Patel v. Midland Memorial Hospital & Medical Center

298 F.3d 333, 2002 WL 1472762
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2002
Docket00-51265
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 298 F.3d 333 (Patel v. Midland Memorial Hospital & Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patel v. Midland Memorial Hospital & Medical Center, 298 F.3d 333, 2002 WL 1472762 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:

P.V. Patel, M.D., (“Dr.Patel”) filed suit in district court against Midland Memorial Hospital and several of its doctors (collectively “the Defendants”) for claims arising out of the hospital’s summary suspension of all of his clinical privileges in January 1999. 1 Specifically, Dr. Patel alleged that the Defendants, by participating in the suspension of his privileges: (1) denied him pre-suspension due process in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2000); (2) engaged in racial discrimination in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (2000); (3) engaged in an illegal monopoly and attempted to monopolize in violation of 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 & 2 (2000) and Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann. § 15.05 (Vernon 2001); and (4) engaged in conduct that constituted breach of contract, defamation, and interference with contractual relationships. The district court granted the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on all of Dr. Patel’s claims. Dr. Patel now appeals on the ground that genuine issues of material fact exist with respect to all of his claims. The Defendants cross-appeal arguing that under the Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986 (HCQIA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 11101-11152 (2000), they are immune from all of Dr. Patel’s claims, except for his civil rights claims, and are entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees.

I

Dr. Patel is a board-certified cardiologist who specializes in invasive and interven-tional cardiology. 2 He joined the staff of Midland Memorial Hospital (“Midland”), a *336 public hospital, in 1982. While at Midland, he continuously expanded his practice by obtaining new clinical privileges and increasing the volume of procedures he performed. By the mid-1990s, he performed one of the highest numbers of cardiac interventions of the hospital staff. Dr. Patel also expanded his practice outside of Midland by maintaining a practice at Odessa Medical Center and opening his own cardiac eath labs and primary care clinics, at times competing with Midland and members of its staff. For fifteen years, Dr. Patel appears to have practiced successfully without any significant problems.

Two incidents in 1997 and 1998, however, drew the attention of Midland’s Medical Executive Committee (MEC) to Dr. Patel’s practice. In November 1997, the MEC investigated an altercation between Dr. Patel and a nurse in front of a patient just before a procedure. Questions were raised as to whether .Dr. Patel properly secured the patient’s consent to continue with the procedure and whether he waited for a new nurse to arrive before beginning the procedure. The MEC ultimately suspended Dr. Patel’s clinical privileges for fourteen days and ordered him to undergo a behavioral evaluation.

Six months later, the MEC received its second complaint regarding Dr. Patel’s practice. The chairman of Midland’s Department of Radiology reported to the MEC ■ that Dr. Patel had “an inordinate number of catastrophic outcomes” among his recent cases of noncardiac peripheral vascular interventions. The MEC directed an ad hoc committee of eight cardiology, vascular surgery, and radiology physicians to review Dr. Patel’s problematic cases. After reviewing three cases handled by Dr. Patel in the preceding eight months, the committee reported several concerns to the MEC. Specifically, the committee cited concerns regarding Dr. Patel’s technical performance of procedures, his intra-pro-cedure decisionmaking, and the accuracy of his documentation. The MEC then met to discuss the cases and the committee’s report, and voted unanimously to revoke Dr. Patel’s noncardiac peripheral privileges. While a post-suspension hearing was pending, the MEC sought independent review of three of Dr. Patel’s cases by two outside experts. Both confirmed that the revocation was appropriate. 3

At the same meeting during which it revoked Dr. Patel’s peripheral privileges, the MEC charged the Cardiovascular Committee with reviewing Dr. Patel’s diagnostic and interventional cardiac procedures “to ensure that a similar pattern is not emerging.” In response, Stephen Brown, M.D., Chair of the Cardiology Committee, reviewed the last six fatalities in cases handled by Dr. Patel. In a report made to John Foster, Jr., M.D., Chairman *337 of the MEC, 4 Dr. Brown noted several concerns with each of the cases and concluded that Dr. Patel’s management of them warranted further investigation. He recommended sending the cases for outside review to avoid any issues of bias on the part of Dr. Patel’s competitors. As a result, Dr. Foster sent ten of Dr. Patel’s cardiology cases to Richard A. Lange, M.D., Director of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, for outside review.

While Dr. Lange conducted his outside review, the Cardiovascular Committee continued its inside review. At its bi-monthly meeting to review the morbidity/mortality cases of cardiologists at the hospital, the Committee reviewed Dr. Patel’s recent morbidity/mortality cases and noted a “high concentration of severe complications.” 5 The Committee then forwarded a report to Dr. Foster stating that Dr. Patel was “not operating in a safe fashion” while performing certain coronary procedures and that the situation was “very dangerous.” 6 The report again recommended outside review by an unbiased third party, and potentially a reevaluation of Dr. Patel’s privileges depending on the outcome of that report.

Dr. Foster then requested that the Medical Control Committee (MCC) 7 review the Cardiovascular Committee reports regarding Dr. Patel’s cardiology cases. The MCC met to discuss the cases, but decided to wait for the results of Dr. Lange’s review, which were expected within the week, before acting. One week later, Dr. Lange reported to Dr. Foster that six of the ten patients whose cases he reviewed died as a “direct result of an interventional procedure” that was performed by Dr. Patel: (a) without clear indication, (b) with poor technical skills, or (c) in coronary vessels poorly suited for the procedure. Dr. Lange also found problems in the cases that suggested poor medical judgment. Two days later, the MCC reviewed Dr. Lange’s report and voted to recommend the suspension of all of Dr. Patel’s privileges. Upon the MCC’s request, the MEC met to consider the evidence and the recommendation for suspension. After deliberation, the MEC unanimously approved the MCC’s recommendation that Dr. Patel’s privileges be summarily suspended. 8

Dr. Patel was notified of his suspension by letter. The MEC then informed him that he had a right to a post-suspension hearing under Midland’s Fair Hearing Plan. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
298 F.3d 333, 2002 WL 1472762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patel-v-midland-memorial-hospital-medical-center-ca5-2002.