MILLER EX REL. MONT. BAKING v. Marymount

125 S.W.3d 274
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 2004
Docket2001-SC-0587-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 S.W.3d 274 (MILLER EX REL. MONT. BAKING v. Marymount) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MILLER EX REL. MONT. BAKING v. Marymount, 125 S.W.3d 274 (Ky. 2004).

Opinion

125 S.W.3d 274 (2004)

Rebecca L. MILLER, By and Through Her Guardian, MONTICELLO BANKING COMPANY; Rachel Ann Miller, By and Through Her Guardian, Monticello Banking Company; Monticello Banking Company; and Timothy Miller, Appellants,
v.
MARYMOUNT MEDICAL CENTER, d/b/a Marymount Hospital, Appellee.

No. 2001-SC-0587-DG.

Supreme Court of Kentucky.

January 22, 2004.

*276 William R. Garmer, Savage, Garmer, Elliott & O'Brien, PLLC, Lexington, Counsel for Appellants.

B. Todd Thompson, Thompson & Miller, PLC, Louisville, Counsel for Appellee.

Paul Joseph Hershberg, Steven Michael Frederick, Christopher S. Fox, Steller & Handmaker, LLP, Louisville, Counsel for Amicus Curiae Kentucky Academy of Trial Attorneys.

Gerald R. Toner, O'Bryan, Brown & Toner, Louisville, Counsel for Amicus Curiae the Kentucky Defense Counsel.

*275 Opinion of the Court by Justice COOPER.

This is an action for damages for injuries allegedly caused by medical negligence. Rebecca C. Miller, then age 31, was admitted to Marymount Medical Center, d/b/a Marymount Hospital ("Marymount") in London, Kentucky, on October 16, 1995, by her family physician, Dr. William D. Pratt. She was admitted for the purpose of giving birth by induced labor. Attempts to induce labor on October 17th were unsuccessful. On October 18th, Mrs. Miller gave birth to a healthy baby girl, Rachel Ann Miller, by Caesarean section surgery performed by Dr. Joseph W. Stern, an obstetrician/gynecologist. Following surgery, Mrs. Miller experienced respiratory difficulties. A chest x-ray taken on the morning of October 19th revealed that she had contracted pneumonia. A blood gas test on the same morning revealed a blood oxygen concentration (PO2) of 64.4. A normal PO2 is between 80.0 and 100.0. The chest x-ray and low PO2 indicated that lung congestion caused by pneumonia was preventing sufficient oxygen from entering the blood stream for delivery to other parts of the body, including the brain.

The doctors began treating Mrs. Miller with antibiotics to combat the pneumonia and pumping increased oxygen into her lungs through nasal tubes. She was also treated for pain and stress with periodic injections of Demerol and Vistaril. She continued to complain of respiratory distress throughout the day and early evening. Dr. Pratt testified that he visited Mrs. Miller's room at 9:45 p.m. and advised her and her husband, Timothy Miller, that he was going to call a pulmonologist, Dr. Vaezy, for consultation. At 9:50 p.m., Nancy Burnett, a nurse, administered injections of Demerol and Vistaril. When Dr. Pratt returned at 10:00 p.m. to inform the Millers that Dr. Vaezy would see her that night, he found Mrs. Miller unresponsive and in respiratory arrest. Dr. Pratt immediately instituted a "Code 700" for emergency resuscitation. By 10:05 p.m., Mrs. Miller had been resuscitated, intubated, placed in an oxygen bag which pumped 100% oxygen into her lungs, and transferred to the intensive care unit. A blood gas test taken at 10:05 p.m. revealed a PO2 of 90, well within normal range. By 10:17 p.m., Mrs. Miller was breathing without assistance. However, she never regained consciousness. Subsequent chest x-rays revealed increasing lung congestion despite continued administration of antibiotics and 100% oxygen. A *277 blood gas test at 11:00 p.m. revealed a PO2 of 43. Another test at 12:45 a.m. on October 20th revealed a PO2 of 44. Mrs. Miller was transferred to Fort Sanders Hospital in Knoxville, Tennessee, where efforts to improve her condition were unsuccessful. She remains comatose at a nursing home in Annville, Kentucky.

Mrs. Miller's legal guardian brought this action for damages against Dr. Pratt, Dr. Stern, and Marymount, alleging that Mrs. Miller's present comatose state resulted from negligent medical care. Her husband, Timothy Miller, and the legal guardian of her daughter, Rachel Ann Miller, joined the action to seek damages for loss of consortium. Approximately two weeks before the scheduled trial date of March 14, 2000, Appellants settled their claims against Drs. Pratt and Stern. Their claims against Marymount then proceeded to trial. At the conclusion of a seven-day trial, a Laurel Circuit Court jury returned a verdict in favor of Marymount. Pursuant to the verdict, a judgment was entered dismissing Appellants' claims. The Court of Appeals affirmed and we granted discretionary review.

Appellants retained three medical experts to review Mrs. Miller's medical records and express their opinions in this case. Two of those experts, Dr. Michael A. Matthay, an internist and pulmonologist from San Francisco, California, and Dr. Fred J. Spielman, an anesthesiologist from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, testified for Appellants at trial. Appellants' third expert, Dr. Patricia Robertson of San Francisco, an obstetrician and gynecologist specializing in maternal-fetal medicine, was deposed for discovery purposes by Dr. Stern on December 14, 1998. Marymount was allowed to read that deposition as Dr. Robertson's testimony at trial. In addition, Marymount retained Dr. Michael G. Ehrie of Ashland, Kentucky, an internist with a subspecialty in pulmonary medicine, who also testified for Marymount at trial.

Drs. Matthay, Spielman and Ehrie agreed that Mrs. Miller developed Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) during the afternoon of October 19, 1995, and that this development caused both the respiratory arrest and the brain cell death that resulted in her coma.[1] They disagreed, however, as to whether the respiratory arrest caused the brain cell damage and whether better medical care could have prevented that damage. Drs. Matthay and Spielman opined that the respiratory arrest caused the brain cell damage that resulted in Mrs. Miller's coma. They also testified that earlier intubation and application of 100% oxygen therapy could have prevented the respiratory arrest. They accused the hospital's nurses of failing to furnish the treating physicians with up-to-date information on Mrs. Miller's symptoms which would have caused the physicians to more quickly institute the aggressive treatment needed to prevent the respiratory arrest. Specifically, they criticized the staff for failing to obtain repeat blood gas tests as required by an order entered in the record by Dr. Stern. They also found negligence in Nurse Burnett's administration of the Demerol injection ten minutes before the respiratory arrest, noting that administration of Demerol accelerates the progression of ARDS.

Dr. Ehrie disagreed. He testified that Mrs. Miller could not possibly have suffered irreversible brain cell damage during the five minutes that passed between the respiratory arrest and the resuscitation, and that the 10:05 p.m. blood gas test showing a PO2 of 90 indicated that the resuscitation had been successful. It was Dr. Ehrie's opinion that the brain cell *278 damage that caused Mrs. Miller's present comatose state occurred between 11:00 p.m. and 12:45 a.m., during which time Mrs. Miller's PO2 registered 43 and 44, levels insufficient to sustain brain cell life. He also testified that pneumonia is caused by infection that causes fluids to accumulate in the lung and, thus, can be treated by antibiotics and oxygen therapy, but that ARDS is caused by blood leaking from the capillaries into the lung, a phenomenon for which no presently known treatment exists. According to Dr. Ehrie, the occurrence of ARDS cannot be predicted, prevented, or treated and is fatal in fifty to ninety percent of cases.

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