Patricia Copley and Ravali Tarigopula v. Kristin Guidry

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 2025
Docket09-24-00046-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Patricia Copley and Ravali Tarigopula v. Kristin Guidry (Patricia Copley and Ravali Tarigopula v. Kristin Guidry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia Copley and Ravali Tarigopula v. Kristin Guidry, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-24-00046-CV ________________

PATRICIA COPLEY & RAVALI TARIGOPULA, Appellants

V.

KRISTIN GUIDRY, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 172nd District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 23DCCV0196 ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an accelerated appeal from the trial court’s order denying Patricia

Copley’s and Ravali Tarigopula’s motions to dismiss Kristin Guidry pursuant to

section 74.351 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. 1 See Tex. Civ. Prac. F 0

& Rem. Code Ann. § 74.351; see also id. § 51.014(a)(9). 2 1 F

1We will collectively call Patricia Copley and Ravali Tarigopula “the Appellants” for this appeal, as their issues on appeal are the same. 2We cite the current version of the statute, and although the statute was

amended in September 2023 after Guidry filed this suit, the amendment does not impact this appeal. 1 Background

In July 2021, Kristin Guidry was admitted to The Medical Center of Southeast

Texas resulting in an almost six-month stay. Guidry claims that during her stay she

was treated by three nurse practitioners and five medical doctors, including the

Appellants. 3 Guidry’s petition asserts that she was intermittently in ICU and was F 2

mostly on a ventilator, immobile, and unable to care for herself. Guidry alleges the

conduct of all defendants, including the Appellants, fell below the applicable

standard of care and caused her serious bodily injury, by accepting and retaining a

resident whose needs they could not meet, by failing to keep appropriate clinical

records, by failing to prevent Guidry’s pressure ulcer, and by failing to treat Guidry’s

pressure ulcer appropriately. In her petition, Guidry alleges negligence and gross

negligence against all defendants, including the Appellants, and seeks actual and

punitive damages, among other things. Attached to Guidry’s petition is a report from

Dr. Lige B. Rushing, Jr. In the report, Dr. Rushing states the following about the

defendants, their standard of care, and their medical treatment of Guidry:

I have been asked to determine whether or not the care and treatment provided by the Medical Center of Southeast Texas and its staff (hereafter referred to as Defendants) to Kristin Guidry met the applicable standards of care, and, if said care fell below such standards, were there any injuries that occurred as a result of breaches of those standards.

3Guidry included other medical providers in her petition, but they are not

parties to this appeal. 2 First, I reviewed the Medical Center of Southeast Texas records pertaining to Kristin Guidry to determine the underlying facts, including such things as the patient’s subjective and objective condition, the course of care and treatment by the defendants, and their staffs and the treatment outcomes.

Second, I have compared the Defendant’s conduct in their care and treatment of Kristin Guidry’s illnesses, injuries, and conditions as revealed in the records to the accepted standards of care in order to determine whether they met or fell below those standards of care.

Third, I evaluated whether the breaches in the standards of care resulted in any injury to Kristin Guidry. This is the method employed by physicians who are asked [] to evaluate the quality of another professional caregiver’s care and treatment of a patient, whether in the context of a lawsuit or a hospital, or a nursing home, an assisted living care facility or a physician’s office. In other words, this method is the generally accepted method for evaluating whether or not a nursing home, long-term care facility, a hospital, or a physician’s care and treatment of a patient met or fell below the accepted standards of care. The opinions expressed here are based on my review of the pertinent medical records, my education, training, and experience as a practicing board certified internist, geriatrician, rheumatologist, and my knowledge of the accepted medica1 and nursing standards of care for the diagnoses, care, and treatment of the illnesses, injuries, and conditions involved in this claim.

[…]

The standard care for the Defendant in this case requires that they provide that level of care and treatment that a reasonable prudent similar facility and staff would provide under the same or similar circumstances.

In order to meet the standards of care the facility must maintain clinical records on each resident in accordance with the accepted professional standards and practices that are complete and accurately documented {Federal OBRA Regulation 483.75 (1) clinical records; 40 TAC 19.1910 clinical records and 19.1911 content of clinical records}. The standard of care requires that the documentation and the clinical records must accurately reflect all assessments, care given, observations, 3 changes in clinical signs, treatments, nursing actions, physician and family notifications, and any notable results of responses to treatment conditions.

In order to meet the standard of care the facility must ensure that (l) a resident receives care, consistent with professional standards of practice, to prevent pressure ulcers and does not develop pressure ulcers unless the individual’s clinical condition demonstrates that they were unavoidable, and (2) a resident with pressure ulcers receives necessary treatment and services, consistent with professional standards of practice, to promote healing, prevent infection, and prevent new ulcers from developing. {Federal OBRA Regulation 483.25 quality of care (b) pressure ulcers; see also 40 TAC 19.901 quality of care (3) pressure sore}.

In this case, the Defendant should have developed a pressure ulcer prevention program. This would consist of but not be limited to a regular turning and repositioning schedule with documentation of each and every turn. There should be a clear documentation of the character of the pressure ulcer i.e. size, stage, location, presence or absence of odor, presence or absence of exudate, presence or absence of eschar, the presence or absence of tunneling. While there was some effort to document the character of the pressure ulcer in this case the effort was woefully inadequate. There should have been documentation, in detail regarding response to treatment. I do not find that there was any meaningful, significant or consist[e]nt effort to turn and repositioning Ms. Guidry or to document such action. While she did have an air mattress, she still needed to be turned and repositioned every two hours to prevent pressure ulcer formation and to meet the standard of care. In this case, the pressure ulcer treatment/management was below the standard care and as a result, Kristin Guidry developed a large stage IV pressure ulcer. There was nothing demonstrated in Kristin Guidry’s clinical status to demonstrate that her pressure ulcer was unavoidable.

The facility must ensure that residents receive treatment and care in accordance with professional standards of practice, the comprehensive person-centered care plan, and the resident’s choices. {Federal OBRA Regulation 483.25 quality of care; see also 40 TAC 19.910 quality of care}.

4 The Defendant in this case knew or should have known that Kristin Guidry [] was at a very high risk for the development of a pressure ulcer. She was at a very high risk because of her immobility and obesity.

The facility must develop a comprehensive care plan for each resident by using among other things the results of the MDS Assessment and other nursing/medical assessments.

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Patricia Copley and Ravali Tarigopula v. Kristin Guidry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-copley-and-ravali-tarigopula-v-kristin-guidry-texapp-2025.