Tobin v. Univ. Hospital E.

2015 Ohio 5553
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 31, 2015
Docket2012-08494
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 Ohio 5553 (Tobin v. Univ. Hospital E.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tobin v. Univ. Hospital E., 2015 Ohio 5553 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as Tobin v. Univ. Hospital E., 2015-Ohio-5553.]

Court of Claims of Ohio The Ohio Judicial Center 65 South Front Street, Third Floor Columbus, OH 43215 614.387.9800 or 1.800.824.8263 www.cco.state.oh.us

JAMES TOBIN, Admr.

Plaintiff

v.

UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL EAST

Defendant

Case No. 2012-08494

Judge John P. Bessey

DECISION

{¶1} This action involves Plaintiff’s claim for damages incurred by the alleged wrongful death of Bruce Tobin (Mr. Tobin) as a result of the care he received from the medical staff of The Ohio State University Hospital East (the Hospital) beginning on November 14, 2005, and concluding on November 19, 2005, when his death was officially noted. During this period, Mr. Tobin received care from actual or ostensible employees or agents of the Hospital. The matter sub judice exclusively involves the care and treatment provided by a single person, Wendy Morton (Nurse Morton), a nurse employed by the Hospital. The case proceeded to trial on the issues of liability and damages on October 14, 2014. {¶2} Plaintiff, James Tobin, Administrator of the Estate of Bruce Tobin, alleges that the care by Nurse Morton negligently fell below the standard of care recognized by the medical community and caused or contributed to Mr. Tobin’s death. {¶3} Prior to Mr. Tobin’s admission to the Hospital in November 2005, he had some admissions in The Ohio State University (OSU) hospital network. In 1996, Mr. Tobin received medical care at the OSU Sleep Medicine Clinic for a sleep related problem. He was diagnosed with a severe case of obstructive sleep apnea and was prescribed the use of a Continuous Positive Airway Pressure machine (CPAP). Pursuant to the recommendation, he acquired a CPAP and used it on every occasion when going to sleep. He fully understood that the machine was intended to maintain his open respiratory airway. He also understood that a closure of the airway could cause his death. {¶4} In September 2004, Mr. Tobin was admitted to the Harding Hospital (Harding), a psychiatric hospital at OSU’s Medical Center. He was diagnosed with a bipolar disorder and placed on psychotropic medications. While at Harding, medical staff noted that Mr. Tobin was “a questionable historian” and that he was “unable to answer assessment questions appropriately.” (Joint Exhibit 8-7.) After being discharged, Mr. Tobin returned to the care of his own psychiatrist and continued under her care until the time of his death. {¶5} The records for his visit to the sleep clinic and Harding were not available to the Hospital at the time of his admission in November 2005. During that time, the OSU medical facilities were in the process of converting their medical records to an electronic system, and the sleep clinic’s records had not been converted to the electronic system. While Harding’s records were maintained electronically, psychiatric records could not have been released without the approval of both the patient and the chief medical officer of Harding pursuant to R.C. 5122.31. {¶6} On November 14, 2005, Mr. Tobin presented to the Hospital’s Emergency Department (ER) seeking aid for a complaint of pain in the right flank area which he felt was being caused by a kidney stone. In his initial conversation with the attending physician, Dr. Richard Limperos, he stated that he was feeling better, that his pain level was at a 1-2 and that he did not think any further testing was needed. He was diagnosed with a kidney stone and instructed to return immediately to the ER if he experienced any worsening pain, nausea, or fever. The discharge time was 11:55 PM. {¶7} In the mid-afternoon of November 15, 2005, Mr. Tobin began to experience a return of pain. Eventually, at the behest of his wife, she transported him back to the ER. When he presented to the ER on the 15th, Mr. Tobin was asked to complete a patient database form that sought information regarding his medical history. However, because of the severe pain he was experiencing, he was not able to complete the form. Later on that evening, Mr. Tobin and his wife had a conversation on the phone during which his wife reminded him of his need for a CPAP and he assured her by saying, “This is a hospital. They will have one.” The record shows no indication that Mr. Tobin conveyed this information to any of the Hospital’s employees. {¶8} Upon evaluation, Dr. Katherine Mitzel, his attending physician on the 15th, determined that it would be necessary to admit Mr. Tobin to the Hospital. To process his admission, he came under the care of Dr. Rohit Kashyap, a hospitalist, who was responsible for preparing a history and orders for treatment that would govern Mr. Tobin’s initial stay in the Hospital. To do this, Dr. Kashyap would have been expected to do a physical exam, review the medical history and treatment of the patient while he was in the ER, add to that history as he determined to be appropriate, conduct additional tests that had not been necessary for Mr. Tobin’s involvement with the ER, and interview Mr. Tobin. {¶9} At some time between 12:11 AM and 3:00 AM on November 16, 2005, Mr. Tobin entered the process of patient transfers from one department to another. The Court notes that no evidence was presented that would indicate Nurse Morton had any responsibility in facilitating the transfer of Mr. Tobin from the ER to her nursing station located on the 5th floor of the Hospital. There is also no indication that he received any treatment for his condition during that time, including pain relief. {¶10} When Mr. Tobin arrived on the 5th floor, he came under the direct care of Nurse Morton. She received the orders from Dr. Kashyap, which included instructions that Mr. Tobin’s vital signs be checked every four hours and that he remain in bed. Dr. Kashyap’s orders also authorized the use of Hydromorphone (also known as Dilaudid) 2 mg IVP O2HPRN, translated as two milligrams of Dilaudid pushed intravenously no more than once every two hours. Five lines below that instruction is an instruction that states “Range: MAY BE GIVEN 1. mg TO 2. mg” which translates to a dosage of no less than 1 mg and no more than 2 mg. Nurse Morton was also permitted to administer a low dosage of Phenergan, 12.5 mg, for nausea. {¶11} Upon his admission to the 5th floor, Nurse Morton recorded his vital signs and noted his subjective pain level was at an 8. She completed two nurse data forms totaling four pages of what, for the most part, consisted of “yes” or “no” type questions that could be answered with a check mark, performed a head-to-toe assessment, and entered the information in the patient flow sheet. She reviewed with him the room procedures for summoning the nurse and using the bed control and lights. She also gave him a patient database form to complete, which sought information regarding insurance coverage and his prior medical conditions and treatment. Because of his pain level, he was able to complete only a few lines, specifically, his wife’s name and cellphone number, that he was in the hospital for abdominal and back pain, and had a prior “illness” of hand surgery in 1978. He made no mention of his condition of acute sleep apnea. {¶12} As his nurse, Nurse Morton’s initial responsibility was to familiarize herself with a history of her patient that was sufficient to enable her to follow the orders of Dr. Kashyap. Only under specific circumstances would it have been appropriate for her to challenge or deviate from those orders. No such circumstance existed. Nurse Morton further testified that she knew that she had 24 hours to complete the form. She took into account and prioritized his attendant problems and attitude, and concluded that Mr. Tobin had demonstrated that he was in too much pain to provide the information required to complete the patient database form. Furthermore, she had the ability to access the information gathered by Drs. Mitzel and Kashyap, if necessary.

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Bluebook (online)
2015 Ohio 5553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tobin-v-univ-hospital-e-ohioctcl-2015.