18 McLaughlin made several efforts to substantiate the physicians’ concerns beyond

10 Id. at 24:11-17. 11 Id. at 24:17-20. 12 Id. at 25:21-25:1. 13 Id. at 25:3-14 14 Id. at 26:9-18. 15 Id. at 26:19-273. 16 Id. at 27:4-7. 17 Id. at 27:10-17. 18 Id. at 27:17-23; Martinez Consent to Assignment of Physician Employment Agreement, Doc. reaching out to Glunk.19 He spoke to Becky Levi, Martinez’s practice manager.20 Levi was responsible for the administrative aspects of Martinez’s practice, such as

scheduling and billing, both before and after UPMC’s acquisition.21 Levi expressed her concern to McLaughlin that Martinez’s patients developed infections or had to have surgeries redone following operations with Martinez.22 She vaguely recalls raising these concerns to McLaughlin following UPMC’s acquisition.23

Subsequently, McLaughlin wrote an email in October 2017 to his superior, Jan Fisher, referencing Levi’s concerns “about compliance issues in the clinic as well as quality issues with [patient] outcomes.”24 McLaughlin also learned from Levi

that Martinez generally did not order laboratory testing for his patients after operations even though it was “standard practice” to do so.25 The absence of postoperative testing made it difficult to determine whether patients were developing infections at higher rates under Martinez’s care.26

Following the October 2017 email, McLaughlin met with Davis and Dave Lopatofsky, M.D., the Chief Medical Officer at Susquehanna Medical Group, to discuss buying out Martinez’s contract.27 At that meeting, McLaughlin recalls

19 See McLaughlin Dep., Doc. 35-1 at 35:1-36:21, 47:6-18. 20 Id. at 48:7-48:4. 21 Dep. of Becky Levi, Doc. 35-4 at 13:16-14:1. 22 Id. at 25:14-26:7. 23 Id. at 26:8-20, 28:5-14, 37:19-38:20. 24 Email Exchange between McLaughlin and Jan Fisher, Doc. 36-20 at 2; McLaughlin Dep., Doc. 35-1 at 51:6-12. 25 McLaughlin Dep., Doc. 35-1 at 52:5-24. 26 See id. “expressing grave concerns to both of them” over Martinez’s performance.28 But the trio agreed to proceed with taking over Martinez’s contract because they could not

substantiate their concerns.29 B. The Allegedly Failed Hip Operation However, after the acquisition, Disimone, the UPMC physician charged with reviewing Martinez’s surgical competence, brought to McLaughlin’s attention

“specific concerns [he] had over the quality of Martinez’s work.”30 Disimone saw, “first hand, the results of a failed surgery performed by Martinez.”31 Specifically, a patient came to him with a “failed total left hip replacement as a result of a recent

surgery performed by Martinez.”32 Disimone performed a corrective procedure.33 He then “discussed with McLaughlin that the quality of Martinez’s work was not up to [UPMC’s] standard of practice, including specifics about the failed total left hip replacement.”34

McLaughlin recalls Disimone contacting him regarding Martinez’s failed operation and Disimone’s subsequent corrective surgery in the fall of 2017, shortly after Martinez began his employment with UPMC.35 Disimone “believed that

28 Id. at 57:7-11. 29 Id. at 57:12-15. 30 Decl. of Ron Disimone, M.D., Doc. 35-2 ¶ 5. 31 Id. ¶ 6. 32 Id. 33 Id. ¶ 7. 34 Id. ¶ 8. [Martinez] was the surgeon of record [and] that the technique was grossly negligent.”36 McLaughlin recalls Disimone telling him that “Martinez reached out

to Disimone to review the films and then to see the patient in the follow-up in [Disimone’s] offices in Williamsport, which led to subsequent surgery and hospitalization.”37 Disimone believed that the issue “was improper installation of the

[hip] prosthesis” and “performed both the outpatient assessment as well as the surgical intervention and the subsequent hospital management” of the patient himself.38 Martinez does not recall reaching out to Disimone and generally denies ever speaking to him.39

Based on his discussions with Disimone, McLaughlin had “never [seen] a case . . . where a surgical technique was so far from the standard of care.”40 He believed that Martinez posed an “unreasonable risk of harm” to patients.41 At some point

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Martinez v. Upmc Susquehanna, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-upmc-susquehanna-pamd-2022.