Soileau v. HCA HEALTH SERV. OF LA., INC.

539 So. 2d 662, 1989 WL 10643
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1989
Docket87-1136
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 539 So. 2d 662 (Soileau v. HCA HEALTH SERV. OF LA., INC.) 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
Soileau v. HCA HEALTH SERV. OF LA., INC., 539 So. 2d 662, 1989 WL 10643 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

539 So.2d 662 (1989)

Lawrence SOILEAU, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
HCA HEALTH SERVICES OF LOUISIANA, INC., d/b/a Cypress Hospital and Dr. W.A. Bernard, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 87-1136.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

February 8, 1989.

Vincent J. Saitta, Lafayette, and Losavio & Weinstein, John H. Weinstein, Opelousas, for plaintiff/appellant.

Seale, Smith & Phelps, Donald J. Zuber, Baton Rouge, Gachassin, Hunter, Susan Severance, Nicholas J. Sigur, Lafayette, for defendants/appellees.

Before GUIDRY, KNOLL and KING, JJ.

KING, Judge.

The issues presented by this appeal concern whether or not plaintiff met his burden of proving medical malpractice.

Lawrence Soileau (hereinafter plaintiff) filed suit for damages against HCA Health Services of Louisiana, Inc., d/b/a Cypress Hospital and Dr. William A. Bernard (hereinafter the defendants) alleging that upon his admittance by Dr. Bernard to Cypress Hospital for treatment of chemical dependency he was detoxified and removed from all medications without the consultation of his prescribing physicians or a psychiatrist. Plaintiff claims this action constituted medical malpractice and caused him to sustain personal injuries. The case went to trial before a jury and at the conclusion of *663 the trial, motions for directed verdict were urged by both parties and denied. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants rejecting plaintiff's claims. A formal written judgment was signed. Plaintiff timely devolutively appeals. We affirm.

FACTS

Plaintiff is a chronic alcoholic and abuser of various antipsychotic and antidepressant prescription medications. These medicines have been prescribed over the years for plaintiff by different members of the psychiatric medical community to counteract his acute depressive and disassociative behavior. Plaintiff was first hospitalized in 1955 for his depressive behavior, just prior to his discharge from the United States Navy. Plaintiff has been a patient at various mental health facilities periodically since 1967. Before the occurrence of the event sued on, plaintiff worked for twenty-six years with Freeport Sulphur Company. His most recent position was that of janitor.

On September 20, 1982, plaintiff voluntarily committed himself into the Alcohol and Drug Program (hereinafter the ADP) at Cypress Hospital. The staff nurse on duty at the time of his admittance was Janice Bowman, LPN. Bowman asked plaintiff a number of questions when she completed his admittance forms, and noted that he was calm and alert. Bowman took a complete medical history on plaintiff, including past mental and physical ailments, treatments, and hospitalizations. While Bowman was taking his blood pressure, pulse, etc., plaintiff told Bowman that he was there to be "dried out and drug free." Plaintiff listed the medicines he was then presently taking as Etraphon Forte, 40 milligrams, three times a day; Tranxene, 7.5 milligrams, three times a day, and Stelazine, 5 milligrams, at night for sleep. He also listed Thorazine, but did not give a dosage. He told Bowman that he had been taking these particular medications for five years. Bowman testified she knew that these medications are used to treat different psychiatric nervous conditions. Plaintiff also related information concerning his nervous breakdown in 1978 but did not inform Bowman that he had been diagnosed as schizophrenic or ever given any other diagnosis of his condition.

Dr. William A. Bernard, a general family practitioner, was Soileau's doctor at Cypress Hospital. He took his own patient history from plaintiff within 24 hours after plaintiff's admission to Cypress Hospital. Dr. Bernard discontinued all of plaintiff's medications and maintained him on Serax to ease the detoxification process. Dr. Bernard testified that he felt able to recognize schizophrenic disorders when he saw them, but that plaintiff did not display any symptoms of schizophrenia upon his admission and that he did not diagnose him as suffering from such an illness at that time. Dr. Bernard further stated that if plaintiff had acted violently or otherwise inappropriately at admission, he would have been transferred immediately to a psychiatric closed ward. The only reference plaintiff made about his previous diagnosis as schizophrenic was after the occurrence of the event sued on and during the post-admission ADP Social Assessment.

The program to which the plaintiff committed himself was a standard type of chemical treatment dependency program modeled after the Hazelton/Johnston Program. At the time of the plaintiff's admission to Cypress Hospital, there was an almost identical treatment program in Baton Rouge and several others throughout the State. Since the time that the plaintiff's cause of action arose, two other dependency treatment facilities have been established in the community in which Cypress Hospital operates, both of which have programs substantially similar to that of Cypress Hospital.

A chemical dependency treatment program modeled after the Hazelton/Johnston Program generally has three phases of treatment: (1) detoxification to determine a baseline upon which to structure treatment; (2) education; (3) recovery/follow-up. Typically, a patient in a Hazelton/Johnston type program would be taken *664 off of all mood altering substances during the detoxification phase of the treatment.

On or about October 6, 1982, the plaintiff suffered some sort of emotional breakdown. Soileau became paranoid and violent and had delusions that he was God. He thought the smoke detector in his hospital room was bugged, so he sprayed shaving cream inside of the mechanism and pulled it off the wall. Plaintiff had been given a chip as reward for staying drug-free and sober and he thought the doctors were controlling him through this chip. Dr. Bernard sought a psychiatric consultation for plaintiff with Dr. Phillip Landry immediately upon witnessing his bizarre behavior. Plaintiff was treated with medication and was brought to the psychiatric ward, where he remained for 17 days.

On March 1, 1983, plaintiff filed this suit against HCA Health Services of Louisiana, Inc., d/b/a Cypress Hospital and Dr. William A. Bernard. He alleged that the defendants were grossly negligent in treating him for chemical dependency by removing him from all medications without first consulting the physicians who had prescribed his medications or a psychiatrist. Plaintiff alleged that the defendants are guilty of medical malpractice for violating the requisite standard of care ordinarily exercised by physicians in the medical community within the involved medical specialty. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendants. Plaintiff appeals urging two assignments of error.

LAW

In his first assignment of error, plaintiff claims that Dr. Bernard failed to comply with the appropriate standard of care, in violation of La.R.S. 9:2794, when he removed plaintiff from his medicine without first consulting the physicians who had prescribed his medications or a psychiatrist. La.R.S. 9:2794 A(1) states that:

"A. In a malpractice action based on the negligence of a physician licensed under R.S. 37:1261 et seq., a dentist licensed under R.S. 37:751 et seq., or a chiropractic physician licensed under R.S. 37:2801 et seq., the plaintiff shall have the burden of proving:

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Bluebook (online)
539 So. 2d 662, 1989 WL 10643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soileau-v-hca-health-serv-of-la-inc-lactapp-1989.