Schales v. United States

488 F. Supp. 33, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12782
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedApril 25, 1979
DocketB-C-77-87
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 488 F. Supp. 33 (Schales v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schales v. United States, 488 F. Supp. 33, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12782 (E.D. Ark. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge,

Sitting by Designation.

This is a wrongful-death case under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The plaintiff is administratrix of the estate of Jacob Monroe Schales, Jr., deceased. She claims Mr. Schales’s death was caused by the negligence of employees of the United States at the Veterans Administration Hospital in *35 Little Rock, Arkansas. The case was tried to the Court, sitting without a jury (as is customary in Federal Tort Claims Act cases), in Batesville, Arkansas, on March 4 and 5,1980. The Court has read in full the three documentary exhibits and five depositions offered in evidence, and now makes its findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Liability

Mr. Schales, a veteran, was 51 years old. He was admitted to the VA Hospital in Little Rock on December 22, 1975. He had chest pain, shortness of breath, tachycardia (fast heartbeat — his pulse was 140), and had been vomiting (PX 1). According to James B. Searcy, M.D., the admitting physician, Mr. Schales was “very sick” (Searcy dep. 5). On the form for hospital admission (part of PX 1), Dr. Searcy at first checked the box marked “emergent” (which means a patient is dying, see Seracy dep. 6), then crossed it out and marked “urgent,” the next most serious classification. Dr. Searcy estimated the likely length of the patient’s stay in the hospital as 7 days. The patient was admitted to the general-medicine section of the hospital. Dr. Searcy testified that his symptoms could be consistent with heart problems (dep. 10).

Between 6:30 and 7:00 p. m'. that night, Mr. Schales was seen by Michael Crawley, M.D. His symptoms were compatible with “infarction or an incipient cardiac infarction.” An infarction is the death of a portion of heart tissue, commonly called a heart attack. An electrocardiogram was done (some times called an EKG, some times an ECG), and it appeared normal to Dr. Crawley (dep. 29). A single EKG, however, may not be a reliable indication that an infarction is not about to happen. Dr. Crawley ordered another EKG done on the morning of December 23 (PX 1; Crawley dep. 36). It was not done, though good medical practice dictated that the EKG be repeated (Crawley dep. 36). 1 Customary enzyme tests were also done. Three enzymes known as LDH, SGOT, and CPK were tested. Their values were elevated— especially the CPK-a circumstance that is consistent with damage to the heart muscle, though by no means diagnostic in and of itself. Dr. Crawley saw the results of the enzyme test on the morning of the 23d, but he did not then follow up to see if the second EKG had been done (dep. 38).

The picture Mr. Schales presented made myocardial infarction a possibility (Crawley dep. 36). Dr. Crawley’s diagnosis was costochondritis, a recognized condition involving pain in the chest that could be brought on by coughing. Mr. Schales had had a cough on the 22d. The enzyme tests could have been repeated to see if the elevated level persisted, and follow-up enzyme tests should have been done based on “standards of medical care observed in this community and in this hospital” (Crawley dep. 39). These follow-up tests, 2 which were not done, might have eliminated the possibility that the enzyme levels were due to injections Mr. Schales had received from a local physician the morning of the 22nd. With this possibility out of the way, the chance that an infarction was occurring or imminent would have appeared greater to Dr. Crawley. Crawley did not review his findings with, or ask that the patient be examined by, a cardiologist (Crawley dep. 50), though a cardiologist was available at all times (de Soyza dep. 7). On the morning of the next day, Christmas Eve, Mr. Schales was discharged. Dr. Crawley summarized the case as follows (dep. 51):

Q Doctor, wouldn’t it be accurate to say that in reviewing these records that those things that should have been done *36 to eliminate the possibility of a heart attack by the standards of medical practice observed in this community were not in fact followed in Mr. Schales’ case?
A Yes.

Neil de Soyza, M.D., the VA’s staff cardiologist, also testified. He was of the opinion that the patient’s CPK was “markedly elevated” (dep. 15). That circumstance would have caused him some alarm as a cardiologist. He would have ordered further diagnostic tests before discharging the patient (dep. 15-16), including a new EKG. “[S]ometimes the evidence of a myocardial infarction takes a couple of days to manifest itself on a [sic] electrocardiogram” (dep. 13). Dr. de Soyza summed up (dep. 17):

Q Dr. de Soyza, taking the symptoms this man presented and these enzymes, would good medicine not say that you should rule out whether he had an infarction before he’s discharged from the hospital?
A If these enzyme values were.known to me, I would agree with you.

Mr. Schales went home (between Hardy and Ash Flat, Arkansas) on December 24, 1975. He seemed to be in less pain, but on Christmas Day he rubbed his chest constantly and didn’t feel well. On the 26th he lay around the house and was again unwell. On the 27th he did not have his normal appetite. These symptoms were more pronounced than his usual state of poor health. His family went out for a while. When they came back, he was on the floor unconscious. The family rushed him to the nearest hospital, 23 miles away in Salem, Arkansas. He died a few minutes after reaching the hospital. Michael Neal Moody, M.D., who saw Mr. Schales at the hospital, stated that he was “in cardiogenic shock” (dep. 3) on arrival. In Dr. Moody’s opinion, which the Court accepts, Mr. Schales died of an acute myocardial infarction (dep. 8).

The Court finds that the negligence of the United States was the proximate cause of Mr. Schales’s death. It is quite true, and triers of fact who have the benefit of hindsight should constantly remind themselves, that medical doctors are not magicians. Diagnostic problems are often imprecise and full of ambiguities. Mr. Schales would have died at some point anyway, as is true of us all. He might have died on December 27 even had he been kept in the VA hospital for further testing and observation. The cause of death might have been some condition wholly unrelated to whatever was wrong on December 22 when the patient was admitted by the VA. All these are possibilities, but they are no more than that. The facts found in this opinion, and particularly the opinions referred to on the part of the various physicians who have been quoted, demonstrate that had reasonably accepted medical procedures been followed, Mr. Schales would probably not have died when he did. If he was suffering, or about to suffer, an infarction on the 22d or 23d (as Dr. Moody’s opinion as to the cause of death indicates), further tests would probably have disclosed it. He would not have been discharged from the hospital, and would still have been there on the 27th. Defendant’s own expert estimated that his chances of survival might have been 20% better had he been kept in the VA hospital. Time is of the essence in preventing cardiac arrhythmia, and drugs are of some help if available immediately.

The Court has found, based on Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
488 F. Supp. 33, 1979 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schales-v-united-states-ared-1979.