Patton v. Rose

892 S.W.2d 410, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 339
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 27, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 892 S.W.2d 410 (Patton v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patton v. Rose, 892 S.W.2d 410, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 339 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

CRAWFORD, Judge.

This is a medical malpractice case. Plaintiff, Roxie Patton, appeals from the judgment of the trial court on a jury verdict for defendants, Dr. Walter Rose and Dr. Renee Harless.

Plaintiffs complaint alleges that she was an employee of Memorial Hospital, and that on March 7, 1991, she was performing her regular duties as a surgical instrument technician when a suction needle, “which should have been sterilized by operating room personnel, slipped from her hand and stuck her in the ‘forearm.’ ” The needle had previously been used on a tuberculosis patient. She avers that on or about March 20, 1991, she developed a knot in the wound area, and as a result the employee health unit of Memorial Hospital referred her to defendant Harless. The complaint alleges that defendant Harless attempted to determine neither the identity of the patient upon whom the needle had been used nor the diagnoses of that particular patient, and although defendant Harless x-rayed plaintiffs arm and gave her antibiotic treatment, she did not perform a skin biopsy. Plaintiff further alleges that when her condition grew worse, Dr. Harless referred her to defendant Rose, who first saw her on March 27, 1991, and who likewise made no attempt to determine the patient upon whom the needle was used or the diagnosis of that patient. She avers that Dr. *412 Rose did not perform a skin biopsy or culture, but chose a local, systematic treatment as she continued under his care and treatment until April 22, 1991. The complaint alleges that defendants Harless and Rose were negligent in failing to perform a skin biopsy, failing to determine the identity and diagnosis of the patient upon whom the needle was used, and in failing to confer with or call in an infectious disease consultant.

Defendants’ answers to the complaint deny negligence on their part and deny that negligence on their part was a proximate cause of losses to plaintiff. They aver that plaintiff’s losses and damages were caused by her own negligence and the negligence of another party.

We will briefly review the facts useful for consideration of the issues presented for review. For approximately five years prior to March 7, 1991, plaintiff was employed as a surgical instrument technician at Memorial Hospital. Her job involved the cleaning, packaging and sterilization of instruments that had been used in surgery. On March 7, 1991, she was cleaning a mediastinoscope suction needle that had been used on a patient with tuberculosis. Plaintiff testified that she was required to have knowledge of the proper names of the medical instruments. As she was washing the instrument to prepare it for the sterilization, it slipped from her hand and stuck in her right forearm. She immediately scrubbed her arm and reported the accident to her supervisor, who filled out an incident report.

Procedures established by Memorial Hospital for employees who are injured by an instrument used on a patient require that the injury immediately be reported to the employee’s supervisor, who fills out an incident report that includes a description of the instrument that caused the injury. Various other information is requested on the form, including the identity of the patient on whom the instrument had been used, the surgeon, and other related information. After the incident report is completed, the employee is to go to the Employee Health Department, which is staffed by two nurses. The duties of these nurses involve evaluating the injury, providing treatment required, referring the employee to a physician, if necessary, and tracing the instrument causing the injury back to the patient upon whom it had been used. Tracing the instrument to the patient enabled the hospital to determine the type of disease and whether it could be transmitted to the employee via the injury from the instrument. When pertinent information was obtained in this regard, it was to be passed on to any physician involved in the treatment of the employee.

There is a sharp dispute in the testimony concerning plaintiffs report to the supervisor. According to the supervisor, when he filled out the report, plaintiff described the instrument that injured her as an “aspiration needle,” but she did not have the instrument with her when she made the report. He testified that she did not at any time describe the instrument as a mediastinal instrument. The supervisor also testified that when he completed the report, he instructed plaintiff to report to the Employee Health Department, and she took the completed report and left. Plaintiff testified that she showed the instrument to her supervisor, and that he did not give her a copy of the report, nor did he instruct her to go to the Employee Health Department.

On March 20, 1991, plaintiff developed a red, sore knot on the punctured area, and she went to the Employee Health Department for the first time. After an examination by a nurse in the Employment Health Department, she was referred to defendant, Dr. Renee Harless. When she told Dr. Harless that she was stuck with a clean needle that had been washed, but not sterilized, Dr. Harless did not ask her to describe the needle and did not ask her any questions about it. Dr. Harless treated her with a broad spectrum antibiotic, which Dr. Harless changed on March 25, 1991, when the condition had not improved. After another day or two of treatment with the new antibiotic, the plaintiff had not improved, so Dr. Harless referred her to defendant, Dr. Walter Rose.

Dr. Rose continued treating the plaintiff, but when she failed to improve, plaintiff then saw Dr. Douglas Beehard, who recommended a biopsy and culture of the wound. Dr. Rose *413 then performed the biopsy, which revealed the bacilli consistent with tuberculosis.

The nurses in the Employee Health Department who attempted to determine the identity of the patient upon whom the needle was used testified that plaintiff changed the description of the needle several times and also subsequently remembered the name of the nurse who had used the instrument on the ease for a Dr. Baker. In any event, it was some time before they were able to confirm that the needle had been used on a tuberculosis patient.

Dr. Bechard testified that in his opinion, both Dr. Harless and Dr. Rose had conformed to the applicable standard of care in their care and treatment of the plaintiff. In addition, Dr. Robert Barnett also testified that Dr. Rose had met the standard of care, and Dr. Don Cannon and Dr. Ronald Brooks-bank each testified that Dr. Harless had met the standard of care. The expert witnesses testified that the standard of acceptable professional practice does not obligate the physicians to make a personal search to locate the instrument that injured the plaintiff, especially when the hospital was undertaking to perform this task.

In her behalf, plaintiff introduced the testimony of Dr. William Burmeister, who opined that Dr. Harless failed to meet the recognized standard of practice in making the diagnosis and treatment and that Dr. Harless had a duty to find out the source of the injury. Dr. Burmeister also opined that Dr. Rose not only deviated from the recognized standard of care in failing to perform a biopsy and culture to determine the cause of the infection, but also breached his duty to find out the name of the patient upon whom the needle was used and the diagnosis of that patient.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
892 S.W.2d 410, 1994 Tenn. App. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-rose-tennctapp-1994.