McArthur v. St. Mary's Hospital

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 3, 1999
Docket4-99-0071
StatusPublished

This text of McArthur v. St. Mary's Hospital (McArthur v. St. Mary's Hospital) 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
McArthur v. St. Mary's Hospital, (Ill. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

3 September 1999

NO. 4-99-0071

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

RANA McARTHUR, f/k/a/ RANA KING,        )   Appeal from

Individually, and as Special            )   Circuit Court of

Administratrix of the Estate of         )   Macon County

BABY BOY KING, Deceased,                )   No. 97L97

Plaintiffs-Appellants,        )

v.                            )   Honorable

ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL OF DECATUR,         )   James A. Hendrian,

Defendant-Appellee.           )   Judge Presiding.

_________________________________________________________________

PRESIDING JUSTICE KNECHT delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs, Rana McArthur, individually and as special administratrix of the estate of Baby Boy King, deceased, appeal from an order of the circuit court of Macon County granting sum­

mary judgment to de­fendant, St. Mary's Hospital of Decatur (hos­

pital), as to paragraphs 6(b) through 6(h) of count V of her third-amend­ed com­plaint.  For the reasons that follow, we re­verse the judgment of the trial court and remand for further pro­ceed­

ings.

The facts necessary to our resolution of this appeal are not in dispute.  Dr. William Wagner provided Rana McArthur's pre­natal care at the hospital's prenatal clinic.  On Sep­tem­ber 18, 1995, in the twentieth week of the pregnancy, Dr. Wagner ordered a com­plete pregnancy ultrasound examination.  A hospital-

employed technician performed the exam­ination.  Perma­nent re­cord­

ed images were made of various anatomi­cal structures.  These images were reviewed and interpreted by Dr. J. Ambrosini, a radi­-

ologist who contracted with the hospital to provide radiolog­ical services.  Dr. Ambrosini testified at his deposition it was the poli­cy of both the hos­pi­tal and Dr. Ambrosini's medical group that the hospital's tech­ni­cian had the responsibility to mea­sure the cere­bral ventri­cles and inter­pret those measure­ments.  The tech­ni­cian who per­formed the exam­i­na­tion for plain­tiff found nothing abnor­mal about the ven­tri­cles.  Plaintiffs were aware a hospital techni­cian took the sonogram but the ultrasound report indicates it was interpreted by Dr. Ambrosini.  Dr. Ambrosini did not per­form his own inde­pen­dent as­sess­ment of the ventricles.    

Plaintiffs allege the cerebral ventricles had begun to dilate or fill with an abnormal amount of fluid by the time of the ultrasound.  When the cerebral ventricles fill with fluid,  they have measurements larger than normal for the gesta­tion­al age in question.  The filling of the cerebral ventricles marks the  be­gin­ning of the de­vel­op­ment of hy­dro­ceph­a­lus, a condition char­acterized by an en­larged head on the baby.  The hydrocephalus went undi­agnosed and contin­ued to develop without the knowledge of Dr. Wagner.

On January 7, 1996, plaintiff mother experienced moder

ate con­tractions and went to the hospital to determine wheth­er she was in labor.  Apparently it was a false labor and she was sent home.  While in the hospital, however, a sonogram was taken by Dr. L. Walton, the obstetrician on call.  Dr. Walton indicated the baby was in a breech position but stated noth­ing more.

Plaintiff mother returned to the hospital on January 18 to de­liver her baby.  Dr. Wagner ordered a flat plate X ray to de­ter­mine whether the baby was still in a breech position.  The

X ray was taken and developed by hospital employees.  Dr. Wagner testi­fied he was informed by a nurse the X rays indicated the baby was still in a breech position.  The X-ray report was made the next day after the radiologist, Dr. T. Ferry, read the

X rays.  Dr. Wagner testified he first saw the X-ray re­port the day after delivery.

Dr. Wagner spoke with plaintiff mother and elected to do a vaginal delivery instead of a cesarean-section delivery.  During the de­liv­ery the baby's legs, trunk, and shoulders were delivered with­out inci­dent but, because of the abnormally large size of the baby's head caused by the hydrocephalus, the head became trapped in the birth canal causing the umbilical cord to compress, and the baby died.  Both Dr. Wagner and plaintiff mother testified this was the first time either was aware hydro

cephalus was pres­ent.

Plaintiffs brought suit against the hospital and sever­

al other defendants on May 23, 1997.  The only allega­tion against the hospital in the orig­i­nal com­plaint was that on or about Janu­

ary 7, 1996, it "[f]ailed to implement and/or enforce a poli­cy re­quir­ing a perma­nent radio­graphic image of all ultra­sound sonogram exami­na­tions be main­tained."  The allegations against other de­fendants included the failure to correctly read the sonograms and X rays taken and the failure to diagnose the hydro­

cephalus from which Baby Boy King suffered.  A first-amend­ed com­

plaint, with the same alle­ga­tion against the hospital, was filed on Au­gust 5, 1997.  A sec­ond-amended com­plaint, again with the same sole allegation against the hospi­tal, was filed on August 25, 1997.  

Discovery proceeded among the parties.  At the February 1998 deposition of Dr. Ambrosini, plaintiffs dis­cov­ered Dr. Ambrosini never evaluated the cerebral ventricles, but he claimed a hospital technician had that responsibility.  That same month the deposition of Dr. Ferry was taken, and plaintiff learned that, al­though Dr. Ferry dictated a report containing his inter­

preta­tion of the X ray taken immediately prior to birth, he did not actual­ly see the film until the next day.  

On April 2, 1998, plaintiffs moved for leave to file the third-amend­ed complaint on April 2, 1998.  Among other things, this complaint added seven new allegations against the hospital:

"(b) Acting by and through its employee,

Connie Lanham, failed to properly read and/

or interpret the ultrasound performed on

September 18, 1995;

(c) Acting by and through its employee,

Connie Lanham, failed to appreciate and/

or document the fetus' enlarged ventricles

on September 18, 1995;

(d) Permitted and/or implemented a policy,

practice, guideline[,] or protocol which did

not require a properly qualified physician

to interpret and/or access the cerebral ven-

tricles for congenital abnormalities during

every complete pregnancy ultrasound;

(e) Acting by and through its agents or em-

ployees, failed to timely interpret the flat

plate X-rays [ sic ] obtained on January 18, 1996;

(f) Permitted an unqualified person to in-

terpret both the September 18, 1995[,] ultra-

sound and the January 18, 1996[,] flat plate

X-ray [ sic ];

(g) Acting by and through its agents or

employees, misread and/or misinterpreted the

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