Sanchez v. Kern Emergency Medical Transportation Corp.

8 Cal. App. 5th 146, 213 Cal. Rptr. 3d 830, 2017 WL 128168, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 80
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 2017
DocketF069843
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 8 Cal. App. 5th 146 (Sanchez v. Kern Emergency Medical Transportation Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanchez v. Kern Emergency Medical Transportation Corp., 8 Cal. App. 5th 146, 213 Cal. Rptr. 3d 830, 2017 WL 128168, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 80 (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

HILL, P. J.

—Plaintiff appeals from a summary judgment entered against him in his action arising out of injuries he sustained during a high school football game. Defendant provided ambulance services at the game; the crew of the standby ambulance assessed plaintiff’s condition and summoned a transport *150 ambulance to take plaintiff to the hospital. A short time later, plaintiffs condition deteriorated and the transport ambulance upgraded the call to a lights and siren emergency. At the hospital, plaintiff was diagnosed with and treated for a subdural hematoma. Plaintiff alleged the standby ambulance crew was grossly negligent in not properly assessing plaintiff’s condition and immediately transporting him to the hospital in the standby ambulance. Defendant’s motion for summary judgment was based on evidence its personnel were not grossly negligent in their assessment or care of plaintiff, and there was no evidence the brief delay caused by transferring plaintiff from one ambulance to the other caused any increase in the severity of his injuries. The motion was supported by extensive expert declarations. The trial court sustained objections to some of the opinions in the expert declaration submitted by plaintiff in opposition. It found there was no triable issue of material fact regarding causation and granted defendant’s motion. We find no error and therefore affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On October 2, 2009, plaintiff Abraham Sanchez, Jr., sustained an injury to his head while playing in a high school football game. The coaches, noticing he was unsteady when he walked, examined him. Plaintiff complained of head pain and winced when a coach shined a flashlight in his eyes. The coaches waved over the standby ambulance and its crew, paramedic Aaron Moses and emergency medical technician (EMT) Ben Armstrong. The ambulance and crew arrived within two minutes.

Moses first contacted plaintiff at approximately 2E25. 1 Plaintiff was sitting upright on a table at the sideline of the field; he responded to Moses’s questions. Moses testified he assessed plaintiff using the Glasgow Coma Scale, a clinical tool designed to assess coma and impaired consciousness. The patient is given a score for each of three categories of responses: eye opening response, verbal response, and motor response. Moses stated he assessed plaintiff with the highest total score possible, 15 out of 15, because of his responses to Moses. Plaintiff asserted Moses either did not assess plaintiff’s condition correctly or did not assess his condition at all, based on the symptoms plaintiff exhibited. Nonetheless, Moses told plaintiff he should go to the hospital and plaintiff agreed.

*151 At 21:30, Moses radioed dispatch for a backup ambulance to transport plaintiff to the hospital “code 2” (immediate response without lights and siren). 2 The standby crew applied spinal precautions, which were appropriate under the circumstances. They then loaded plaintiff into the ambulance and drove to the northeast corner of the field to meet the transport ambulance. The transport ambulance arrived at the football field at 21:34. The transport ambulance crew, paramedic Benjamin Ferguson, EMT William Hendricks, and EMT/paramedic trainee Ryan Rice, made first contact with plaintiff at 21:38. By 21:42, the transport ambulance was leaving the football field on its way to the hospital. Between 21:43 and 21:48, the transport ambulance crew upgraded the call to a “code 3,” a lights and siren emergency. They transported plaintiff to Kern Medical Center (KMC), a distance of approximately 31 miles, in 30 minutes. The emergency room personnel took custody of plaintiff at 22:13.

After a computerized tomography (CT) scan, plaintiff was diagnosed with a right-sided subdural hematoma. At 23:00, he was administered mannitol to reduce brain swelling. At 23:42, he was taken to the operating room where, at 00:35 on October 3, 2009, he underwent craniotomy surgery to relieve his brain hemorrhage. At some point, plaintiff suffered a posterior artery stroke.

In this action, plaintiff sued Kern Emergency Medical Transportation Corporation, doing business as Kern Ambulance Service (defendant), and others for his injuries. He alleged defendant was grossly negligent (the standard of care applicable to paramedics and EMTs pursuant to Health & Saf. Code, § 1799.106) in the care and treatment it rendered to him; defendant failed to properly assess him and failed to recognize he had sustained a traumatic brain injury that required immediate, urgent transport to a trauma center. Defendant allegedly wasted time and did not immediately, urgently or rapidly transport plaintiff to a trauma center, as a proximate cause of which his brain injury was made worse. Plaintiff conceded the crew of the transport ambulance did not act in bad faith or with gross negligence in treating him; he also conceded the hospital personnel were not negligent in their care of plaintiff.

Defendant moved for summary judgment, asserting there was no evidence to support plaintiffs allegations of gross negligence or causation of any damages. It argued Moses properly evaluated plaintiffs condition and could *152 not have immediately transported plaintiff to the hospital in the standby ambulance code 3 because plaintiff did not meet Kern County’s criteria for activating the trauma system (i.e., transporting plaintiff code 3) until he was placed in the transport ambulance and his condition deteriorated. Using a timeline, defendant also argued that the delay caused by using two ambulances was only two and one-half minutes, which did not harm plaintiff or increase his injuries. Additionally, it argued that, even if the delay was as much as 30 minutes, plaintiff could not demonstrate the delay caused him any injury, or increased the injury he suffered, because the medical literature indicates there is no evidence such a brief delay in treatment correlates with a worse outcome for the patient.

Plaintiff opposed the motion, arguing Moses failed to assess plaintiffs condition, or failed to properly assess it, and his resultant failure to rapidly transport plaintiff to the hospital was a substantial factor in causing his brain injury to be more extensive or severe. In support, he submitted expert declarations, including the declaration of Dr. Fardad Mobin, a neurological surgeon. Without addressing any of the medical literature presented by defendant, Mobin opined, among other things, that had plaintiff “been transported immediately upon Moses’[s] initial contact at 9:25 p.m., there would have been a decrease in brain swelling, and thereby pressure, because the administration of Mannitol would have occurred much sooner.” Defendant objected to portions of Mobin’s declaration.

The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment, after sustaining some of defendant’s objections to Mobin’s declaration and overruling others. It concluded plaintiff “failed to proffer substantial, admissible evidence from which a trier of fact could find in his favor on a necessary element of causation of injury.” Plaintiff appeals from the judgment subsequently entered.

DISCUSSION

I. Standards

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Bluebook (online)
8 Cal. App. 5th 146, 213 Cal. Rptr. 3d 830, 2017 WL 128168, 2017 Cal. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanchez-v-kern-emergency-medical-transportation-corp-calctapp-2017.