Myron v. Doctors General Hospital, Ltd.

704 So. 2d 1083, 1997 Fla. App. LEXIS 14498
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 31, 1997
DocketNo. 95-0212
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 704 So. 2d 1083 (Myron v. Doctors General Hospital, Ltd.) 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
Myron v. Doctors General Hospital, Ltd., 704 So. 2d 1083, 1997 Fla. App. LEXIS 14498 (Fla. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

WARNER, Judge.

Appellants file this appeal from a defense verdict following a four month medical malpractice trial, claiming that the trial court committed five reversible errors. We find that two errors merit reversal. We hold that the trial court erred in admitting Child Protection Team reports of a child abuse investigation and in permitting the defense to cross-examine the appellants’ experts with non-authoritative medical treatises. These errors were not harmless and consequently necessitate a new trial.

This case involved diametrically opposing views of the causation of the minor child’s, Rayna’s, injuries. The appellants sued three hospitals and nine doctors, alleging that they had committed medical negligence. The ap-pellees steadfastly claimed that the baby was a victim of shaken baby syndrome — child abuse. Over twenty-four expert physicians testified both in support of, and in opposition to, the views of each respective side, in addition to the eight appellee doctors, several lay witnesses, and the witnesses who testified on damages. In sum, it was a hotly contested trial.

Facts

On the morning of September 28, 1987, appellant Sharon Brock, the mother of six-month old Rayna, brought Rayna to Doctor’s Hospital with complaints of a high fever, and appellee Doctors Gervasi and Stary examined her. After a general examination in which Dr. Stary observed some redness of the left ear drum, he diagnosed Rayna with otitis media (ear infection) and prescribed an antibiotic for her. He recorded that there were “no meningeal signs” but faded to perform a spinal tap to rule out meningitis, an ever-present concern in the case of an infant having a very high temperature. The appellants’ expert, Dr. Martin Raff, testified that Rayna had symptoms consistent with meningitis and that the emergency room doctors deviated from the standard of care by failing to perform a spinal tap, which would have definitively diagnosed whether she had meningitis. Dr. Raff opined that Rayna was suffering from meningitis and that giving her antibiotics created a condition called “partially treated meningitis,” which masked the meningeal symptoms without curing the infection.

The next day, Ms. Brock brought Rayna to the offices of Pediatric Associates. She relayed the baby’s symptoms and her treatment at Doctors’ Hospital, including the diagnosis, and reported that Rayna had vomited after she received her second dose of antibiotics during the previous evening. Ap-pellee Dr. Shulman found Rayna to be alert and cheerful. He concluded that she did not have otitis media and believed that her vomiting was due to a fairly common reaction to the antibiotic. After concluding that the baby had gastroenteritis or a stomach virus, and finding no signs of meningitis, he told Ms. Brock to discontinue the medication.

The next day, appellee Dr. Ohring examined Rayna when Ms. Brock brought her back to Pediatric Associates. After his examination, Dr. Ohring concurred with Dr. Shulman that the baby had a stomach virus, rather than an ear infection, and he also found no signs of meningitis.

As Rayna’s health appeared to be improving, on Friday, October 2, 1987, Ms. Brock brought her to Leeia Tinsley, the babysitter, to spend the night so that Ms. Brock could go on a date. Ms. Tinsley noticed that the baby seemed a little warm and looked pale, but she did not think that she was too sick to be left for the evening. Ms. Tinsley gave Rayna Tylenol once and fed her three times. Rayna spit up once and had a little diarrhea.

Rayna slept through the night and into the next morning. After breakfast, Rayna fell asleep while playing on the floor. Ms. Tins-ley was not alarmed at the time, and she put Rayna to bed. Later, when Ms. Tinsley checked on her, Rayna was limp as a rag and would not stir, but there was nothing unusual about her breathing. When Ms. Tinsley tried to reach Ms. Brock on the telephone to no avail, she decided to take the baby to the emergency room. Believing that she would not have the authority to take Rayna to the hospital, Ms. Tinsley stopped at Ms. Brock’s [1087]*1087home, which was on the way. She informed Ms. Brock that Rayna would not wake up and that she was taking her to the hospital. Ms. Brock went out to the ear and checked on Rayna. Ms. Brock then got dressed and drove with Ms. Tinsley to the emergency room. Rayna was breathing, according to Ms. Tinsley, but Ms. Brock testified that at some point on the way to the hospital, Rayna started breathing “funny.”

Humana Bennett

At approximately 1:13 p.m., Ms. Brock carried Rayna into Humana Hospital Bennett’s emergency room. Within two minutes of her admission, Rayna suffered a “witnessed arrest,” and a code blue was called. There is a significant dispute in the testimony as to when Rayna stopped breathing. Ms. Brock testified that she was still breathing when she entered the hospital, but defense experts testified that, based upon their review of the medical records and statements of Ms. Brock and Ms. Tinsley, the baby’s breathing problems began much earlier in the morning. According to these experts, Rayna was either not breathing or had only one last breath when she arrived at Humana. The hospital records indicated “0” (zero) respirations on Rayna’s admission. There is no question that the notation of the “0” was repeatedly written over a “6” in the same ink.

After she stopped breathing, Rayna’s pulse dropped to 60 and her heart rate slowed down because of insufficient oxygen in the blood going to her heart and circulating through her body. Suspecting meningitis, appellee Dr. Kareff, an emergency room physician, began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Thereafter, Rayna was intubated, placed on a monitor, ventilated, and given intravenous fluids. Appellants’ experts testified that all of these functions were unreasonably delayed or performed improperly, causing a substantial delay in the resuscitation efforts. Particularly, many of the experts testified that the doctors improperly placed the endotracheal tube, which would have helped Rayna breathe and provide oxygen to her brain, thereby causing her to become hypoxic and resulting in her brain injury. The defense experts all testified that the resuscitation efforts were all within the standard of care and that the tests showed that the baby was getting sufficient blood to her brain to survive.

At about 2:00 p.m. Dr. Kareff phoned the on-call pediatrician, appellee Dr. Calzadilla, to examine Rayna. Based upon Rayna’s medical history, Dr. Calzadilla made a preliminary diagnosis of meningitis and prescribed antibiotics for her. The antibiotics were not administered until Dr. Calzadilla arrived about a half hour later. Upon his examination of Rayna, Dr. Calzadilla observed that her left pupil was dilated and her right pupil was constricted. He stated that he could not perform a full ophthalmologic examination. He also did not perform a spinal tap to confirm the existence of meningitis.

Shortly after Dr. Calzadilla arrived, Rayna began to convulse, and the doctor administered phenobarbital to calm her and sodium bicarbonate to combat her profound metabolic acidosis. He then called appellee Dr. Rutherford, head of pediatric intensive care at both appellee Plantation General Hospital and Memorial Hospital, and requested Ray-na’s transfer to a hospital with a pediatric intensive care unit. Dr. Calzadilla sent an ambulance over to Plantation Hospital to pick up Dr. Rutherford.

The appellants’ experts testified that Dr.

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Related

Donshik v. Sherman
861 So. 2d 53 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2003)
Myron Ex Rel. Brock v. DOCTORS GENERAL HOSP.
704 So. 2d 1083 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1997)

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704 So. 2d 1083, 1997 Fla. App. LEXIS 14498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myron-v-doctors-general-hospital-ltd-fladistctapp-1997.