Smith v. Ochsner Health Sys.

353 F. Supp. 3d 483
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedNovember 13, 2018
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 17-9899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 353 F. Supp. 3d 483 (Smith v. Ochsner Health Sys.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Ochsner Health Sys., 353 F. Supp. 3d 483 (E.D. La. 2018).

Opinion

BARRY W. ASHE, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

Before the Court is the motion of defendants Ochsner Health System and Ochsner *485Clinic Foundation (collectively "Ochsner") for summary judgment,1 to which plaintiff Daniel G. Smith ("Smith") responds in opposition,2 and in support of which Ochsner replies.3 Having considered the parties' memoranda and the applicable law, the Court issues this Order & Reasons.

I. BACKGROUND

This Fair Labor Standards Act ("FLSA") action arises out of Smith's allegations that he did not receive overtime compensation while employed as a non-exempt transplant (or organ procurement) coordinator for Ochsner.4 The job description for a transplant coordinator at Ochsner included the following duties and responsibilities: responding to all calls for organs offered to the Ochsner Transplant Center; evaluating the medical management of the donor; verifying consent; communicating with physicians and surgeons to obtain acceptance of an organ; preserving the organ; arranging transplantation; transporting organs; and completing all associated reports.5 The parties essentially agree that transplant coordinators at Ochsner rotated among four categories of duties.6

Donor Coordinator . The first category of duties was that of "donor coordinator." In this capacity, the transplant coordinator would receive communications from the Louisiana Organ Procurement Agency ("LOPA") regarding organs potentially available for transplant.7 The donor coordinator would then access the donor's information on a database.8 On occasion, when acting as donor coordinator, Smith would identify a mistake in the database or a need for additional information, and he would contact the donor's hospital to obtain the correct information to provide to the transplant surgeon.9 After gathering this information, the donor coordinator could either decline the organ or, if the organ satisfied Ochsner's criteria (which is regulated by UNOS), enter a "provisional yes" before contacting the surgeon.10 The "provisional yes" indicated Ochsner was interested in the organ.11 To comply with UNOS regulations, Ochsner's established procedure required the donor coordinator *486to contact the surgeon on call and relay certain standard information.12 However, Smith testified to having rejected an organ without first contacting a surgeon if, in his experience and as dictated by the UNOS regulations, he knew the surgeon would not accept it.13 Nonetheless, no coordinator's decision was final; all decisions were reviewed by the surgeon.14 Dr. George Loss, a transplant surgeon at Ochsner who worked with Smith, testified that "it takes two to say yes ... and three to say no" to an organ, a rule of thumb that both parties agree constitutes Ochsner's policy.15 Specifically, according to Dr. Loss, to accept an organ, the recovery coordinator and the surgeon may say "yes"; but to reject an organ, the recovery coordinator and two surgeons must say "no."16 Smith admits that he advocated for very sick Ochsner patients to receive organs ahead of patients at other transplant centers, as directed by his supervisors and as permitted under UNOS protocol.17

Although LOPA could provide the matching program's results directly to the surgeon, Ochsner handled "this aspect in-house" by employing coordinators such as Smith.18 Smith testified that, as donor coordinator, he communicated to the surgeon basic information generated by LOPA's matching program, such as the potential recipient's status on the list and the recipient's height and weight.19 On occasion, a donor coordinator would discuss with Dr. Loss, as transplant surgeon, the decision whether to accept the organ.20 Dr. Loss testified that the organ procurement coordinators were "absolutely critical" to Ochsner's success as a transplant center.21 Dr. Loss compared his interaction with the donor coordinator to that with a resident about a patient in the ICU: "They don't tell me everything that's going on with that patient ...; they tell me the things I need to know. And they know the things I need to know because we work together and we know what's important. But then there are certain parts that I ask more information, and they have to know where to get it or how to get it. And if they don't, they ask me, and I tell them."22 According to Smith, the surgeons "depended upon us to be correct. They trusted that the information we gave them would be correct to make a decision."23

Once an organ was accepted, the donor coordinator would arrange for the transportation of the organs.24 Although the organ procurement coordinators would not enter into transportation contracts on behalf *487of Ochsner, they would arrange transportation with companies under contract with Ochsner.25 In one instance, Ochsner implemented Smith's suggestion to purchase flight hours, rather than renting planes, as a means of managing transportation costs.26

Fly Out Coordinator . The second category of duties for transplant coordinators was that of "fly out" coordinator. A fly out coordinator traveled with the medical team to assist in recovering the organ.27 The fly out coordinator would contact the operating room where the organ was to be recovered, and then the fly out coordinator would apprise the surgeon and Ochsner's operating room of the organ's history and condition (such as the timeline of surgery, biopsy results, size, and viability problems, including whether there had been unexpected occurrences potentially affecting the organ like no heartbeat or no blood pressure).28 To transport particular organs, Smith helped to create checklists of supplies and then stocked them based upon the surgeon's directives.29 But Smith insists that his supervisors would authorize supply orders costing more than $10,000.30

Administrative and Backup Coordinator . The third category of a transplant coordinator's duties was that of administrative coordinator. An administrative coordinator was responsible for completing the paperwork related to the organ and Ochsner's patients.31 For instance, after Ochsner's committee confirmed that a patient needed an organ transplant, the coordinator would input the patient's information into a database to be matched to a donor by the computerized system.32

The fourth and final category of an organ procurement coordinator's duties was that of backup coordinator. In this capacity, an organ procurement coordinator would assist with lab work and donors as needed.33

The Rotating Duties in General

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Bluebook (online)
353 F. Supp. 3d 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-ochsner-health-sys-laed-2018.