Teresa Grimes Kidd v. James Q. Dickerson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 5, 2020
DocketM2018-01133-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Teresa Grimes Kidd v. James Q. Dickerson (Teresa Grimes Kidd v. James Q. Dickerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teresa Grimes Kidd v. James Q. Dickerson, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

10/05/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 7, 2019 Session

TERESA GRIMES KIDD, ET AL. v. JAMES Q. DICKERSON, ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Maury County No. 15520 David L. Allen, Judge ___________________________________

No. M2018-01133-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________ In this health care liability action, the surviving daughter of a woman who died as a result of a stroke brought suit as executrix of her mother’s estate and as her next-of-kin against two physicians and their practice group as well as a pharmacist who filled a prescription for her and the pharmacist’s employer. Plaintiff alleged that the death occurred due to a stroke her mother suffered as a result of taking the drug Pradaxa, which had been prescribed by the defendant doctors and filled by the defendant pharmacist and the defendant pharmacy (the “pharmacy defendants”). The trial court granted summary judgment to the pharmacy defendants on all claims, holding that the proof submitted by Plaintiff was insufficient to establish the element of causation; the court granted summary judgment to the defendant doctors on Plaintiff’s claims that their negligence caused and hastened the decedent’s death, and the claim that the doctors did not have the decedent’s informed consent to administer Pradaxa; the court granted summary judgment to one doctor on all claims; and the court denied summary judgment to one doctor and the practice group on the remaining claims. Plaintiff appeals the grant of summary judgment to the pharmacy defendants and the doctors; the remaining doctor and practice group appeal the denial of their motions for summary judgment on the remaining claims. Upon our de novo review, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to the pharmacy defendants; we affirm the grant of summary judgment to Dr. Thomas Farmer in toto; we affirm in part the grant of partial summary judgment to the doctors and their group and remand for further proceedings on whether the nurse practitioner’s actions caused Ms. Grimes’ injury and suffering during the period of October 20 until she was stabilized in the hospital, as well as whether the remaining doctor and practice group are liable for that negligence under a respondeat superior theory.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part; Case Remanded

J. STEVEN STAFFORD, P.J., W.S.,1 delivered the opinion of the court, in which CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, J., joined. RICHARD H. DINKINS, J., not participating. 1 This opinion was assigned to the authoring judge on September 2, 2020. William Kennerly Burger, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, for the appellants, Teresa Grimes Kidd and Estate of Doris Ann Holt Grimes.

Marc Sorin, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellees, Rite Aid of Tennessee, Inc. and James Q. Dickerson.

J. Eric Miles, Phillip North, and Brent A. Kinney, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Thomas William Farmer, M.D., Charles Albert Ball, M.D., and Family Health Group, Inc.

OPINION

On September 30, 2014, 82-year-old Doris Grimes went to the Family Health Group (“Family Health Group” or “FHG”) in Columbia, Tennessee, complaining of pain and swelling in her lower left arm; she was seen by her primary care physician, Dr. Charles Ball, who diagnosed her with a blood clot. On October 7, she returned to the practice, complaining of a sudden onset of pain behind her right knee. She was seen by another doctor in the practice, Dr. Thomas Farmer, who ordered further diagnostic evaluations; he concluded that Ms. Grimes had a blood clot and prescribed a blood-thinning medication known as “Pradaxa.” Ms. Grimes had the prescription filled that day by pharmacist James Dickerson at a Rite Aid Pharmacy.

Ms. Grimes returned to Family Health Group on October 13 for a follow-up appointment relative to swelling in her leg. Her medical chart recites that she was “placed on one week of [P]radaxa and made appointment with [Dr. Ball] after seeing Dr. Farmer.” The chart records that Ms. Grimes stated that her leg “does get tender and sore if she stands to[o] long,” and that she has “a little bit of swelling at times.” The entry for October 13 states that Dr. Ball observed that the swelling in her leg was “now completely resolved,” that he changed her prescription to Xarelto, 20 milligrams daily, and set a one month follow-up appointment. On October 20, Ms. Grimes returned and was seen by a nurse practitioner, Shavonne Frierson; at that visit, an exam was conducted, which resulted in findings that Ms. Grimes was “ill appearing” and her cardiovascular rhythm was “irregularly irregular.” A chest x-ray was conducted, and an entry in her chart states that she was to be referred to a cardiologist “this week.”

On October 21, Ms. Grimes fainted and was seen at the Maury Regional Medical Center emergency room and admitted to the hospital for further examination and treatment. A consultation with a radiation oncologist was conducted on October 24, who diagnosed her with a stage IV “malignant neoplasm of fundus of stomach” and said that “[t]he patient is symptomatic from blood loss secondary to her tumor in her stomach.” Ms. Grimes’ pathology “returned with invasive gastric adenocarcinoma”; “prior imaging had revealed a mass in liver which is now consistent with metastatic disease.” An MRI on October 24 revealed “multiple strokes consistent with embolic etiology.” Ms. Grimes was 2 subsequently diagnosed with “healthcare associated pneumonia” and later transferred to a nursing home; she remained non-communicative and non-responsive until she expired on November 21, 2014.

Ms. Grimes’ daughter, Teresa Kidd (“Plaintiff” or “Ms. Kidd”), filed a healthcare liability action on January 22, 2016 in her capacity as executrix of her mother’s estate and as her next-of-kin; the complaint named as defendants Drs. Farmer and Ball and Family Health Group, (collectively, “Defendant Doctors”), as well as pharmacist James Dickerson and Rite Aid (collectively, “Pharmacy Defendants”). The complaint sought compensatory damages for the “excruciating pain and suffering” endured by Ms. Grimes in the six-week period preceding her death, as well as the cost of all medical expenses; Ms. Kidd sought damages on her own behalf as well as the estate for “loss of companionship, enjoyment of life, and any related economic losses.”

The complaint alleged that the Defendant Doctors breached the acceptable standard of professional practice by not recognizing “that internal loss of blood could explain the dramatic deterioration in the decedent’s physical condition since the commencement of the Pradaxa,” and that “[t]he decedent’s scant medical chart, as maintained and reviewed by Drs. Farmer and Ball, reveals no informed consent, minimal or otherwise, regarding the well-known, well-documented, potentially dangerous and irreversible side effects of the drug Pradaxa.”

The complaint alleged that the Pharmacy Defendants breached the acceptable standard of professional care “by failing to provide adequate instructions to the decedent regarding the potentially dangerous and irreversible side effects of the drug Pradaxa . . . which proximately and directly contributed in a substantial manner to the death of the decedent due to uncontrolled internal bleeding and a related stroke on November 21, 2014.”

The Pharmacy Defendants answered, denying liability and asserting the affirmative defenses of standing, the one-year statute of limitations, failure to state a claim, comparative fault, intervening cause, and others. The Defendant Doctors answered, denying liability and asserting the affirmative defenses of, inter alia, comparative fault, assumption of the risk, and the statutes of limitation and repose.

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Teresa Grimes Kidd v. James Q. Dickerson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teresa-grimes-kidd-v-james-q-dickerson-tennctapp-2020.