Pisel v. Stamford Hospital

430 A.2d 1, 180 Conn. 314, 36 A.L.R. 4th 94, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 788
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 22, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by142 cases

This text of 430 A.2d 1 (Pisel v. Stamford Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pisel v. Stamford Hospital, 430 A.2d 1, 180 Conn. 314, 36 A.L.R. 4th 94, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 788 (Colo. 1980).

Opinion

Parskey, J.

This action was brought by the conservator of the estate of Carol Ann Pisel (hereinafter the plaintiff) to recover damages against Stamford Hospital and Dr. John J. Sullivan for alleged malpractice. After a trial to the jury a verdict was returned for the plaintiff against the hospital hut in favor of the defendant doctor. The trial court refused to set aside the plaintiff’s verdict and the hospital has appealed.

In its appeal the hospital claims that the court erred (1) in failing to grant the hospital’s motions for a mistrial, (2) in failing to exclude from evidence a videotape of the plaintiff, (3) in permitting Dr. Gerald H. Flamm to testify, (4) in certain rulings referable to the testimony of Dr. Myer M. Shimelman, (5) in instructing the jury on the issue of pain and suffering, (6) in failing to charge in accordance with five separate requests, and (7) in refusing to set aside the verdict of 3.6 million dollars as excessive. Another claimed error involving the refusal of the court to admit into evidence a memorandum of decision in a related case was specifically abandoned at oral argument.

On January 24, 1976, at 6:15 a.m. the plaintiff was a patient in the defendant hospital’s psychiatric unit. She was locked alone in a seclusion room in a highly agitated and psychotic condition, after having told the staff that she was hearing voices telling *317 her to hurt herself. Shortly after 10 a.m. she was found in the room with her head wedged between the side rail and the mattress of her bed, unconscious, with no pulse, blood pressure, or respiratory function. During that period of nearly four hours no staff member entered the plaintiff’s room or had any personal contact with her to assess her mental condition or alleviate her agitation.

Prior to June, 1975, the plaintiff was a normal, healthy twenty-three year old woman with no previous psychiatric problems. In June, 1975, she contracted choriomeningitis and a urinary infection which evolved into psychotic symptomatology. After a hospitalization of approximately six weeks and a three-week recovery period she returned to her full-time job as a dental technician and resumed a normal life. The plaintiff saw Dr. John Sullivan, her psychiatrist, for a period of approximately two months after discharge from the hospital, at which time, of her own volition, she discontinued treatment.

On January 14, 1976, the plaintiff’s psychiatric problems having recurred, Sullivan recommended admission to the defendant hospital’s psychiatric unit for an expected short-term stay. On that evening she was taken to the hospital by ambulance. She was admitted in a psychotic state with an admitting diagnosis of schizophrenia. At the hospital she complained that the light bulb burning in her head had broken and that she had broken glass in her ear that hurt. She did not recognize her parents, was withdrawn, almost catatonic, agitated, confused and had poor motor coordination. She was admitted to the unit’s Ford Wing, the area designated for the most agitated patients, and put to bed.

*318 On January 15, because of her highly agitated state, Sullivan ordered her placed in the psychiatric unit’s quiet room. This was a seclusion and isolation room used for agitated and psychotic patients. Because of her condition all furniture, including a steel bed frame, was removed from her room. The steel bed frame was removed for safety reasons; it remained out of the room for three days except for brief periods when it was wheeled into the room, and the plaintiff was kept in arm and leg restraints. On the fourth day the bed frame was returned to the room. The hospital records contain no entry authorizing the return of the frame and Sullivan denied ordering its return.

Between January 15 and 23, the plaintiff remained psychotic, with continuing bizarre behavior, hallucinations, irrationality, lack of contact with reality and agitation. Restraints were often necessary. Electric shock treatment was administered without improvement to her condition. On January 20, she sustained a grand mal seizure and thereafter continued to display disorientation, confusion, agitation and at times hostility. On January 21, Sullivan ordered antipsychotic medication. The nursing staff failed to record the order until the following day, at which time the staff discovered that the medication was out of stock. Despite this knowledge, the staff failed to notify Sullivan or to seek a substitute anti-psychotic medication. As a result, for a three-day period the plaintiff received no antipsychotic medication and her agitation consequently increased.

On the evening of January 23, the plaintiff’s condition grew acute. She was agitated, disoriented and confused, and appeared to be hallucinating. She was walking and running in circles, “chasing her *319 self,” and at times walking into walls. Because of her condition the staff maintained constant observation in order to ensure her safety and to calm and reassure her. The door to her room was kept open and unlocked because the staff was more comfortable keeping her in sight and because it was difficult to see into her room when the door was closed. At the change of shifts at midnight, the evening staff informed the members of the next shift that the plaintiff had been in bad condition throughout the evening and bore very close watching.

At 6 a.m. on January 24, the plaintiff came out of her room in an agitated condition and attempted to leave the Ford Wing. She made a similar attempt on two other occasions that morning. Hospital records reflect that she stated to one staff member that she was hearing voices telling her to hurt herself. The plaintiff’s remarks were especially significant because she had previously responded to voices telling her not to eat and not to take her medication by refusing either to eat or to take her medication. In response to the statement the staff administered a sedative and locked her alone in the seclusion room which contained a steel bed frame. One side rail was up, the other down even though the plaintiff had a known history of attempting to climb over side rails.

No antipsychotic medication was given to the plaintiff that morning to alleviate her agitation or her hallucinations nor was her physician notified of her acute condition. Although the plaintiff was observed awake from 7:30 to 8 a.m., no staff member attempted to speak with her or assess her condition, nor did any member of the staff enter the *320 room to break the seclusion or calm her agitation. From 8 to 10 a.m., the plaintiff remained locked in her room. From 6:15 until 10 a.m., no one entered her room to assess her condition, although at 9:50 aun., she was seen awake and psychotic. Shortly after 10 a.m., she was found in the position previously described, unconscious, with no pulse, blood pressure or respiratory function.

A few days following the plaintiff’s injury, the director of nursing at the hospital ordered the entire staff who charted the plaintiff’s care to rewrite and change the hospital records pertaining to the care she received on the morning of January 24. The original record was surreptitiously removed from the chart and a “revised” record was substituted without the knowledge of the hospital administration and in violation of explicit hospital policy.

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Bluebook (online)
430 A.2d 1, 180 Conn. 314, 36 A.L.R. 4th 94, 1980 Conn. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pisel-v-stamford-hospital-conn-1980.