Timblin v. Kent General Hosp.(Inc.)

640 A.2d 1021, 1994 Del. LEXIS 154, 1994 WL 184223
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedMay 12, 1994
Docket182 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 640 A.2d 1021 (Timblin v. Kent General Hosp.(Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timblin v. Kent General Hosp.(Inc.), 640 A.2d 1021, 1994 Del. LEXIS 154, 1994 WL 184223 (Del. 1994).

Opinion

VEASEY, Chief Justice:

In this case, we address the admissibility of statistical evidence presented by medical expert witnesses testifying for defendant below-appellee Kent General Hospital (“Kent General”) concerning the percentage of patients who die or suffer brain damage following a cardiac arrest. Plaintiffs below-appellants Leroy Timblin (“Mr. Timblin”) and his wife (collectively, the “Timblins”) appeal from the Superior Court’s denial of their motion for a new trial and from the judgment in favor of Kent General. The Superior Court found no error justifying the granting of a new trial. The statistical evidence, however, had little probative value to the issues in dispute and was highly prejudicial to the Timblins because it allowed the jury to base its verdict on irrelevant statistical probabilities. We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the Superior Court and REMAND the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTS

On March 14, 1988, Mr. Timblin entered Kent General complaining of chest pain. He was diagnosed as suffering from a heart attack. Mr. Timblin was admitted to the coronary intensive care unit of Kent General. The on-call internist, Dr. Christopher Giles (“Dr. Giles”), recommended a course of treatment that included thrombolytic therapy. The prescribed therapy involves the administration of anti-clotting medication, in this case, a combination of Activase and Heparin.

During the hours following his admission, Mr. Timblin continued to experience an irregular heartbeat. Lidocaine was given to correct the problem. Mr. Timblin had a severe reaction to the medication, and experienced a grand mal seizure in which he *1022 became unconscious and stopped breathing. Valium was administered to control the seizure, and Mr. Timblin subsequently went into cardiac arrest.

Dr. Giles, along with Dr. Charles Allen (“Dr. Allen”), the emergency room physician, attempted unsuccessfully to establish an artificial airway for Mr. Timblin by inserting a tube down his throat (a procedure known as “intubation”). Eventually, a nurse anesthetist was able to insert the tube and establish an artificial airway. By that time, Mr. Timb-lin had been without oxygen for approximately 25 minutes. Following the intubation, Mr. Timblin was successfully resuscitated. Nevertheless, he suffered neurological damage due to lack of oxygen to his brain.

The Timblins filed suit in Superior Court alleging that the hospital staff was not adequately trained to intubate Mr. Timblin or to resuscitate him properly. The Timblins claimed that the staff of Kent General was required to be certified by the American Heart Association in Advanced Cardiac Life Support (“A.C.L.S.”). Dr. Allen was the only A.C.L.S.-certified member of the group that treated Mr. Timblin. The Timblins contended that the failure to ventilate Mr. Timblin properly was the proximate cause of his neurological deficit.

II. PROCEEDINGS IN SUPERIOR COURT

At trial the Timblins presented expert medical testimony from Dr. Calvin Fuhrm-ann (“Dr. Fuhrmann”). Dr. Fuhrmann testified that, in his opinion, the attending physicians failed to ventilate Mr. Timblin properly while he was in cardiac arrest. His opinion was based upon the medical records which showed the attending medical staffs repeated unsuccessful attempts to intubate Mr. Timblin, as well as the resulting brain damage suffered by Mr. Timblin. Dr. Fuhrmann testified that it was a departure from the appropriate standard of care not to ventilate the patient in some other manner when the intubation was unsuccessful.

During Kent General’s presentation of its defense, Dr. Giles testified as a fact witness. On direct examination, Dr. Giles, in response to a question about the risk of death in the hours following a cardiac arrest stated that “published studies cite a short-term hospital mortality without thrombolytic therapy within the range of ten to fifteen percent.” The Timblins’ counsel immediately objected, contending that the testimony concerned matters not properly disclosed in discovery. The trial judge overruled the objection, subject to a possible further ruling, and ordered defense counsel to provide the Timblins’ counsel with a copy of the study mentioned by Dr. Giles in his testimony.

Kent General also presented expert medical testimony from Dr. James Bouzoukis (“Dr. Bouzoukis”). Dr. Bouzoukis testified that the risks involved with the alternative ventilation procedures suggested by Dr. Fuhrmann rendered the procedures inappropriate in the situation presented by Mr. Timblin’s cardiac arrest. Kent General’s counsel inquired whether the fact that Mr. Timblin suffered a neurological deficit indicated that he was negligently resuscitated. Dr. Bouzoukis responded as follows:

[Ujnfortunately, the facts are that when a patient experiences a cardiopulmonary arrest, certainly less than half — and that’s being generous — will survive. In fact, I recently reviewed two articles reviewing the results of in-hospital arrests, and they had a success rate, a survival rate, if you will, of only fourteen and sixteen percent respectively. That’s only one out of seven survives.
This is an arrest that occurred within the hospital. And we know from the pre-hospital setting that at least eighty percent will have some kind of brain damage because of the incident.

Kent General’s counsel later asked Dr. Bouzoukis whether anything about Mr. Timblin’s condition suggested that the ventilation was properly performed. Dr. Bouzoukis responded:

The fact that he was resuscitated.... Statistically we know less than twenty-five percent of patients whose heart [sic] goes into asystole [cessation of electrical activity] can be resuscitated; I think it’s one out of twenty. I think it was remarkable that *1023 they were able to bring his heart back under those circumstances.

The Timblins’ counsel made no immediate objection to Dr. BouzouMs’ testimony.

Prior to the parties’ closing statements, the trial judge held a prayer conference with counsel at which the Timblins’ attorney raised the fact that Kent General had not supplied the previously ordered study. The trial judge stated at the conference that, if the Timblins could show prejudice from the admission of the statistical evidence, they could apply for a remedy. Following the conference, the parties made their closing statements. During his closing, Kent General’s counsel stressed the statistical evidence by repeatedly stating that people often die or suffer neurological damage after a cardiac arrest. The following day, the jury entered a verdict in favor of Kent General.

Two days after the jury verdict, Kent General’s counsel provided the Timblins’ counsel with a study in support of Dr. Giles’ statistical references. The Timblins moved for a new trial, contending that the study, which they assert should have been provided during discovery, did not support the testimony of either Dr. Giles or Dr. BouzouMs. The Timblins attached an affidavit from Dr. Enrico Veltri (“Dr. Veltri”) in support of their contention. The trial court denied the motion for a new trial because it found that the complained-of discovery defect did not warrant a new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
640 A.2d 1021, 1994 Del. LEXIS 154, 1994 WL 184223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timblin-v-kent-general-hospinc-del-1994.