Moore v. Singh

755 S.E.2d 319, 326 Ga. App. 805, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1211, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 18, 2014
DocketA13A2387
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 755 S.E.2d 319 (Moore v. Singh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Singh, 755 S.E.2d 319, 326 Ga. App. 805, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1211, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 280 (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

This appeal arises from the grant of a motion for directed verdict in favor of Sonu G. Singh, M.D., and Peach State Nephrology, Inc., in a medical malpractice action filed by Herbert Moore, individually and as the administrator of the Estate of Rosemary Moore. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.

A directed verdict is authorized only when there is no conflict in the evidence as to any material issue and the evidence introduced, with all reasonable deductions therefrom, shall demand a particular verdict. A grant of directed verdict is a ruling that the evidence and all reasonable deductions therefrom demand a particular verdict. It is illogical to say such a finding will be upheld if there is any evidence to support it. A grant of directed verdict can be upheld only where we determine that all the evidence demands that verdict. This requires a de novo review.... It is correct to say that a directed verdict cannot be granted if there is any evidence to support a contrary verdict, but there cannot he “some evidence” that all the evidence demands a particular verdict.1

Viewed in this light, the evidence presented at trial showed that on December 23, 2008, after a fall in her home during which she hit her left knee on a door frame, Rosemary Moore, who as a result of her diabetes had end-stage renal disease, was transported by ambulance to Henry Medical Center Emergency Department (“Henry Medical”). Rosemary complained that she was unable to put weight on her leg, and she feared that her ankle was sprained; she also had a contusion on her knee, which was x-rayed, but did not appear to have a fracture per the radiologist’s report. Rosemary was diagnosed with a left ankle sprain and left knee contusion and discharged from the hospital that same day, but Rosemary was not able to stand or walk at that time.

[806]*806The following morning, December 24, 2008, Moore found Rosemary unresponsive in their bed, and she was again transported to Henry Medical, where Dr. Singh, who is a nephrologist who treats patients with diabetes, treated her until she was discharged on January 5,2009.2 Rosemary regained consciousness on December 26, and she again complained of pain in her left leg. Over the course of the hospital stay, Rosemary was assessed for various other ailments related to her diabetes, and a physical therapist assessed her left leg, finding that her pain in that leg was centered on her knee and tibial tuberosity,3 but Dr. Singh did not follow up on the physical therapist’s findings and did not order further x-rays, a CT scan, or an MRI, nor consult with an orthopedist regarding the issue.

Rosemary continued to experience issues with her leg and was unable to bear weight on it. She regularly saw doctors for the other ailments she experienced as a result of her diabetes, but in late February 2009, she sought assistance from Dr. Brice Choi about her leg.4 Dr. Choi determined that Rosemary had sustained a fracture in her tibia that had at some point displaced5 and healed in the displaced position, and he referred her to orthopedist Dr. Daniel Orcutt for treatment. On April 2, 2009, Dr. Orcutt performed surgery on Rosemary’s leg, which surgery included breaking the partially healed bone in order to set it with pins for healing in the correct position.

At trial, Dr. Stephan Borkan provided expert testimony that a nephrologist examining Rosemary would have been concentrating on the status of her bones, which could be affected by end-stage renal disease and the length of time she had been on dialysis, circulatory problems, and peripheral neuropathy, which is the decreased perception of pain and normal stimuli in the extremities. Borkan testified that doctors are taught specifically to describe and localize particular portions of the lower extremities to which they are referring when assessing a patient and describing symptoms in a chart. He explained that the upper leg is the area below the pelvis and above but not [807]*807including the knee, the knee is the knee joint, the lower leg is the area below but not including the knee to the ankle joint, and below the ankle joint is the foot.

Dr. Borkan testified that Dr. Singh’s December 27 notes failed to meet the standard of care by adequately describing and localizing Rosemary’s pain to a specific portion of Rosemary’s left leg, instead, noting that she had “severe pain in the [left] leg” and contained a notation that the “[left] leg is tender [and] swelling.” Dr. Borkan further testified that Dr. Singh should have explained to a more precise degree the location of pain and swelling on the leg, the appearance of that particular portion of the leg — swelling, tenderness, bruising — and Rosemary’s ambulation ability, and he stated the failure to so specify was a breach of the standard of care.

Dr. Borkan testified that there was evidence Dr. Singh was examining the leg because she noted deep vein thrombosis and cellulitus as possible issues causing the leg pain, but contrary to the standard of care, Dr. Singh failed to note the area of the leg where the symptoms appeared that may indicate such issues. Dr. Borkan explained that a chart should be able to stand alone so that any other medical providers could step in and easily assess what the other doctor had found with regard to symptoms and what other possibilities had been ruled out; Borkan stated that he had “not seen such a superficial and inadequate record in” his career, and the damage that it can lead to is misdiagnosis. Dr. Borkan testified that by December 27, with Rosemary still complaining of pain in her left leg, trauma leaving a contusion and swelling at the knee merely four days prior to that, and redness and pain in the leg as evidenced by the differential diagnosis’s inclusion of deep vein thrombosis and cellulitus, Dr. Singh’s differential diagnosis also should have included a fracture as a possible diagnosis, and she should have ordered a CT scan, an MRI, or an orthopedic consult.

By December 29, Rosemary still was experiencing pain in her leg and could not bear weight on it, and Dr. Singh ordered a physical therapy consult, which consult localized the pain in Rosemary’s leg to the top of the tibial tuberosity and kneecap area; Dr. Singh, however, failed to follow up on that report with any further investigative tests, such as a CT scan, an MRI, or an orthopedic consult between that time and Rosemary’s discharge on January 5,2009, which Dr. Borkan testified was a breach of the standard of care for an attending nephrologist.

Dr. Orcutt testified that when he first saw Rosemary in late March 2009, the fracture was at the least six weeks old, which he estimated based on the appearance of the fracture and the partial healing that had occurred, and he postulated that it had not existed [808]*808for more than a year. According to Dr. Orcutt, because Rosemary did not have issues walking prior to her December 23 injury, it was unlikely that the fracture existed prior to the incident and was most likely not displaced until sometime after December 23 because the x-ray performed on that day did not show the existence of a fracture, which could have been occult, i.e., not visible on an x-ray, at that point. Dr. Orcutt stated that without some other trauma than that which reportedly occurred on December 23, “[t]he only explanation [for the displaced and re-healed fracture] was [Rosemary] had a nondisplaced fracture after the fall in December that was not diagnosed.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
755 S.E.2d 319, 326 Ga. App. 805, 2014 Fulton County D. Rep. 1211, 2014 Ga. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-singh-gactapp-2014.