Mead v. Legacy Health System

220 P.3d 118, 231 Or. App. 451, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1682
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 28, 2009
Docket040201947; A130969
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 220 P.3d 118 (Mead v. Legacy Health System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mead v. Legacy Health System, 220 P.3d 118, 231 Or. App. 451, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1682 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*453 WOLLHEIM, J.

In this medical malpractice case, plaintiff appeals a judgment for defendant, Dr. Adler, an on-call neurosurgeon who gave advice over the telephone to an emergency room physician or resident physician concerning plaintiffs care. The case turns on whether the circumstances of that communication gave rise to a physician-patient relationship between defendant and plaintiff. The trial court denied plaintiffs motion for a directed verdict on the issue of the existence of a physician-patient relationship and submitted the question to the jury, with instructions as to what constitutes such a relationship. On appeal, plaintiff assigns error to, among other rulings, the denial of her motion for a directed verdict, to the court’s instruction to the jury, and to the court’s failure to give her own requested instruction. She also assigns error to the trial court’s evidentiary ruling with respect to Mary Carter agreements 1 that plaintiff entered into with defendants Legacy Health System, Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital, and Dr. Leonard, all of whom have been dismissed from the case. 2 Because we conclude that defendant’s conduct gave rise to a physician-patient relationship as a matter of law, we conclude that the trial court erred in submitting the question of the existence of a physician-patient relationship to the jury and reverse the judgment for defendant and remand.

The relevant evidence is as follows: On July 1, 2002, defendant was the neurosurgeon on call for Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital. Defendant’s responsibility to be on call was a condition of his having privileges to treat patients at Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital. As the on-call neurosurgeon, defendant had an obligation to be available for *454 patients who presented neurosurgical concerns on an emergency basis.

Plaintiff came to the emergency room on the morning of July 1, 2002, unable to walk due to severe low back pain and weakness in her legs. Dr. Aviva Zigman, the emergency room physician, examined plaintiff. A second-year resident was also present in the emergency room and examined plaintiff. Based on her findings, Zigman suspected that plaintiff either had a herniated disk or was developing cauda equina syndrome, a serious neurological condition caused by compression of the nerves at the base of the spinal cord that requires immediate surgery. Zigman ordered an MRI, and that MRI showed a herniated disc at L3-4. That result caused Zigman to worry more about the possibility of cauda equina syndrome, and she testified that for that reason she decided to contact defendant, who was the neurosurgeon on call that day. Zigman and defendant relate different versions of the telephone conversation.

Zigman testified that she personally spoke to defendant and concisely presented plaintiffs case, describing plaintiffs symptoms and the MRI report, including specifically mentioning the herniated disc. Zigman testified that defendant told her that plaintiff could go home with pain medication and bed rest. Zigman testified that she was surprised by that advice and told defendant that plaintiff could not be sent home because she could not walk. Zigman testified that defendant then told her to admit plaintiff for one day for observation and pain management, under her primary physician’s name. Zigman noted her consultation with defendant in the hospital chart and called plaintiffs primary physician, Dr. Easor, to ask that plaintiff be admitted for observation and pain management.

Defendant presented a different version of the conversation. He testified that he did not speak to Zigman. He did, however, agree that he spoke about plaintiffs condition to a male physician in the emergency room who may have been a resident. Defendant testified that the resident told him that he had a patient “with bad back pain, who was neurologically intact, who had an MRI with a disc bulge, and who *455 had normal rectal tone.” He testified that it was his perception that the conversation with the resident was “a sort of a phone call for advice,” to determine whether the patient needed to be seen by a neurosurgeon. He testified that, based on the information provided to him by the resident at that time, he believed that plaintiffs primary concern was pain and that he did not believe that plaintiffs condition demonstrated the existence of a neurosurgical issue.

Defendant testified that, after a brief conversation, he told the resident physician that plaintiff should be admitted by her primary physician for observation and pain management; he acknowledged that the implication of his advice was that plaintiff did not need neurosurgery at that time. 3 Defendant testified that he did not expect that the resident physician would rely on his advice, and that he did not consider that plaintiff would be admitted to his service. Defendant testified that he was not asked on July 1 to examine plaintiff, that he never told the physician that he would examine plaintiff or become involved in plaintiffs treatment, and that he never assumed responsibility for and did not expect to play a role in her care. He did not bill the hospital for his telephone conversation on July 1. Defendant stated that he anticipated that, if plaintiffs condition deteriorated neurologically, he would be called.

Kisor, plaintiffs primary physician, visited plaintiff in the hospital that evening and requested a neurosurgical and psychiatric consult. Kisor testified that, in her conversation with Zigman, Zigman told her that defendant did not think that plaintiff required surgery. Kisor and Zigman both *456 believed that defendant would come to the hospital to evaluate plaintiff after her admission. Kisor also consulted with Leonard, a neurologist 4 who had treated plaintiff over the years for headaches. Plaintiffs condition deteriorated; she continued to lose strength and sensation in her legs. Both Kisor and Leonard testified that they sought a consult from defendant but that he did not return their calls. Defendant testified that a nurse made a consult request on Kisor’s behalf on either July 3 or 4, but that defendant simply told the nurse to have Kisor call him.

On July 5, defendant examined plaintiff and looked at her MRI results and determined that she had “a very large herniated disk with cauda equina syndrome.” He performed emergency surgery to relieve compression of the nerves. Plaintiff suffers from permanent impairment. At the time of trial, she was unable to walk without assistance and was incontinent of bowel and bladder. She required 24-hour assistance and could not care for her three children alone.

Plaintiff filed this medical malpractice claim. The case went to trial. Defendant asserted that he had no liability to plaintiff because the two had not entered into a physician-patient relationship at the time of the alleged negligent conduct. At the close of the evidence, plaintiff sought a partial directed verdict that she and defendant had a physician-patient relationship. 5 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 P.3d 118, 231 Or. App. 451, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mead-v-legacy-health-system-orctapp-2009.