Poliner v. Texas Health Systems

537 F.3d 368, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15580, 2008 WL 2815533
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 2008
Docket06-11235
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 537 F.3d 368 (Poliner v. Texas Health Systems) 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
Poliner v. Texas Health Systems, 537 F.3d 368, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15580, 2008 WL 2815533 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

This appeal brings to us a judgment awarding some $33 million, including prejudgment interest, against a major hospital and leading physician for alleged defama-tions. As we will explain, this extraordinary judgment rests on limited restrictions of Dr. Lawrence Poliner’s privileges at Presbyterian Hospital over a period of fewer than twenty-nine days to investigate concerns involving his handling of several patients. This peer review, which was headed by Dr. James Knochel, led to a suspension of Poliner’s cardiac catheterization lab and echocardiography privileges that lasted approximately five months. Poliner sued Knochel, Presbyterian, and other doctors involved in the peer review alleging various federal and state law violations. The district court found that the suspension enjoyed immunity from money damages under the federal Health Care Quality Improvement Act (HCQIA), 1 and granted a partial summary judgment. But *370 the court concluded that whether the temporary restrictions of privileges during the investigation enjoyed immunity from money damages presented questions for a jury.

The case proceeded to trial solely on the temporary restrictions of privileges. The jury found for Poliner on his defamation claims. 2 Poliner was able to offer evidence at trial of actual loss of income of about $10,000 — but was awarded more than $90 million in defamation damages, nearly all for mental anguish and injury to career. The jury also awarded $110 million in punitive damages. The district court ordered a remittitur of the damages and entered judgment against Defendants. We hold that Defendants are immune under the HCQIA from money damages for the temporary restrictions of Poliner’s privileges. We reverse and render judgment for Defendants.

I. Facts and Proceedings Below

A.

On May 12, 1998, Patient 36 presented in Presbyterian’s emergency room with chest pains, and he was referred to Dr. Lawrence Poliner, an interventional cardiologist who had a solo practice at Presbyterian Hospital. Diagnostic tests indicated that the patient was suffering from a heart attack, and that the patient’s right coronary artery (RCA) was partially blocked. Poliner performed a procedure to open the artery. However, Poliner made a diagnostic mistake: the patient’s left anterior descending artery (LAD) was completely blocked, and Poliner missed it. Another doctor, Dr. Tony Das, saw the LAD on a monitor in the control room. Poliner learned that he missed the LAD sometime after completing the procedure. Das spoke to him about the procedure and the LAD. Dr. Charles Levin, the director of the catheterization lab, heard that day that Poliner had performed an emergency procedure. He reviewed the patient’s films, and then spoke with Poliner.

In an addendum to the chart, Poliner admitted that he missed the totally blocked LAD. He wrote that “[i]n reviewing the films, it is apparent that the left anterior descending coronary artery is totally occluded,” and that “[a]t the time that this study was done and visualizing the anatomy in the laboratory from the video, this was not apparent, but it is obvious from reviewing the films.” Poliner indicated that he might have treated the LAD before the RCA had he seen it.

Patient 36 also suffered post-procedure complications. The patient suffered internal bleeding and eventually went into shock, deteriorating to the point that a critical care specialist, Dr. Kenney Wein-meister, was brought in. Weinmeister testified that the patient was suffering from “severe metabolic acidosis,” which “was due to what we call hypovolemia or essentially blood loss so that he didn’t have enough fluid in his vessels to maintain blood pressure, and that was due to a retroperitoneal hemorrhage or bleeding.” The patient was, in his words, “near respiratory failure.” Weinmeister testified that, had he not intervened, the patient could have died within an hour. Poliner was in the ICU a number of times following the patient’s procedure. There were problems contacting Poliner, although at trial there was testimony that he tried to call the ICU several times but he could not get through. Poliner also sent his wife, who is a nurse, over to check on the patient. As the patient’s condition deterio *371 rated in the afternoon, Poliner was not present. There was evidence at trial that he had another procedure scheduled that afternoon, but the time line is not entirely clear. Dr. John Harper, the chief of cardiology, was told about Patient 36 on May 12, and he reviewed the patient’s chart and films.

Dr. James Knochel, the chairman of the Internal Medicine Department (IMD), learned about Patient 36 from Das and Weinmeister the next day, May 13. 3 This, however, was not the first of Poliner’s patients to come to Knochel’s attention. Cardiology was part of the IMD, and four of Poliner’s other patients — Patients 3, 9, 10, and 18 — had been referred by the hospital’s Clinical Risk Review Committee (CRRC) to Knochel and the Internal Medicine Advisory Committee (IMAC), which Knochel chaired, for review. 4

Poliner’s care of Patients 3, 5 9, 6 10, 7 and 18 8 involved different issues of varying degrees of concern, but in each case, his medical judgment had been questioned *372 and, to some extent, criticized. 9 Although Patient 10 had been reviewed and cleared by the IMAC in March 1997, the other cases were of recent vintage. The CRRC referred Patients 3 and 18 to the IMD in early 1998. Knochel asked a cardiologist to review each case, and the IMAC considered the cases at the end of April. The CRRC referred Patient 9 to the IMD in April. Levin completed a review of the case sometime before May 13, although the IMAC had yet to take up the case. It was against this backdrop that Knochel learned of Patient 36. Knochel consulted with Harper, Levin, various hospital administrators and the members of the IMAC on May 13, and decided that he would seek an abeyance — a temporary restriction — of Poliner’s cath lab privileges to allow for an investigation as provided for in the Medical Staff bylaws. 10

Late on May 13, Knochel met with Po-liner, Harper, and Levin, and asked Poliner to agree to the abeyance. When Poliner asked what his options were, Knochel told him that the alternative was suspension of his privileges. 11 The abeyance letter was delivered to Poliner the next afternoon, May 14, and Knochel asked Poliner to sign and return it by 5:00 p.m. The letter advised Poliner that Patient 36 was the catalyst, and that Patients 3, 9, and 18 had also been referred by the CRRC to the IMD.

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Bluebook (online)
537 F.3d 368, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 15580, 2008 WL 2815533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poliner-v-texas-health-systems-ca5-2008.