Regions Bank v. Hagaman

84 S.W.3d 66, 79 Ark. App. 88, 2002 Ark. App. LEXIS 482
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 11, 2002
DocketCA 01-1187
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 S.W.3d 66 (Regions Bank v. Hagaman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Regions Bank v. Hagaman, 84 S.W.3d 66, 79 Ark. App. 88, 2002 Ark. App. LEXIS 482 (Ark. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

John E. Jennings, Judge.

In August 1998, Willard Harris J was delivered by Dr. Michael Hagaman. The delivery was complicated by a shoulder dystocia, described as a medical emergency in which the baby’s head is delivered but one or both of the child’s shoulders are stuck within the birth canal. After the child’s birth, he was diagnosed with a permanent brachial plexus injury, a nerve injury to the right shoulder.

Lindsey Bumpus, the child’s mother, and Regions Bank, the guardian of the child’s estate, sued Dr. Hagaman in Baxter County Circuit Court alleging malpractice. During the jury trial each side presented the testimony of one expert witness: Dr. Bruce Bryan, an obstetrician from St. Louis, Missouri, testified for the plaintiffs and Dr. Herbert Sandmire, an obstetrician from Green Bay, Wisconsin, testified for the defendant. The jury found in favor of the defendant and the circuit court entered judgment on the jury’s verdict. Regions Bank and Ms. Bumpus now appeal.

Appellants’ sole argument for reversal is that the circuit court erred in refusing to grant their motion in limine seeking to prohibit the defendant’s expert, Dr. Sandmire, from testifying at trial. We find no error and affirm.

The case cannot be understood without at least a summary of the testimony of the expert witnesses. Dr. Bruce Bryan had practiced as an obstetrician for twenty years. He testified that he was familiar with “guidelines or rules” which doctors are taught to follow when dealing with a shoulder dystocia delivery. He said that a shoulder dystocia will occur in approximately one out of 100 deliveries. A shoulder dystocia is an emergency which must be dealt with immediately. Dr. Bryan said the first rule is not to lose your head.

Dr. Bryan testified that he was not certain exactly what was meant by “bilateral shoulder impaction,” but that he believed that both of the child’s shoulders were stuck during delivery. He testified that the first thing that should be considered is the adequacy of the episiotomy (an incision to enlarge the birth canal). Dr. Bryan said the next two steps that should be taken are that the patient should be put in the “McRoberts position,” which rotates the pelvis and changes the angle, and then suprapubic pressure should be applied manually. He testified that he usually did the McRoberts maneuver first and then would add suprapubic pressure. He testified that he did not believe that the weight of the mother, 294 pounds in this case, made any difference in the efficacy of applying suprapubic pressure.

Dr. Bryan then described what he characterized as a “second tier” of options which might be performed if the McRoberts maneuver and suprapubic pressure were unsuccessful to deliver the baby. He testified that the delivery of the posterior arm of the child is a possible maneuver, but that there is a risk of breaking the baby’s arm or collarbone. He testified that he could not perform this maneuver because his hands were too big.

He also described the “Woods screw maneuver,” which also involves reaching up into the birth canal. In this procedure the doctor tries to rotate the baby within the birth canal. He described a third maneuver called the “Rubin maneuver” in which the doctor tries to “shrug” the shoulders. If these steps aren’t successful one must escalate traction, meaning that the baby must be pulled out. He testified that a brachial plexus injury can occur even when the delivering doctor has done nothing wrong and that it had happened to him. He also discussed the Zavanelli maneuver in which the baby’s head is pushed back into the birth canal and a Caesarean section is performed. Dr. Bryan testified that a 1998 article in Precis: Obstetrics (2d ed. 2000), a medical treatise, stated that eighty-five to ninety percent of shoulder dys-tocias are relieved without injury to the fetus with the use of the McRoberts maneuver and suprapubic pressure.

Dr. Bryan testified that the record of delivery did not show that Dr. Hagaman attempted to use suprapubic pressure or the Woods screw maneuver, or that he attempted to deliver the posterior arm. Dr. Bryan said:

I believe that suprapubic pressure would have relieved this shoulder dystocia, again eighty-five percent of the time, and we wouldn’t have been to the point where the Woods screw would have been an issue, so the question of whether the standard of care required this defendant to attempt to do the Woods screw maneuver is a difficult question for me to answer. I think the real problem is not doing simple suprapubic pressure, which does not cause injury and which works much of the time.

Dr. Bryan testified that the delivering doctor would have had about four to five minutes to perform various maneuvers before the child might have suffered brain damage. He testified that he could not guarantee that the child would have been delivered safely had suprapubic pressure been applied and that a brachial plexus injury can occur while the child is still in the uterus even without a shoulder dystocia. He testified that the occurrence of a brachial plexus injury does not mean that the obstetrician was not within the standard of care.

On cross-examination, Dr. Bryan testified that there are times when the doctor has to apply that degree of force necessary to deliver the baby. He conceded that a subsequent version of the Precis article, published in 2000, omitted the statement that eighty-five to ninety percent of shoulder dystocias can be safely resolved by the use of McRoberts and suprapubic pressure. He conceded that there was no protocol that should serve to substitute for clinical judgment during delivery. He said, “If McRoberts does not work, you increase the traction and if pressure doesn’t work, increase the traction, if something else doesn’t work, then you kind of start over again.”

Dr. Herbert Sandmire had delivered almost 11,000 babies since he began his career as an obstetrician and gynecologist in 1959. He had taught at the University of Wisconsin Medical School and had published thirty-six scientific articles, some of which dealt with the problems of brachial plexus injury and shoulder dystocia. He testified that bilateral shoulder dystocia, while uncommon, is described in the literature. He explained why delivery of the posterior arm and the Woods screw maneuver were not viable options for a bilateral shoulder dystocia. He testified that there was no recognized order of procedure that a doctor must follow to deliver a baby who presents with a shoulder dys-tocia. He said that he attempted to discover who authored the 1998 Precis article referred to by Dr. Bryan but was unable to do so. He said that the weight of the mother does decrease the ability to use suprapubic pressure. He testified that in his opinion it was not a violation of the standard of care for Dr. Hagaman not to have had the nurse apply suprapubic pressure. He expressed his opinion that suprapubic pressure would not have been effective in this case because of the mother’s weight. He said that, in his view, no one with any authority has ever purported to lay down strict rules by which babies must be delivered once a shoulder dystocia has occurred. Dr. Sandmire testified that his opinion that suprapubic pressure would not have been effective in this case was based on his own experience in delivering babies, but was also supported, to a certain extent, by an article written by a Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.3d 66, 79 Ark. App. 88, 2002 Ark. App. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regions-bank-v-hagaman-arkctapp-2002.