Neely v. St. Francis Hospital & School of Nursing, Inc.

363 P.2d 438, 188 Kan. 546, 1961 Kan. LEXIS 321
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1961
Docket42,320
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 363 P.2d 438 (Neely v. St. Francis Hospital & School of Nursing, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neely v. St. Francis Hospital & School of Nursing, Inc., 363 P.2d 438, 188 Kan. 546, 1961 Kan. LEXIS 321 (kan 1961).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Robb, J.:

This is an appeal in a damage action for personal injuries, proximately caused by negligent treatment of plaintiff by defendant hospital, from the trial court’s judgment in favor of plaintiff based upon answers to special questions and the verdict of the jury and all other rulings, orders and decisions thereon including: Overruling of the hospital’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and its motions to set aside answers to special questions, and to grant a new trial as well as the overruling of the hospital’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and the overruling of a renewal of such demurrer along with a motion for directed verdict.

On April 1, 1956, plaintiff, a woman thirty-seven years of age with a life expectancy of 31.75-years, was employed by Midwestern Industries in Wichita as a PBX operator at a salary of $75.00 a week. About 11:00 o’clock p. m. while she was working on a pair of sunglasses, the lens broke and she sustained a cut about one half inch long on the middle finger of her left hand.

At 8:00 o’clock a. m. on April 2, 1956, plaintiff arrived at work, went to the company nurse to get a bandaid and the nurse sent her *548 to defendant hospital. Mrs. Davis, a fellow employee of plaintiff, went with plaintifF to the hospital and they arrived at the emergency room thereof about 8:30 a. m. where nurse Oleta Melton, intern William Bibb, and a Sister of the Order managing the hospital, examined plaintiff’s finger, cleansed the wound and sutured the finger. It was decided that plaintifF should have, and she was given, a penicillin shot followed by a skin or sensitivity test in the upper right arm, to determine plaintiff’s susceptibility or reaction to horse serum which was the most common base used in administering a shot of tetanus antitoxin. In the skin test a minute quantity of the serum was injected between the layers of plaintiff’s skin and subsequently she received 1500 units of tetanus antitoxin by hypodermic injection in her upper right arm. The penicillin shot and serum sensitivity test were administered by the nurse but the tetanus antitoxin was gixen by the intern who told plaintiff to call her doctor as soon as she returned to work. Plaintiff and Mrs. Davis left the hospital and by the time they reached their car the area of the sensitivity test on plaintiff’s upper right arm was showing a positive reaction. A stop was made for coffee and the spot on her arm was becoming red and puffy and had increased in size from a nickel to that of a half dollar. Plaintiff returned to work, her arm developed a reddening of the skin, a swelling, and a rash broke out over her body. She continued to be ill and feverish, and her muscles ached.

On April 14, 1956, a roaring began in plaintiff’s ears and on April 15 she returned to the hospital where she remained through April 23, 1956. In September, 1956, after receiving directions so to do from medical sources, plaintiff went to the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minnesota, where diagnosis showed 50 to 55 percent permanent loss of hearing in both ears.

In October, 1959, plaintiff was employed at $40.00 a week by a toy factory in Ruleville, Mississippi. Her income was entirely dependent upon her own efforts. Prior to the injury plaintiff had been in good health, had had a vivacious personality, and the ability to meet people, which made her a capable secretary, receptionist and PBX operator. After the injury she was highly nervous and had a noticeable change of personality.

The testimony of witnesses was highly conflicting, much of it was technical medical testimony, and only the principal parts will be touched upon. The prescribed minimum standard of waiting time *549 between a skin test and giving of a tetanus shot is fifteen to twenty minutes. However, there is no specification as to where the test is to be made on the body for any reaction to show in that period of time. Doctor Ernest R. Schlachter testified that throughout the country he knew the universal practice was to wait not less than ten minutes and that when he was giving a tetanus shot to a person for the first time, which he stated was the usual reason for giving the skin test, he waited fifteen minutes but if the shot was given in the upper arm “one should probably wait a minimum of thirty minutes.” He further testified a positive skin test was a warning and should put one on guard that a reaction of one or the other types, meaning immediate or delayed, might possibly occur. Doctor Schlachter stated that in his opinion the hospital, in allowing the medical procedures followed by the intern and nurse in question, had not met the approved standards of medical practice in the community in the treatment of plaintiff.

The other expert medical testimony was contradictory and controversial on the proposition as to whether the skin test rendered any assistance at all in predicting the delayed reactions terminating with serum sickness that could settle in some nerve tissue similar to that which happened to plaintiff, and the immediate reaction which would be a serum sickness made evident by swelling, breaking out with hives, difficulty in swallowing, redness of the skin, etc., and finally, whether such skin test if negative would be an assurance there would be no reaction. As usual, plaintiff here can point to certain portions of the expert medical testimony in favor of her contentions, and the hospital can point to portions of the expert testimony which appear to be in support of its contentions. These matters will be referred to again later.

In regard to the time element, plaintiff and the woman who took her to the hospital both testified that no more than five minutes could have elapsed between the time the skin test was administered by the nurse and the time the intern injected the 1500 units of tetanus antitoxin into plaintiff’s upper arm. According to their version of what took place, plaintiff and her companion arrived at the emergency room of the hospital, the cut was examined and thoroughly cleaned by the intern and nurse on duty, and while a Sister was present, it appears she only came and went and took no active part. The intern sutured the finger with ten stitches and plaintiff was given a shot of penicillin. Then it was determined *550 that plaintiff should have a shot of tetanus antitoxin and since plaintiff had not previously had one, the nurse gave her a skin test and left the room. Immediately the intern came in and gave plaintiff 1500 units of tetanus antitoxin and, as previously mentioned, no more than five minutes could have elapsed between the two shots. Plaintiff and her companion thereafter went to their car and in about eight to ten minutes severe positive reactions were showing around the area of the skin test.

On the other hand, the intern and nurse testified the hospital records showed that the skin test was made in the forearm at 9:10 a. m. and the 1500 units of tetanus antitoxin were injected into the upper arm at 9:45 a. m. As to other matters such as the penicillin shot and the suture referred to in the testimony of the nurse and intern, the exact sequence of these events is somewhat difficult to tell from the record before us.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the trial court instructed the jury. Failure to instruct the jury on defendant’s requested instructions No. 8 and No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
363 P.2d 438, 188 Kan. 546, 1961 Kan. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neely-v-st-francis-hospital-school-of-nursing-inc-kan-1961.