Sharma v. Luong CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 4, 2015
DocketH039492
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sharma v. Luong CA6 (Sharma v. Luong CA6) 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
Sharma v. Luong CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 9/3/15 Sharma v. Luong CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

RAVI SHARMA, H039492 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 112-CV-217846)

v.

JEAN F. LUONG,

Defendant and Respondent.

Sheila Sharma passed away in November 2010. Her son, Ravi Sharma, brought a wrongful death action against her primary care doctor, Dr. Jean F. Luong, based on failure to evaluate decedent for urosepsis two years earlier. We will affirm summary judgment in favor of defendant because plaintiff has failed to demonstrate a triable issue of material fact regarding breach of the standard of medical care. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND In December 2008, decedent Sheila Sharma, then 83 years old, was examined by defendant, her primary care physician of many years. At that time decedent had an extensive medical history including chronic kidney disease, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus with neuropathy, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, and severe labile hypertension. She had had percutaneous coronary intervention and stenting of her renal artery. Defendant had referred her to a nephrologist for renal deficiency treatment the previous year. Decedent underwent a renal perfusion scan and extensive laboratory evaluation during a trip to India in November 2008. The scan showed 97 percent perfusion to the left kidney, but a negligibly functioning shrunken right kidney with only 4 percent perfusion. She was prescribed approximately 12 maintenance medications. According to defendant’s handwritten examination notes documenting decedent’s December 5, 2008 office visit, plaintiff complained of pain in the right foot, weakness, and fever. Decedent’s temperature was 98 degrees, her pulse was 68, and her blood pressure was 90-110/70. She had no cough, and her lungs were clear. Defendant did not note any complaints of burning with urination or frequent urination. Defendant’s diagnosis included dehydration and chronic kidney disease. Because of her relatively low blood pressure, defendant advised decedent to decrease her blood pressure medications. Although defendant advised her to finish a course of Zithromax, his notes do not reveal how, when, or why decedent had procured that antibiotic. According to defendant’s notes, a comprehensive metabolic blood panel and hemoglobin A1c blood test were ordered.1 Those results, reviewed by defendant on December 8, showed out-of-range BUN (urea nitrogen) and creatinine levels. The BUN had improved since her testing a month earlier in India, decreasing from 102 to 54, but her creatinine level had worsened, increasing from 1.5 to 2.8. According to hospital records, decedent arrived at O’Connor Hospital by ambulance on December 9 complaining of weakness, poor appetite, nausea, vomiting, and chills. Decedent reported shortness of breath while lying down and a cough present for five days. Upon admittance, decedent’s blood pressure was 156/101, her pulse was 121, and her respirations were 27 per minute. Blood and urine cultures were ordered because of clinical evidence of sepsis. Decedent’s initial lab work revealed a urinary tract infection and acute kidney injury, with a creatinine of 6.5 and a BUN of 107. Decedent was given an intravenous antibiotic (Levaquin) and admitted to the intensive

1 The parties dispute whether the notes also show defendant ordering a comprehensive blood count. 2 care unit.2 The attending physician ordered Ceftriaxone for the urinary tract infection, and a renal specialist later prescribed Gentamicin. On December 13, a doctor consulting on decedent’s septic condition reported that blood and urine cultures showed urosepsis—a secondary bacterial infection that spread from the urinary tract to the blood stream—caused by ESBL-producing E. coli. The Levaquin was discontinued and decedent was started on Imipenem to treat the sepsis.3 As of December 13, decedent was stable on that medication and was clinically improving. Decedent’s hospital stay was difficult due to urosepsis and other complex medical issues. Decedent was monitored by a cardiologist, an infectious disease specialist, an endocrinologist, an otolaryngologist, a neurologist, and a gastroenterologist. She required hemodialysis three times weekly and tube feeding. Decedent was discharged to a nursing home on February 2, 2009. At plaintiff’s request, on March 15, 2009 decedent’s son-in-law, Dr. Vibhay Bhatnagar, provided a letter opinion regarding the medical care decedent received on December 5, 2008. In Dr. Bhatnagar’s opinion, which he represented was based solely on his review of defendant’s medical records, defendant had breached the standard of medical care by failing to diagnose and treat decedent for sepsis. Dr. Bhatnagar opined that the appropriate course of action would have been “to admit [decedent] to the hospital, hydrate her intravenously, obtain culture and treat infection appropriately.” He concluded that defendant’s negligence caused decedent irreversible kidney damage and long-term health issues.

2 Hospital records indicate that decedent finished the Zithromax on December 6, and, on her own accord, began taking Levaquin 500 daily. Like the Zithromax, the source of the Levaquin is unknown. 3 Hospital records do not show when urosepsis was identified or when decedent was started on Imipenem. 3 II. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS In November 2009, decedent filed a medical malpractice suit regarding the December 5 care and treatment she received from defendant. One year later, while her motion for summary judgment was pending, decedent passed away and her complaint was dismissed without prejudice. Plaintiff filed the instant action on January 31, 2012. The first amended complaint alleged negligence, survivorship, and wrongful death causes of action against defendant. The factual basis for plaintiff’s claims was identical to that alleged in decedent’s earlier malpractice action. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that decedent presented on December 5 “complaining of fevers, chills, generalized weakness and low blood pressure” and that, based on those symptoms, an “evaluation should have been made to rule out possibility of sepsis since decedent was at risk for development of same due to her co-morbidities.” Plaintiff alleged that defendant breached the standard of medical care “by failing to appropriately and/or timely evaluate, test, diagnose, and/or treat decedent’s condition by failing to consider and appropriately evaluate urosepsis … .” Plaintiff further alleged that decedent died on November 14, 2010 “due to kidney failure and cardiac arrest, a direct result of the septicemia which resulted in renal failure and dialysis, all as a consequence of the treatment received from [defendant] … on December 5, 2008.” The trial court dismissed the negligence and survivorship claims as time-barred, and defendant filed a motion for summary judgment on the remaining wrongful death cause of action. In support of that motion, defendant submitted the memorandum of points and authorities, statement of undisputed facts, and supporting expert declaration of Dr. Michael Podlone, all filed in the earlier malpractice case. Defendant also refiled the documents supporting the Podlone declaration, including decedent’s medical records retained by both defendant’s office and the hospital, and Dr. Bhatnagar’s March 2009 opinion letter. Defendant argued that he complied with the standard of care and that no act or failure to act caused decedent’s injuries. 4 Plaintiff opposed the motion with a declaration by Dr.

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Sharma v. Luong CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharma-v-luong-ca6-calctapp-2015.