Robin Rash v. Providence Health & Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 16, 2014
Docket31277-1
StatusPublished

This text of Robin Rash v. Providence Health & Services (Robin Rash v. Providence Health & Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robin Rash v. Providence Health & Services, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

SEPTEMBER 16, 2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DMSION THREE

ROBIN RASH, as Personal ) Representative of the ESTATE OF ) No. 31277-1-III BETTY L. ZACHOW, deceased, and on ) behalf of all statutory claimants and ) beneficiaries; Robin R. Rash, Keith R. ) Zachow and Craig L. Zachow, ) ) PUBLISHED OPINION Appellants, ) ) v. ) ) PROVIDENCE HEALTH & SERVICES, ) a Washington business entity and health ) care provider; PROVIDENCE HEALTH ) & SERVICES-WASHINGTON, a ) Washington business entity and health ) care provider; PROVIDENCE-SACRED ) HEART MEDICAL CENTER & ) CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL, a Washington ) business entity and health care provider, ) and DOES 1-10, ) ) Respondents. )

FEARING, J. - Plaintiff Robin Rash invites us to enter a path untraveled. She

brings a medical malpractice claim, on behalf of her mother's estate, in the form of a lost

chance, when she has no expert testimony as to a percentage of a lost chance and only

expert testimony that the medical negligence may have shortened her mother's life. She

has no testimony as to the length of the mother's decreased life expectancy. We decline No. 31277-1-III

Rash v. Providence Health & Servs.

the request to follow an unchartered course, and we affirm the trial court's grant of

summary judgment on behalf of Sacred Heart Medical Center. A higher authority will

need to map any new trail.

FACTS

On March 5, 2008, Betty Zachow, age 82, underwent a right knee replacement

surgery at Sacred Heart Medical Center (SHMC). Prior to surgery, she provided SHMC

a list of her medications, including metoprolol, a beta blocker used to treat high blood

pressure. Before surgery, Zachow also suffered from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, or

enlargement of the heart, a genetic condition, left ventricle outflow obstruction, and mild

to moderate mitral valve stenosis. Beta blockers reduced the heart rate. The beta

blockers also reduced the chance of emboli and strokes.

After surgery, SHMC failed to give Betty Zachow two doses of metoprolol, one

during the evening of March 5 and one the following morning. On March 6, Zachow

suffered a series of complications, including tachycardia and acute pulmonary edema,

and was transferred to the SHMC's Intensive Care Unit. Tachycardia is a rapid heartbeat

and pulmonary edema is the filling of lungs with fluid. Zachow recovered and, 10 days

after she entered the hospital, SHMC released her.

According to Robin Rash's medical expert, Dr. Wayne Rogers, Betty Zachow

suffered acute pulmonary edema and aspiration pneumonia as a result of SHMC's failure

to provide the two doses ofmetoprolol. The edema and pneumonia aggravated Zachow's

No. 31277-1-111 Rash v. Providence Health & Servs.

weakened heart. Acute pUlmonary edema also reduced oxygen saturation to the brain.

According to Dr. Rogers, Zachow should have been discharged one day after the surgery,

but instead a "profound illness" resulted in a 10-day stay. According to Rogers, Zachow

left SHMC in a weakened state from which she never fully recovered. Rogers concedes,

however, that Zachow's heart condition would have continued to deteriorate even without

SHMC's omission of medication.

On April 18, 2008, the SHMC's Director of Risk Management acknowledged the

medication error and offered to waive the charges for Betty Zachow's care. Zachow

never responded. Over the next two years Zachow suffered two strokes.

PROCEDURE

This appeal has a complicated procedural background, which includes two

lawsuits, later consolidated in the trial court. The background complicates a resolution of

the appeal but does not impact its substantive outcome.

On January 7, 2010, Betty Zachow filed a complaint, under Spokane County

Superior Court Cause No. 10-2-00084-9, alleging that as a result of SHMC's negligence,

she developed cardiomyopathy and suffered physical injury, emotional distress, and

"reduced life expectancy," among other injuries. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 6. She did not

specifically allege a loss in her chances to survive. On March 21, 2010, Zachow suffered

her third stroke and died. The stroke was the result of a cardiac embolism to the head.

On April 15, 2010, Betty Zachow's counsel sent a letter to SHMC informing it

No. 31277-1-111

that he intended to substitute a personal representative for Zachow and '"file an amended

complaint to include the Estate's claims, and include the claims of the Zachow adult

children as statutory beneficiaries." CP at 99. The beneficiaries are Robin Rash and her

two brothers, sons of Betty Zachow. Robin Rash, Zachow's daughter, was appointed

Zachow's personal representative but Rash never moved for leave to amend nor filed an

amended complaint. The parties, nonetheless, beginning in at least March 2011, ifnot

earlier, filed pleadings in Spokane County Superior Court Cause

No. 10-2-00084-9, whose captions removed Betty Zachow as plaintiff and named, as

plaintiff, "Robin Rash, [individually and] as Personal Representative of the Estate of

Betty L. Zachow, deceased, and on behalf of all statutory claimants and beneficiaries."

CP at 191.

On March 26, 2012, the parties filed a trial management joint report, in which

Robin Rash wrote, "Betty's adult children suffered from the untimely loss of [Zachow],

due to [SHMC's] negligence." CP at 13. In response, SHMC sent a letter claiming the

report was the first time it heard Rash sought survival damages for Zachow's statutory

beneficiaries separate and apart from the claims made by her estate.

In a motion in limine, filed on March 30, 2012, SHMC moved to preclude, at trial,

any reference to Betty Zachow's loss of chance of survival theory because the theory was

not pled. SHMC also argued in its trial brief that Rash must establish SHMC's

negligence was the '"but for" cause of Zachow's injuries. CP at 235.

No.31277-1-III

Robin Rash's trial brief, filed on April 3, 2012, argued that her original complaint

gave SHMC notice that she intended to bring a lost chance of survival claim. Rash cited

the original complaint's language that Zachow suffered from "reduced life expectancy."

In the brief, Rash also contended that one "can bring a claim for loss of chance of

survival and/or for wrongful death, based upon the substantial factor doctrine." CP at

241. To support her claim, Rash cited to deposition testimony of Wayne R. Rogers, who

opined that SHMC "promoted" or "accelerated" the disease process. CP at 242. Dr.

I Rogers could not provide a "mathematical figure" as to the degree SHMC accelerated the

!

I disease, but noted it was significant. CP at 73, 242.

During questioning by defense counsel at Dr. Rogers' deposition, Rogers testified:

I "Q. Doctor, just a couple follow-ups. Your bottom-line opinion is that because of the events in Sacred Heart in March of2008, Ms. Zachow's deterioration was accelerated? Is that what you're basically saying? 1 A. Or promoted. She eventually would have died anyway, as we all

I do, but she had a promotion of her disease process. Q. And you can't state, as we sit here today, how much her disease was promoted or accelerated; is that correct?

I ~ A.

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