Robert v. Chodoff

393 A.2d 853, 259 Pa. Super. 332, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3850
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 20, 1978
Docket2418
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 393 A.2d 853 (Robert v. Chodoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert v. Chodoff, 393 A.2d 853, 259 Pa. Super. 332, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3850 (Pa. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinions

PER CURIAM:

Appellant hospital seeks to overturn a jury verdict in appellee’s favor in a medical malpractice action. In order to accomplish this purpose, appellant raises the following broad contentions for our consideration: (1) appellee did not introduce sufficient evidence to support the submission of alternative theories of negligence to the jury, (2) the lower court’s charge misstated the law of proximate cause and burden of proof, distorted the evidence, and confused the jury, (3) the lower court thwarted appellant’s presentation of its primary defense, and (4) the $800,000 jury verdict was excessive. We find these contentions unpersuasive.1 Ac[339]*339cordingly, we affirm the lower court’s order denying appellant’s post-verdict motions.

On June 18, 1965, appellee filed a complaint in trespass against appellant hospital and Dr. Richard J. Chodoff in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas. Put simply, the complaint alleged that the defendants’ negligence in performing a trans-thoracic vagatomy operation on appellee on November 4, 1963, and in rendering inadequate post-operative care resulted in serious brain damage to appellee. Over the next ten years, the parties engaged in an unremitting pleading and discovery battle. On May 21, 1975, a jury trial finally commenced before Judge CARSON, in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas.

The following facts emerged at trial. On November 17, 1962, beset by a bleeding ulcer, appellee entered appellant hospital. Dr. Chodoff performed a partial gastrectomy in order to correct appellee’s problem, and appellee left the hospital on December 22, 1962. However, massive bleeding from a marginal ulcer developed during the next year. Consequently, appellee reentered Jefferson Hospital on October 25, 1963. On the morning of November 4, 1963, Dr. Chodoff performed a trans-thoracic vagatomy; this elective operation entails cutting through the patient’s chest and side in order to sever a vagus nerve, thus decreasing the acidity contained in the stomach. After removing the ulcer, Dr. Chodoff closed and sutured the incision.2 After the operation, Dr. Chodoff issued 11 post-operative orders; one order required the checking and recording of the patient’s vital signs — including temperature, pulse, respiration rate, and blood pressure — every 15 minutes for one hour and thereafter every hour for ten hours. Despite this order, appellee’s temperature was recorded only four times on his graphic record dated November 4, 1963. [340]*340On the afternoon of November 4, 1963, appellee’s mother-in-law and his wife visited appellee in his hospital room. According to these two witnesses, they found appellee in distress and desirous of having his blood-soaked bandage and bedclothing changed. After appellee’s wife departed to locate a doctor, a nurse allegedly entered appellee’s room. Appellee’s mother-in-law informed the nurse of appellee’s discomfort; in response, the nurse, apparently in a hurry to go to dinner, allegedly “ . . . went to the window and took kleenex out of a box that was not his, and stuffed it down into the incision. . . . ” Appellee’s wife testified that upon her return to her husband’s room, she observed a kleenex tissue protruding from his bandaged area. At some point in the later morning or early afternoon of November 5, 1963, Dr. Chodoff entered a progress note into the hospital record; he observed that appellee’s blood pressure had unexpectedly fallen to 85 systolic, perhaps as a result of some bleeding from the ulcer. Also on November 5, 1963, Dr. Chodoff ordered that his patient receive an injection of penicillin and streptomycin as well as an aspirin suppository every four hours if his temperature exceeded 100 degrees. Dr. Chodoff specifically directed that appellee’s temperature be taken every four hours. At trial, however, he stated that a nurse would not awaken a sleeping patient in order to check a temperature and to administer aspirin suppositories.3

Appellee’s graphic record indicates that his temperature was 102.2 at noon on November 5th. At 4:00 p. m., his temperature was 101.4. However, the graphic record does not contain entries of appellee’s temperature at 8:00 p. m., on November 5th, midnight, or 4:00 a. m., on November 6th. At 8:00 a. m., on November 6th, a nurse registered appellee’s temperature at 105.2 on the graphic record. During the 16 hour hiatus between 4:00 p. m., on November 5th, and 8:00 a. m., on November 6th, someone made multiple entries of appellee’s pulse, respiration rate, and blood pressure in the [341]*341graphic record. Appellee also received aspirin suppositories at 10:45 p. m., on November 6th, and 2:00 a. m., and 6:00 a. m., on November 6th.4

Dr. Chodoff and Margaret Summers, for 20 years a head nurse at Jefferson and at the time of trial a supervisor of the hospital’s staff development, testified that hospital procedure required that a nurse at Jefferson would take a patient’s temperature and vital signs and then immediately record this information as well as any other pertinent observations in a nurse’s notebook. According to Ms. Summers, immediate recording in this notebook protected against a memory lapse before the nurse transferred the information to the graphic record kept outside the nurse’s station. According to Dr. Chodoff, transfer of the information contained in the nurse’s notes to the central graphic record was essential because a doctor visiting a patient at Jefferson would first consult the centrally located chart to ascertain the patient’s progress and current condition. At trial, neither appellant nor appellee could produce any nurse’s notes containing a recording of appellee’s temperature between 4:00 p. m., on November 5th, and 8:00 a. m., on November 6th. Furthermore, neither party produced a witness who could testify that appellee’s temperature either was or was not taken during this time period.5

At 8:00 a. m., on November 6th, a nurse took appellee’s temperature and recorded it at 105.2 degrees in the graphic record. At 10:45 a. m., after the administration of aspirin, appellee’s temperature registered 106 degrees. At this time, [342]*342a resident named Gosin6 examined appellee and made the following entry in the hospital progress notes: “Huge area of erythema [redness], marked induration [swelling] around chest wound and spreading up to left shoulder and down in left flank. Some crepitation [as a result of either gas bascillus infection or subcutaneous emphysema air gets underneath tissue and causes it to bubble] over this area. Foul-smelling bloody material aspirated. Sent for stat gram stain. Rapidly spreading cellulitis [infection of soft tissue under skin] and/or myositis [infection of muscle] appears to be present. The problem appears quite serious. Will await gram stain report [gram stain helps to determine the group of bacteria present].” The next entry in the progress notes, again made by Dr. Gosin, states: “Many gram positive rods and chains. Typical picture of clostridial cellulitis and myo-sitis. [A clostridial infection is an anaerobic infection present in traumatic wounds where the tissue is devitalized.] Will begin treatment.” Dr. Gosin’s final entry on November 6th states: “At 1:00 p. m., patient became hypotensive. Levophed started. [Levophed, a drug, was employed to counteract appellee’s plummeting blood pressure.] Skin test for gasgangrene antitoxin administered. If this is negative we will start the antitoxin.

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Bluebook (online)
393 A.2d 853, 259 Pa. Super. 332, 1978 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-v-chodoff-pasuperct-1978.