O'Connell v. Holy Family Hospital

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 1997
Docket1-96-2579
StatusPublished

This text of O'Connell v. Holy Family Hospital (O'Connell v. Holy Family Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connell v. Holy Family Hospital, (Ill. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Fourth Division

June 30, 1997

No. 1-96-2579

MICHAEL O'DONNELL AND KATHRYN HUNT, ) APPEAL FROM THE

as Co-Administrators of the Estate ) CIRCUIT COURT OF

OF RYAN O'DONNELL, Deceased, ) COOK COUNTY.

)

Plaintiffs-Appellants, )

v. )

HOLY FAMILY HOSPITAL, a corporation, ) HONORABLE

and DR. MUSTAFA KEMAL YON, ) RONALD C. RILEY,

) JUDGE PRESIDING.

Defendants-Appellees. )

PRESIDING JUSTICE WOLFSON delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiffs in this case say that 12 minutes was the difference between life and death for their son, Ryan.  They also say that the actions or omissions of Dr. Mustafa Kemal Yon during that brief span of time are what caused Ryan's death.  The jury found otherwise.  This court must decide, among other things, whether the jury's verdict for the defendants was against the manifest weight of the evidence.  We affirm.

FACTS

In a third amended complaint, Michael O'Donnell and Kathryn Hunt (Ryan's parents) alleged that Holy Family Hospital was negligent because it failed to provide timely and competent resuscitative care to Ryan; because the hospital failed to provide a neonatologist within 30 minutes of the obstetrician's decision to perform an emergency Caesarian section (C-section); because the hospital violated its Maternity and Neonatal Service Plan in several ways; and because the hospital failed to have in place a reliable means of communicating with its on-call neonatologists.  Plaintiffs further alleged that Dr. Yon, as agent, and the hospital, as principal, were negligent because: Dr. Yon failed to properly intubate and ventilate Ryan; Dr. Yon failed to monitor or have others monitor Ryan's heart rate; Dr. Yon failed to perform cardiac compressions on Ryan; Dr. Yon failed to resuscitate Ryan; and Dr. Yon failed to timely anesthetize Kathryn (Ryan's mother) in preparation for the C-section.  

Although the trial in this case lasted several days, much of the evidence focused on the 12 minutes between 11:10 and 11:22 a.m. on May 22, 1991.  This time period was important because, while there was some discrepancy in the records, it was generally accepted that Kathryn Hunt gave birth to a son, Ryan, by Caesarean section (C-section) at Holy Family Hospital at 11:09 a.m.; that Dr. Yon, Kathryn's anesthesiologist for the C-section, took over resuscitation efforts on the infant at 11:10 a.m.; and that Ryan was clinically dead when the neonatologist, Dr. Go, arrived in the delivery room at 11:22 a.m.  Resuscitation efforts continued for nearly two hours after Dr. Go arrived and Ryan was not pronounced dead until 1:15 p.m.  But what transpired during those 12 minutes and whether anything Dr. Yon did or did not do during that time deviated from the standard of care and proximately caused Ryan's death were the main issues at trial.

Kathryn Hunt was 41½ weeks pregnant when she arrived at Holy Family Hospital in the early morning hours of May 22, 1991.  Her amniotic sac already had ruptured.  Still, the progress of her labor, as observed by the doctors attending her throughout that morning, was slow.  When Dr. Carson, Kathryn's obstetrician, took over Kathryn's care at 9:40 a.m., Kathryn's cervix had dilated only 4 cm.   The fetal monitor strip up to this point, however, showed that the baby's heart beat was stable and strong.

Between 10:05 and 10:24 a.m. the fetal monitor strip began to show that problems were developing.  There were deccelerations in the fetal heart rate indicating that the baby was not getting enough oxygen.  At 10:30 a.m., when Dr. Carson next checked Kathryn, the doctor saw the strip and an unusually large amount of blood in Kathryn's pelvic cavity.  The doctor concluded that an abruption (a separation of the placenta from the uterine wall) had occurred.  For this reason, she decided that an emergency C-section was necessary.  The decision to perform a C-section was made at approximately 10:36 or 10:37 a.m.

The hospital delivery room personnel immediately went into action.  A nurse called the surgical department and requested a surgical assistant and an anesthesiologist.  Another nurse called the nursery department and told the staff nurse there to notify the on-call neonatologist that an emergency C-section was going to be performed.  The nursery nurse paged Dr. Go.

Dr. Go, the neonatologist, was driving in her car to another hospital when she received the page.  Dr. Go called Holy Family Hospital at about 10:55 a.m.  When she learned of the emergency, she agreed to proceed to Holy Family Hospital immediately.

Once when Dr. Carson checked the fetal monitor attached to Kathryn it showed a "flat line" for two-four minutes, indicating that the fetus was not getting any oxygen.  For this reason Kathryn was given oxygen and turned on her side to improve circulation to the fetus.

The monitor was disconnected from 10:41 until 10:46 a.m., while Kathryn was moved to the delivery room.  When reconnected at about 10:47 a.m., the monitor showed some improvement in the fetus' heart rate.  At about 10:50 a.m., Kathryn was in the delivery room and being prepped for surgery.  Dr. Yon, the anesthesiologist, began to administer anesthesia to Kathryn.  By 11:02 or 11:03 a.m., less than 30 minutes from the time Dr. Carson decided to perform the C-section, the first incision was made by Dr. Carson.  According to the fetal monitor strip, Ryan was born at 11:09 a.m.

Dr. Carson determined, after Ryan's delivery, the placental abruption had not been complete, but she categorized it as "severe."  Dr. Carson assessed Ryan briefly as she passed him to Dr. Zamirowski, a general practitioner who came to delivery to help in this emergency.  Dr. Carson noted that Ryan was limp and not breathing at birth.  As the other doctors worked on trying to resuscitate Ryan, Dr. Carson never heard Ryan cry.

Dr. Carson opined that the pain medications and anesthesia administered to the mother had contributed to Ryan's depressed condition at birth.  Dr. Carson also admitted that, after Ryan's birth, Kathryn developed disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), a condition in which the mother uses up much of the clotting factors in the blood.  Also, a hematocrit done on the blood in the cord going to Ryan showed that his blood count was low, though not alarmingly so.  Still, the low blood count indicated that he might have had some blood loss due to the abruption.

Despite Ryan's condition at birth, it was Dr. Carson's opinion that neither the delivery, nor anything that occurred before the delivery, was the proximate cause of Ryan's death.  Her medical opinion was that Ryan died due to an inability to be resuscitated after birth.  Why Ryan could not be resuscitated, she could not explain.

Plaintiff's expert, Dr. Kimble, agreed that Ryan died after birth due to failed resuscitation attempts.  Dr. Kimble stated:

"I think that Ryan's death resulted because of the failure on the part of Dr. Yon to be able to provide ventilation to this baby in the first very few minutes of life, and I think that why ventilation was not successful in Dr. Yon's hands is not entirely clear."

It was his opinion, however, that Dr. Yon's inability to resuscitate Ryan stemmed from one of three possibilities: (1) that Dr. Yon put the endotracheal tube in the wrong place, (2) that Dr.

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