Roy Dalbey v. Heartland Regional Medical Center and Ashok Gokhale, M.D.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 2021
DocketWD83602
StatusPublished

This text of Roy Dalbey v. Heartland Regional Medical Center and Ashok Gokhale, M.D. (Roy Dalbey v. Heartland Regional Medical Center and Ashok Gokhale, M.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roy Dalbey v. Heartland Regional Medical Center and Ashok Gokhale, M.D., (Mo. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT ROY DALBEY, ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) WD83602 ) HEARTLAND REGIONAL ) FILED: April 6, 2021 MEDICAL CENTER and ASHOK ) GOKHALE, M.D., ) Respondents. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of Buchanan County The Honorable Daniel F. Kellogg, Judge Before Division One: Alok Ahuja, P.J., and Thomas H. Newton and Thomas N. Chapman, JJ. Roy Dalbey sued Dr. Ashok Gokhale and Heartland Regional Medical Center

in the Circuit Court of Buchanan County. Dalbey claimed that he suffered personal

injuries as a result of medical negligence by Dr. Gokhale, and that Heartland was

vicariously liable for Dr. Gokhale’s actions. Following a nine-day trial, a jury

returned a verdict in favor of Dr. Gokhale and Heartland. Dalbey appeals. We

affirm.

Background1 In the early morning on November 6, 2011, Roy Dalbey arrived at

Heartland’s Emergency Department in St. Joseph, accompanied by his roommate,

David Rosenbaum, and a neighbor, Kathy Hoffman. Rosenbaum had found Dalbey

1 On appeal “[w]e view the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict.” Snellen ex rel. Snellen v. Capital Region Med. Ctr., 422 S.W.3d 343, 346 n.1 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013) (citations omitted). unconscious and unresponsive in the bathroom of their apartment. Dalbey regained

some level of consciousness five to twenty minutes after Rosenbaum found him.

Hoffman and Rosenbaum drove Dalbey to the hospital.

A critical question – and perhaps the critical question – in this case is what

Heartland staff were told about Dalbey’s condition during his November 6, 2011

hospital visit. Dalbey’s medical records indicate that he told the emergency room

triage nurse that he had passed out after vomiting up blood approximately half-an-

hour earlier (around 2:30 a.m.). Dalbey stated that he had drank some alcohol

earlier that night. One of his friends told the nurse that when they found him,

Dalbey had “fixed pupils” and had been briefly unresponsive. The triage nurse did

not note any abnormalities based on her initial physical examination. The medical

records indicate that Dalbey was alert and oriented with no signs of acute distress.

Dalbey reported to the nurse that he was not in any pain, and in fact reported a

pain level of zero out of ten.

Dr. Gokhale was working in Heartland’s Emergency Department when

Dalbey arrived. Dr. Gokhale examined Dalbey. According to Dr. Gokhale’s notes,

Dalbey complained of nausea and a decreased appetite, and stated that he had

vomited blood. Dr. Gokhale found Dalbey to be neurologically normal – he was alert, fully oriented, and lucid, was able to carry on a normal conversation, and did

not slur his speech. Dr. Gokhale concluded that Dalbey had “almost certainly”

fainted as the result of a vasovagal episode, triggered when he saw his own blood

after vomiting. Dr. Gokhale ordered numerous tests related to gastrointestinal

bleeds, as well as an electrocardiogram (or “EKG”) that would look for potential

cardiac issues. Dr. Gokhale diagnosed Dalbey with gastritis versus peptic ulcer

disease. He prescribed Prilosec, a medication used to decrease gastric acid

secretion. Dalbey was discharged with literature relating to gastrointestinal bleeds, and with the recommendation that he obtain a follow-up endoscopy.

2 When he was discharged, the medical record indicates that Dalbey was

ambulatory and was discharged walking (rather than assisted in a wheelchair) to a

private vehicle, accompanied by his friends.

Although we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s

verdict in favor of Dr. Gokhale and Heartland, we note that Dalbey’s companions,

Rosenbaum and Hoffman, provided radically different testimony concerning how

Dalbey presented at the hospital, and what they and Dalbey told Heartland

personnel on the morning of November 6, 2011. While we presume under our

standard of review that the jury disbelieved this testimony, it provides important

background to the issues Dalbey raises on appeal.

According to Rosenbaum and Hoffman, Dalbey needed their physical

assistance both to enter and to leave the Heartland Emergency Department. They

testified that Dalbey could not remember what had happened earlier that night, his

speech was slurred, and he had difficulty communicating with Heartland staff.

Rosenbaum and Hoffman claimed that they told the triage nurse that Dalbey had

lost bowel and bladder control during his syncopal episode. They testified that they

told both the triage nurse and Dr. Gokhale that Dalbey had complained of severe

headaches, and that Dalbey stated that his headache was so severe that he “felt like his head was going to blow off,” and that it was a ten out of ten on a pain scale.

Hoffman testified that she told a nurse that Dalbey needed to have his head X-

rayed. In addition, Hoffman and Rosenbaum claimed that they, and Dalbey, all

asked Dr. Gokhale to order an X-ray or computerized tomography (or “CT”) of

Dalbey’s head. They testified that their requests were “blown off,” and that Dr.

Gokhale concluded that an X-ray or CT scan was unnecessary. None of the

circumstances and events which Rosenbaum and Hoffman described were

documented in Dalbey’s medical records, or corroborated by the testimony of Heartland personnel.

3 In the early morning hours of December 2, 2011, less than one month later,

Dalbey again arrived at Heartland’s Emergency Department, this time by

ambulance. Rosenbaum testified that he had noticed Dalbey acting strangely in the

bathroom of their apartment, scrubbing the sink with no running water, and that

Dalbey had said he had a “tremendous horrible headache.” Rosenbaum called 9-1-1

when he observed that Dalbey could not move his left side.

Dalbey presented at Heartland’s Emergency Department with an “altered

mental status,” was confused and had decreased responsiveness. Emergency

medical personnel reported to Heartland staff that Dalbey’s family had found him

on the floor in the bathroom confused and disoriented about one hour prior to

arriving at the hospital, and that when emergency personnel arrived at his home,

Dalbey was unresponsive. While the Emergency Department nurse was conducting

her initial examination, Dalbey began experiencing an active seizure.

Dr. Gokhale was again on duty in the emergency room. He ordered a non-

contrast CT scan. The CT scan indicated an intracerebral hemorrhage with acute

subarachnoid hemorrhage as well as intraventricular hemorrhage, possibly from a

ruptured intracranial aneurysm. At approximately 3:13 a.m., Dr. Gokhale

consulted with the on-call neurosurgeon at Heartland. The neurosurgeon recommended that Dalbey be transferred to another hospital because Heartland

could not treat the massive brain hemorrhage which the CT scan indicated Dalbey

had suffered. At approximately 3:33 a.m., Dr. Gokhale contacted the on-call

neurosurgeon at the University of Kansas Medical Center, and established plans to

transfer Dalbey there for further treatment. Dalbey was life-flighted to the

University of Kansas Medical Center at approximately 3:45 a.m.

Dalbey’s medical treatment revealed that he had an aneurysm in his right

pericollosal artery, which had ruptured on the night of December 1-2, 2011. Dalbey suffered intraparenchymal hemorrhage (bleeding in the brain), as well as

4 subarachnoid bleeding (blood leaking into the fluid surrounding the brain). As a

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Roy Dalbey v. Heartland Regional Medical Center and Ashok Gokhale, M.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-dalbey-v-heartland-regional-medical-center-and-ashok-gokhale-md-moctapp-2021.