Megan E. Baan, as the Personal etc. v. Columbia County

180 So. 3d 1127
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 7, 2015
Docket1D15-0092
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 180 So. 3d 1127 (Megan E. Baan, as the Personal etc. v. Columbia County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Megan E. Baan, as the Personal etc. v. Columbia County, 180 So. 3d 1127 (Fla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinions

BENTON, J.

On appeal from final summary judgment, the parties focus on an antecedent order granting a motion to exclude the testimony of appellant’s expert witness. The expert testified on deposition as to, among other things, the standard of care when emergency personnel respond to a 911 call seeking help for an infant reported to be struggling to breathe. Columbia County concedes that, if exclusion of the expert testimony was error, entry of summary judgment was also error. Concluding the expert testimony should have been considered in deciding the motion for summary judgment, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

On November 17, 2007, Columbia County Emergency Medical Services (EMS) responded to a 911 call reporting a child was in respiratory distress. Arriving on the scene, EMS personnel found Charles Craven McAlpin (Craven), an 11-month-old who had been left in the care of Allison McAlpin, his aunt. Thé parties agree that the EMS personnel left the scene within 10 minutes of arriving, after showing Allison McAlpin how to use a nebulizer.

In a 2014 affidavit and again on deposition in 2014, Dorothy Benoit, a neighbor to whom Ms. McAlpin had taken Craven because of his difficulty breathing, maintained she held the child over her shoulder during the entire time EMS personnel were on the scene during their first visit, and that the first responders who arrived on the initial run “did not conduct any examination of him and in fact did not even touch Craven.”1

On the other hand, an EMS report said Craven was examined and found to have normal vital signs: a pulse of 120, a respiratory rate of 20, and oxygen saturation of 98 percent. The same report indicated EMS personnel were told the child had earlier been diagnosed with asthma, and concluded he might have been suffering an asthma attack before EMS arrived. Finally, the EMS report said that the child had throat congestion he cleared upon coughing, and that his lungs sounded clear. Approximately 50 minutes after EMS personnel left, another 911 call brought news that the child was not breathing at all. This time a different neighbor, Carl Billings, a trained emergency medical technician whom the aunt summoned , to help when he came home, “found Craven lying on the floor face up with his face turning blue.” Mr. Billings instructed Ms. McAlpin to call 911, before he “immediately began administering CPR.” He stated in an affidavit (and testified to the same effect on deposition) that he first turned the child over “to allow the copious amounts of mucus and fluid to drain from his mouth and nose.”

When EMS arrived in'response to the second 911 call, one EMS employee testified, the child was “blue,” “extremely clammy,” and “cool to touch.” EMS personnel immediately used equipment they had on the ambulance to clear his airway by suctioning, started ventilating with a “bag valve mask,” and intubated him. But they never detected the child’s pulse on the second run, and soon transported him to a local hospital. After being airlifted to Shands Hospital in Gainesville, where he was placed on a mechanical ventilator, Craven was pronounced dead there the next day.

[1130]*1130Dr. David Tulsiak, an emergency room physician retained as an expert by the child’s mother, executed an affidavit in 2010 in which he offered two highly relevant opinions.2 First, he concluded EMS breached the prevailing professional standard of care by failing to put the child in the ambulance (which was equipped with oxygen) on their first run and take him to the hospital for evaluation and treatment. Dr. Tulsiak also concluded that “had the prevailing professional standard of care been met by Columbia County EMS, more likely than not, Charles C. McAlpin would have been treated for a lack of oxygen and he would have survived.” , ■

In his deposition taken four years later, Dr. Tulsiak said much the same thing, stating he had reviewed all the material appellant provided him in 2010 in forming his opinion at that time.3 ■ Consistently with his affidavit, Dr. Tulsiak testified that the most critical breach of the standard of care was EMS’s failure to “transport th[e] patient to .a medical facility for further definitive care” after responding to the first 911 call. Dr. Tulsiak pointed out that EMS violated its own protocol for “Respiratory Distress.” EMS’s protocol called for maintenance of the airway,' continuous assessment of breathing and circulation, application of oxygen, and “[transport ASAP.” 4 .

Dr. Tulsiak concluded the child’s respiratory condition had deteriorated — after EMS failed to transport him — until his airway was obstructed by mucus, congestion, and “[m]ore likely than not” bron-chospasm, that is, “narrowing of the airways from smooth muscle constriction.” Although he conceded that something like “a peanut in his upper airway” or severe blunt force trauma to the head could theoretically cause respiratory arrest, Dr. Tulsiak stated there was no physical evidence of either5 and that it “would not be consistent with [the child’s] presentation on either the first or. the second run.”

Even assuming EMS recorded the child’s vital signs accurately,6 Dr. Tulsiak [1131]*1131testified, a more detailed assessment of the child should have been performed; to that end, EMS should have spent more time observing the child, and should have taken him to a hospital to be examined by a physician. Since the child was reported in respiratory distress when the first 911 call was placed, he required transport to a hospital, according to Dr. Tulsiak, given the historical diagnosis of asthma7 and considering an 11-month-old child’s inability to “verbalize [his] need for help.”

Some months after Dr. Tulsiak’s deposition, EMS moved to exclude his expert testimony, arguing primarily that his testimony was insufficiently reliable under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993), because “[a]ll of Dr. Tulsiak’s opinions ... [we]re- rooted in one assumption: that because [the child] experienced a respiratory arrest within one hour of [i.e., after] the first EMS call, he must have been experiencing a detectable respiratory problem at the time of that first call.” (This overlooks, .of course, the fact that the aunt and the neighbor both actually observed the “detectable respiratory problem” that led to the first call, and so informed EMS personnel upon, their arrival.)

Following a hearing on EMS’s motion, the trial court concluded that Dr. Tulsiak had rejected evidence he should have accepted as true (the EMS report) and that “the only evidence as to the child’s true respiratory status was recorded by the paramedics,” so that Dr. Tulsiak’s opinions were “premised on speculation based on an ultimate injury and manufactured facts.” On this.rationale, the' trial court ruled Dr. Tulsiak’s .testimony inadmissible under Daubert and granted EMS’s motion to exclude his testimony. Shortly thereafter, EMS moved for summary judgment on grounds there was no evidence of any negligence without Dr. Tulsiak’s testimony,- and appellant filed a motion for reconsideration of the trial court’s evidentiary ruling. After the trial, court denied the motion for reconsideration and granted final summary judgment in favor of EMS, the present appeal ensued.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 So. 3d 1127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/megan-e-baan-as-the-personal-etc-v-columbia-county-fladistctapp-2015.