Shedlock v. UPMC Presbyterian Inc.

69 Pa. D. & C.4th 1, 2004 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 121
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County
DecidedNovember 17, 2004
Docketnos. GD03-15564 (Consolidated) and GD02-3039
StatusPublished

This text of 69 Pa. D. & C.4th 1 (Shedlock v. UPMC Presbyterian Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shedlock v. UPMC Presbyterian Inc., 69 Pa. D. & C.4th 1, 2004 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 121 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

WETTICK JR., A.J.,

The subjects of this opinion and orders of court are plaintiff’s motion in Shedlock to compel a hospital to produce essentially the entire employment record of seven physicians who were apparently involved in plaintiff’s treatment, and plaintiff’s motion in Waldschmidt to compel production of the complete personnel files of two nurses and all respiratory therapists who provided respiratory care to the decedent on the date of a medical incident.

Shedlock is a medical malpractice action in which plaintiff alleges that she suffered brain damage because of defendants’ overly rapid correction of her low sodium levels. Plaintiff’s claims against UPMC Presbyterian Inc. are set forth in the second count of her complaint. Plaintiff alleges that the physicians, nurses, and other healthcare personnel who observed, examined, and/or treated plaintiff while she was a patient at UPMC were the agents, servants, and/or employees of UPMC acting within the course and scope of their employment. Plaintiff’s complaint sets forth 16 acts of negligence, most of which relate to the negligence of the persons providing medical care with respect to regulating, adjusting, monitoring, recording and reporting plaintiff’s sodium. The complaint also includes a general allegation that [4]*4UPMC was negligent in failing to have the hospital “staffed with sufficient competent physicians, nurses and other healthcare personnel” (paragraph 60) and “in failing to have plaintiff diagnosed, cared for, and/or treated by competent physicians” (paragraph 61).

Plaintiff seeks a court order compelling the hospital to provide the following documents for each of the seven physicians who, according to plaintiff’s brief at 3, administered intravenous fluids to plaintiff while she was a patient at UPMC:

“Requests For Production
(1) With respect to Dr._please produce:
(a) All applications for medical staff privileges. This request includes his initial application/request for privileges and all subsequent applications/requests for privileges.
(b) Lists of privileges sought by him.
(c) Letters to references to verify his education, training, experience and competence, including but not limited to those directed to his medical school and prior employers, residency program, fellowship program, director, department chairs, chiefs of staff, etc.
(d) All documents concerning his continuing medical education.
(e) All records concerning his training, experience and competence.
(f) All documents provided by him, or any other person, in support of his application/request for privileges or renewal thereof.
(g) All documents concerning your approval, denial or other decisions concerning staff privileges.
[5]*5(h) All documents concerning the delineation of the privileges or limitation of privileges that were afforded to him.
(i) Any document that sets forth or describes the specific privileges or limitations of privileges granted to him by you at any time.
(j) All documents concerning inquiries made to the National Practitioner Databank.
(k) All documents received from the National Practitioners Data Bank.
(l) His residency evaluation forms.
(m) A copy of any board certifications.
(n) All documents concerning any licenses or certificates.
(o) Physician profile reports or any document regarding the type and number of procedures and/or admissions performed by him.
(p) All committee memberships.
(q) All documents concerning any claim made against him.
(r) All reports and complaints regarding him.
(s) Any complaints by patients, nurses or other staff concerning him.
(t) All letters to him and all letters from him.
(u) Actions/recommendations by credential committee, executive committee or board of trustees.
(v) All contracts entered into by and between him and Highlands Hospital.
Response:”

UPMC opposes the production of these documents on the ground that the request is overly broad and seeks [6]*6information that is not relevant to plaintiff’s claims against the hospital.1

In Waldschmidt, the plaintiff’s husband was transferred on August 30, 2000 from defendant Allegheny General Hospital to defendant St. John’s Lutheran Care Center. Plaintiff alleges that on September 6,2000 her husband, while at St. John’s, suffered a cardiac and/or pulmonary arrest and was thereafter not properly or timely resuscitated, as a result of which he suffered severe brain damage and other injuries. The complaint’s negligence allegations as to St. John’s are set forth in paragraph 22 of the complaint, which reads as follows:

“(22) Defendant St. John’s and its agents, servants and/ or employees were negligent, reckless and careless in some or all of the following particulars:
(a) In causing and/or permitting plaintiff’s decedent to suffer a cardiac and/or respiratory arrest and not to be properly resuscitated;
(b) In causing and/or permitting decedent to suffer brain damage and other injuries which occurred while decedent was a patient;
(c) In failing to monitor decedent’s condition on an ongoing basis;
(d) In failing to monitor decedent’s condition at necessary intervals;
(e) In failing to properly resuscitate decedent after a cardiac and/or respiratory arrest had occurred;
[7]*7(f) In failing to have sufficient physicians, nurses and/ or other healthcare professionals, properly trained, to monitor, care for and/or treat decedent;
(g) In failing to oversee the care being rendered to decedent;
(h) In failing to have its facility equipped with the equipment necessary to monitor, care for and/or treat decedent;
(i) In accepting decedent as a patient when defendant St. John’s was not properly staffed and equipped to care for decedent in the condition in which he was at the time he was transferred from Allegheny General Hospital;
(j) In failing to advise the other defendants herein that it could not accept decedent as a patient because it was not properly staffed and equipped to care for decedent in the condition in which he was;
(k) In failing to transfer decedent to a highly-skilled facility which could properly care for and treat decedent;

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Bluebook (online)
69 Pa. D. & C.4th 1, 2004 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shedlock-v-upmc-presbyterian-inc-pactcomplallegh-2004.