Morton v. McFall

128 Wash. App. 245
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 5, 2005
DocketNo. 54642-2-I
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 128 Wash. App. 245 (Morton v. McFall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton v. McFall, 128 Wash. App. 245 (Wash. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

¶1 So Young Morton had a suspicious mass in the upper portion of her right lung surgically removed. The surgery was unnecessary, as it turned out, because Morton had tuberculosis, not cancer. Discounting testimony by an internist who was experienced in diagnosing lung problems, the trial court dismissed Morton’s medical negligence action on summary judgment.

Becker, J.

¶2 No hard and fast rule requires testimony on the standard of care in a medical negligence action to come from a physician who has the same specialty as the defendant. The internist testified that Dr. Joseph, the lung specialist, should have done more to rule out tuberculosis before recommending surgery to diagnose cancer. Because the internist had sufficient expertise to demonstrate familiarity with the medical problem at issue and gave an opinion rooted in the facts of the patient’s treatment, we reverse the order granting summary judgment to Dr. Joseph.

¶3 We affirm the order of summary judgment dismissing the claim against Dr. McFall, the surgeon, who relied on Dr. Joseph’s statement that Morton’s test results were negative for infectious disease. The record contains no evidence that such reliance is a breach of the standard of care.

[248]*248FACTS

¶4 Physicians at Valley Medical Center Emergency Department examined So Young Morton and detected a mass in the upper lobe of her right lung on May 12, 2000. Morton had gone to Valley for recurrent respiratory symptoms and upper thoracic pain. In connection with this visit, Morton submitted sputum samples to test for tuberculosis. She also had a Computed Tomography (CT) scan, which revealed an irregular mass in the right upper lung.

¶5 Morton’s primary care physician referred her for a follow-up pulmonary consultation with Dr. John Joseph, a pulmonologist. Dr. Joseph’s documentation of the initial consultation on May 19, 2000 included this note: “Apparently, she has turned in three sputum for AFB, however, those results are not available on the computer.”1 Dr. Joseph found that the mass was “very suspicious for bronchogenic carcinoma despite the patient’s history of lifelong nonsmoking and no history of exposure to carcinogenic agents.”2 Dr. Joseph’s notes show that he considered tuberculosis as a less likely diagnosis because that disease is “more commonly seen in the apex and the anterior segment of the right upper lobe rather than the posterior segment” as was the case with Morton.3

¶6 Dr. Joseph scheduled Morton for a bronchoscopy and a CT-guided biopsy of the lesion itself. The bronchoscopy showed upper lobe granulomatous inflammation with necrosis, a sign of chronic infection. The biopsy showed acute inflammation and “rare, mildly atypical cells.”4 Neither test revealed a definitive diagnosis of either tuberculosis or cancer.

[249]*249¶7 Dr. Joseph testified that he discussed the test results with Morton. He told her one possible course of action was another bronchoscopy and CT-guided biopsy, which might or might not establish a diagnosis. Another course of action was waiting several months to see if the condition improved. But Morton “looked horrified” and stated that she wanted a more “definitive test.”5 In June 2000, Dr. Joseph referred Morton to Dr. Tori McFall, a surgeon, for an upper right lobectomy. The recommended lobectomy was purely diagnostic, designed to get a definitive diagnosis as to whether the lung mass was in fact cancerous.

¶8 In discussing the referral with Dr. Joseph, Dr. McFall asked him if an infectious disease workup had been completed. Dr. Joseph told Dr. McFall that a workup had been completed and the results were negative.6 After consultation with Morton, Dr. McFall removed the upper lobe of Morton’s right lung on July 5, 2000. The surgery was uneventful. The analysis of the mass revealed tuberculosis, not cancer.

¶9 On July 6, 2000, the day after Morton’s surgery, a doctor from the Seattle-King County Health Department called Dr. Joseph to report that they had just received a positive tuberculosis test result on Morton’s sputum samples, from the lab where the sputum samples had been sent. Dr. Joseph noted this in his chart and said, “Unfortunately this was reported positive by the lab on 6/23/00; however, it’s unclear whether anyone was notified. Unfortunately, Mrs. Morton underwent thoracotomy yesterday for the right upper lobe lesion.”7

f 10 Morton was discharged from the hospital four days after her surgery. Sometime after her release, Morton sought treatment for discomfort in deep breathing, compro[250]*250mised range of motion, frequent upper respiratory infections, shortness of breath, and decreased lung function.8

¶11 Morton sued Dr. Joseph and Dr. McFall for negligence in June 2002. In February 2004, both defendants moved for summary judgment on the grounds that Morton had failed to disclose on her witness list an expert witness who would testify as to standard of care and breach. Dr. Joseph argued in addition that Morton could not establish causation. In response, Morton submitted the declaration of Dr. Cynthia Rasch. Dr. Rasch, an internist, said she was familiar with the standard of care for assessing and diagnosing pulmonary problems. Based on her review of Morton’s medical records, Dr. Rasch concluded that the defendants had breached the standard of care, proximately causing Morton to undergo unnecessary surgery:

4. ) As a practicing doctor in the Seattle area, I am familiar with the standard of care for assessing and diagnosing pulmonary problems with patients. I have reviewed the medical records submitted to me and the Plaintiff received from Dr. John Joseph and Dr. Tori McFall and determined that, for the reasons outlined below, on a more likely than not basis, the defendant health care providers failed to exercise that degree of care, skill and learning expected of a reasonably prudent health care provider at the time in the profession or class to which they belong, in the State of Washington, acting in the same or similar circumstances. This failure proximately caused the plaintiff to undergo a surgical procedure that was unnecessary and has led her to experience the physical symptoms of which she has complained.
5. ) My conclusion is based upon the fact that the doctors involved in the Plaintiff’s care did not obtain the results of the sputum test prior to recommending and performing surgery on the Plaintiff. As noted in Dr. Joseph’s chart on July 13, 2000, if he had known that the sputum test was positive for TB [tuberculosis] the surgery could have been avoided. It is clear from the ER [emergency room] Report of May 12, 2000, that a sputum culture was performed. A sputum test would be included in an infectious disease workup. Likewise, a PPD [251]*251[purified protein derivative], a simple skin test could help evaluate the potential for tuberculosis.
6.) In the present case the defendant health care providers did not wait for the results of the sputum test prior to recommending and performing surgery. The results of the sputum test which the defendants received the day after the surgery are clear that surgical intervention was not necessary in this case. The bronchoscopy showed right upper lobe granulomatous inflammation with necrosis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 Wash. App. 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-mcfall-washctapp-2005.