Roseberry v. Brooks

461 S.E.2d 262, 218 Ga. App. 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 28, 1995
DocketA95A0177, A95A0353
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 461 S.E.2d 262 (Roseberry v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roseberry v. Brooks, 461 S.E.2d 262, 218 Ga. App. 202 (Ga. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

McMurray, Presiding Judge.

In this action for medical negligence, plaintiff Gary B. Roseberry is the representative of the estates of his wife, Allegra Roseberry (deceased), and that of Amy Roseberry (deceased), a “twenty-three week gestation child, . . . whose life was terminated during the twenty-third week of term of the deceased mother’s pregnancy.” The complaint alleges that Allegra Roseberry was admitted to DeKalb General Hospital on March 21, 1988, and discharged on March 24, 1988, with a diagnosis of “sclerosing cholangitis.” On June 5, 1988, while she was under the primary care of defendant Walter S. Brooks, M. D., Allegra Roseberry was diagnosed as having “a malignant disease known as cholangiocarcinoma,” i.e., liver cancer. Although Allegra Roseberry had informed Dr. Brooks on June 3, 1988, “that her last menstrual period occurred January 14, 1988, [he] failed to perform a pregnancy test, failed to perform a pelvic examination and, as a result, failed to diagnose [Allegra Roseberry] as being pregnant.” Allegra Roseberry reentered the hospital on August 2, 1988, for treatment of her liver cancer, where, after a sonogram examination, “it was determined that [she] was twenty-three weeks pregnant.” Dr. Brooks, “a gastroenterologist, without consultation of a pediatrician or perionatologist, recommended that [Allegra Roseberry] consent to a clinical abortion to be performed by Defendant [Young W. Ahn, M. D.]. . . .” Allegedly “at the direction of her physicians, after being informed that the unborn child would be ‘doomed,’ and the stress of the pregnancy was impairing her health, [Allegra Roseberry] consented to a clinical abortion.” On August 9, 1988, “less than four days [after] the clinical abortion,” Allegra Roseberry herself died of gram-negative sepsis (infection). Defendants Dr. Brooks, Dr. Ahn, and The Emory Clinic, a Georgia partnership allegedly liable for the negligence of Dr. Brooks and Dr. Ahn under the doctrine of respondeat superior, denied the material allegations and the case was tried before a jury.

In support of plaintiff’s contentions, the following evidence was adduced: Gary and Allegra Roseberry were married in 1967. After they had been “married about five years,” they thought about having a child. However, they experienced difficulties because Allegra Rose-berry was a “victim of infertility.” Through an expensive course of treatment (over approximately ten years) under the direction of a se *203 ries of infertility experts, Allegra Roseberry’s first pregnancy resulted in the birth of Matthew Roseberry in 1983. In March 1988, Gary Roseberry noticed for the first time that “the whites of [Allegra’s] eyes were somewhat yellow.” On March 24, 1988, Allegra Roseberry was diagnosed at DeKalb General Hospital as having “sclerosing cholangitis, which is basically a scarring in the bile duct system of the liver.” This is “a very serious liver problem. To date the only cure for it was a liver transplant.” Allegra Roseberry was referred to The Emory Clinic for evaluation for a liver transplant. From the date of Allegra Roseberry’s discharge from DeKalb General Hospital in March 1988 to May 27, 1988, Gary Roseberry noticed that Allegra’s “skin color continued to become more of a coppertone or olive color.” Also her abdomen became distended and she “lost ... a little bit of weight. . . .” Gary Roseberry recalled the May 27, 1988, visit to Allegra Roseberry’s regular physician, George R. Jones, M. D. (a named defendant but a non-party to this appeal), where she told Dr. Jones that “she felt like she was pregnant.” Specifically, “her breasts were swollen and . . . rather tender, and her ears seemed to have fluid in them. . . .” Gary Roseberry further affirmed that Allegra Roseberry had “frequent [nighttime] urination[, . . . and] shortness of breathf.]” The Roseberrys had stopped active birth control in 1986. They were not actively seeking to have another child, and Gary Rose-berry “felt with Allegra’s infertility the chances were pretty slim [they] could have a child on [their] own.”

On June 3, 1988, Allegra Roseberry had her first appointment with defendant Walter S. Brooks, M. D., a gastroenterologist at defendant The Emory Clinic. Gary Roseberry recalled that, after Allegra Roseberry had been examined, Dr. Brooks stated: “ ‘This woman needs a transplant now.’ ” During this visit, Allegra Roseberry told Dr. Brooks “that [she felt] pregnant.” Although “[p]atients with sclerosing cholangitis are usually not an urgent transplant,” a CT scan revealed a tumor in the liver and at that time the more serious diagnosis of cholangiocarcinoma (liver cancer) was made. However, in mid-June, while the Roseberrys were getting Allegra Roseberry’s liver typed for a transplant and getting her on a waiting list, they were informed that “Allegra had terminal liver cancer. It really was beyond the point of a transplant, and it was our last hope. It was time to go home more or less.” Specifically, a biopsy was performed of “one of the lymph nodes between the liver and the bile duct[.]” This confirmed that Allegra had “metastatic adenocarcinoma.” The cancer had already spread from the bile duct “to the lymph glands.” The oncologist at defendant The Emory Clinic, Martin York, M. D., told the Roseberrys that there was no chance of a transplant and that Allegra Roseberry had only “three to six months . . .” to live.

In late July 1988, the Roseberrys heard of an experimental chem *204 otherapy being performed on liver cancer patients at Roswell Park Memorial Institute, in Buffalo, New York. As a prerequisite to this experimental chemotherapy, the patient must have a “low bilirubin level [and] Allegra . . . had a higher level than this protocol would allow.” Dr. Brooks agreed that this experimental chemotherapy was “a long shot but it was [the Roseberrys’] best shot, it was [their] only shot, and . . . having reviewed the protocol . . . [suggested that a] liver [stent] be installed . . . [to] drain the liver and lower [Allegra Roseberry’s] bilirubin count so that she could be admitted into this protocol.” Without the experimental treatment, the Roseberrys anticipated that Allegra Roseberry’s “life expectancy at best would be December,” although they knew the end could come as soon as September or October.

The Roseberrys were advised that the liver stent involves “a very dirty part of the body[, . . . and that the] chances of infection were great[.]” After this insertion, and despite successful drainage, Allegra Roseberry “did not get the bounce off of the liver [stent] ...” that was anticipated. Concerned that Allegra Roseberry was retaining abnormal fluid levels, Dr. Brooks ordered an ultrasound examination of her abdomen. It was this ultrasound examination that first revealed the existence of a fetus. Joseph H. Moyers, M. D., the radiologist who discovered the fetus, noted a positive heartbeat and observed the fetus “turning from side to side. The extremities were moving.” He estimated its gestational age at “21 weeks [. . . varying] a week or so in either direction[.]”

David Plotkin, M. D., affirmed that Dr. Brooks’ “failure to conduct a pelvic examination upon [Allegra Roseberry’s] admission to the hospital deviate[d] from the standard of care expected of physicians generally!.]” Dr. Plotkin also “[did not] think . . .” the abortion procedure itself was within the standard of care. Duane Thiele, M. D., affirmed that “the records [he had] seen associated with Dr. Brooks’ reasons for terminating the pregnancy . . . deviate[d] from the standard of care[.]” In Dr. Thiele’s opinion, if Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
461 S.E.2d 262, 218 Ga. App. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roseberry-v-brooks-gactapp-1995.