Sharon Lecroy v. Byrd Regional Hospital

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 2011
DocketCA-0010-0904
StatusUnknown

This text of Sharon Lecroy v. Byrd Regional Hospital (Sharon Lecroy v. Byrd Regional Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharon Lecroy v. Byrd Regional Hospital, (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

1 HEARD: January 4, 2011 2 CIRCULATED: January 5, 2011 3 PANEL: JTG #1; JCP #2; EAP #3 4 RECOMMEND: Publication. 5 6 7 STATE OF LOUISIANA 8 9 COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT 10 11 10-904 12 13 SHARON LECROY, INDIVIDUALLY 14 AND ON BEHALF OF BRANDY COOK 15 16 VERSUS 17 18 BYRD REGIONAL HOSPITAL, 19 DR. HUSSEIN ALAMMAR, 20 DR. MOHAMED SHEHATA, 21 DR. HEMANT PANDE, AND 22 DR. JOSEPH CROOKSHANK, JR. 23 24 25 ********** 26 27 APPEAL FROM THE 28 THIRTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT 29 PARISH OF VERNON, NO. 79,099-B 30 HONORABLE JOHN C. FORD, DISTRICT JUDGE 31 32 ********** 33 34 JAMES T. GENOVESE 35 JUDGE 36 37 ********** 38 39 Court composed of Jimmie C. Peters, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and James T. Genovese, 40 Judges. 41 42 AFFIRMED. 43 44 45 46 John E. Morton 47 Morton Law LLC 48 1450 Peterman Drive 49 Post Office Box 11950 50 Alexandria, Louisiana 71315 51 (318) 448-1771 52 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: 53 Sharon LeCroy 1 J. Gregory Bergstedt 2 Jodi C. Andrews 3 Fraser, Wheeler, & Bergstedt 4 4350 Nelson Road 5 Post Office Box 4886 6 Lake Charles, Louisiana 70605 7 (337) 478-8595 8 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: 9 Dr. Joseph W. Crookshank, Jr. 10 11 12 Frederick B. Alexius 13 Jeremy C. Cedars 14 Provosty, Sadler, deLaunay, Fiorenza & Sobel, APC 15 934 Third Street, Suite 800 16 Post Office Drawer 1791 17 Alexandria, Louisiana 71309-1791 18 (318) 445-3631 19 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: 20 National Healthcare of Leesville, Inc. d/b/a 21 Byrd Regional Hospital 1 GENOVESE, Judge.

2 In this medical malpractice case, Sharon LeCroy, individually and on behalf

3 of the estate of Brandy Cook, appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in

4 favor of Defendants, Dr. Joseph W. Crookshank, Jr. and National Healthcare of

5 Leesville d/b/a Byrd Regional Hospital. For the following reasons, we affirm.

6 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

7 On July 28, 2005, Brandy Cook presented to the emergency department of

8 Byrd Regional Hospital in Leesville, Louisiana, via ambulance with complaints of

9 altered mental status and an increased respiratory rate. Ms. Cook was seen by

10 Defendant, Dr. Joseph W. Crookshank, Jr., who contacted Ms. Cook’s treating

11 physician, Defendant, Dr. Hussein A. Alammar; however, Dr. Alammar advised

12 Dr. Crookshank that he was “unable to accept [Ms. Cook] any longer and [that] he

13 had recommended that [she] go to a neurologist in Alexandria or Shreveport.”

14 According to the Petition for Damages, “Dr. Crookshank suggested a psych

15 evaluation, which was declined, and discharged [Ms. Cook] home.” The following

16 morning, Ms. Cook was found unresponsive and was transported via ambulance back

17 to Byrd Regional Hospital in cardiac arrest, where efforts to resuscitate her were

18 unsuccessful and she expired. An autopsy was performed by Dr. Collie Trant, a

19 forensic pathologist for the Lafayette Parish Coroner’s Office, whose report stated

20 that the cause of Ms. Cook’s death was an “accident” caused by “[a]cute citalopram[1]

21 use[.]”

22 This matter was submitted to a medical review panel, and, on December 10,

23 2007, the medical review panel rendered an opinion wherein it unanimously found

24 that the evidence did not support the conclusion that Dr. Crookshank and Byrd

1 Citalopram, also known as Celexa, is a serotonin reuptake inhibitor and was not prescribed for Ms. Cook at the time of her death. 1 Regional Hospital failed to comply with the appropriate standard of care. The

2 medical review panel’s written opinion specified, in pertinent part:

3 With respect to Dr. Crookshank, the panel finds that his treatment 4 of the patient was proper in all respects. He attempted to get 5 Dr. Alammar to come in to treat the patient, and he referred the patient 6 for other consults. He also treated the potassium deficiency properly. 7 8 With respect to [Byrd Regional Hospital], the panel finds that the 9 nursing staff and hospital personnel properly and timely followed all 10 physician orders and directives. The patient was timely triaged each 11 time[] and was monitored throughout the patient’s stays in the hospital.

12 Ms. LeCroy instituted this medical malpractice lawsuit on January 23, 2008,

13 naming, among others, Dr. Crookshank and Byrd Regional Hospital as defendants.

14 Dr. Crookshank and Byrd Regional Hospital each filed motions for summary

15 judgment, asserting that Ms. LeCroy will be unable to sustain her burden of proving

16 that they breached the appropriate standard of care owed to Ms. Cook because

17 Ms. LeCroy offered no expert testimony as to the standard of care and offered no

18 evidence as to whether said standard of care had been breached.

19 In her opposition to the motions filed by Dr. Crookshank and Byrd Regional

20 Hospital, Ms. LeCroy offered the affidavit2 of Dr. William Fann, a pharmacologist,

21 in which he opined that Ms. Cook “died by suicide.” Dr. Fann further opined that

22 “Dr. Crookshank’s failure to properly evaluate [Ms. Cook] for suicide potential, and

23 Dr. Alammar’s refusal to continue treating her on her visit to [Byrd Regional

24 Hospital] on [July 28, 2005], fell below standards and, within reasonable medical

25 probability, caused her to suicide [sic].” Ms. LeCroy supplemented her opposition

26 to the motions filed by Dr. Crookshank and Byrd Regional Hospital by offering a

2 This affidavit is dated September 18, 2009, and is Dr. Fann’s first of two affidavits.

2 1 second affidavit3 from Dr. Fann, wherein his opinion had changed. This affidavit

2 declared:

3 I have been made aware of the following sequence of events: 4 5 A. Dr. Ghanta, in her sworn deposition of November 6, 2009, 6 testified that she discontinued the prescription of citalopram 7 (Celexa), a serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), over a year before 8 [Ms.] Cook’s death. 9 10 B. Dr. Ghanta instituted a prescription for escitalopram (Lexapro), 11 which is also an SSRI and an enantomer [sic] of citalopram, in the 12 year before [Ms.] Cook’s death in July 2005. 13 14 C. On July 5, 2005, Diflucan was added to [Ms.] Cook’s prescription 15 medication regimen for the treatment of her severe candidiasis 16 esophagitis. Diflucan inhibits the metabolism of escitalopram and 17 thereby raises its blood level. 18 19 [] 20 21 The combination of prescriptions for Lexapro and Diflucan, under 22 these circumstances, within reasonable medical probability, caused the 23 elevated citalopram levels discovered at autopsy and listed as the cause 24 of Ms. Cook’s death. 25 26 [] 27 28 Dr. Alammar, who prescribed the Diflucan, should have been 29 aware of the known contraindications for its use under these 30 circumstances and should have given cognizance to this known 31 interaction of Diflucan and Lexapro.

32 A hearing was held on November 9, 2009. After taking the matter under

33 advisement and allowing the parties to submit post-trial memoranda, the trial court

34 issued Written Reasons on January 14, 2010, granting the motions for summary

35 judgment filed by Dr. Crookshank and Byrd Regional Hospital. The trial court signed

36 its Judgment on April 6, 2010. Ms. LeCroy has appealed.

3 This is Dr. Fann’s second affidavit. It is dated November 6, 2009.

3 1 LAW AND ANALYSIS

2 Assignment of Error

3 In her sole assignment of error, Ms. LeCroy alleges that “[s]ummary judgments

4 in favor of [Dr.] Crookshank and Byrd Regional Hospital were inappropriate due to

5 pending discovery request[s] and allegations of fault among the health care

6 providers.”

7 Standard of Review

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