Vyse v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital

2024 IL App (1st) 230575-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 15, 2024
Docket1-23-0575
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 230575-U (Vyse v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vyse v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital, 2024 IL App (1st) 230575-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 230575-U

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

FIRST DIVISION July 15, 2024 No. 1-23-0575 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

CRISTINA VYSE f/k/a Cristina Yarbrough and DAVID ) GOODPASTER, Individually and on Behalf of Hayley ) Joe Goodpaster, a Minor, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) Cook County ) v. ) No. 18 L 3144 ) NORTHWESTERN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL and ) The Honorable NORTHWESTERN MEDICAL FACULTY ) Janet Adams Brosnahan, FOUNDATION, ) Judge Presiding. ) Defendants-Appellees. )

PRESIDING JUSTICE FITZGERALD SMITH delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Lavin and Coghlan concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: Trial court did not abuse its discretion with respect to plaintiffs’ efforts to publish a contract to the jury in a medical negligence case or in barring testimony by the minor whose damages were at issue in the case due to plaintiffs’ failure to disclose her as a witness.

¶2 This appeal involves an action for medical negligence in which a Cook County jury returned

a verdict in favor of the defendants, Northwestern Memorial Hospital (NMH) and Northwestern

Medical Faculty Foundation (NMFF), and against the plaintiffs, Cristina Vyse (formerly Cristina No. 1-23-0575

Yarbrough) and David Goodpaster, individually and on behalf of their minor daughter Hayley Joe

Goodpaster. The plaintiffs request this court to vacate the defense verdict and remand this case for

a new trial based on two claims of error by the trial court: (1) denying the admission and

publication to the jury of an affiliation agreement between the defendants and Erie Family Health

Center, Inc. (Erie), and (2) barring testimony at trial by Hayley Goodpaster. We affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 This action arises out of the prenatal medical care that Christina Vyse received when she was

pregnant with her daughter Hayley, who was born prematurely on April 8, 2006, at 26 weeks

gestation. During her pregnancy, the primary provider of her care was Erie, a Federally Qualified

Health Center that has an “affiliation agreement” with NMH and NMFF. 1 The affiliation

agreement reflects a general agreement that NMH and NMFF will provide certain medical services

to the patients served by Erie, most of whom have otherwise limited access to health care. In an

earlier appeal, the Illinois Supreme Court answered a certified question holding that NMH could

not be held vicariously liable under the doctrine of apparent agency for alleged negligence by

employees of Erie, an independent medical clinic not party to this litigation. See Yarbrough v.

Northwestern Memorial Hospital, 2017 IL 121367, ¶ 49. Accordingly, no claims based on the

conduct of Erie employees remain as part of this case.

¶5 On November 30, 2005, at approximately 8 weeks of pregnancy, Vyse experienced vaginal

bleeding for which she was seen in the emergency department of Advocate Illinois Masonic

Medical Center (Advocate). There, she underwent an abdominal ultrasound that showed her

1 The actual signatories to the affiliation agreement, dated April 15, 1998, are Erie and Northwestern Memorial Corporation (NMC). An addendum titled “NMFF Appendix to Affiliation Agreement” is attached to it that is not signed on behalf of NMFF. However, on appeal the defendants do not dispute that the affiliation agreement applies to them.

-2- No. 1-23-0575

pregnancy and a probable “bicornuate uterine morphology,” meaning her uterus was heart-shaped.

Having a bicornuate uterus placed Vyse at increased risk of complications during pregnancy, such

as cervical insufficiency (in which the cervix is too weak to maintain the pregnancy in the uterus

for a full term of 40 weeks), preterm delivery, or miscarriage. Vyse’s primary healthcare provider

at Erie, certified nurse midwife Elizabeth McKelvey, C.N.M., was informed by the emergency

department personnel at Advocate of this ultrasound finding of bicornuate uterus.

¶6 In February 2006, McKelvey referred Vyse to NMH’s Prentice Women’s Hospital (Prentice)

for a 20-week ultrasound. The referral form stated in pertinent part: “TO THE CONSULTANT:

Thank you for your assistance in evaluating the above patient, who is being referred for: OB

Ultrasound—Level 1.” (The italicized portion of the preceding sentence was handwritten, with the

remainder being preprinted.) The form provided a history that Vyse was 20 years old, that this was

her first pregnancy, and that her estimated delivery date was July 12, 2006. It stated nothing about

Vyse undergoing a prior ultrasound or the finding of a probable bicornuate uterus.

¶7 On February 21, 2006, Vyse underwent this 20-week ultrasound at Prentice. A sonographer

performed the ultrasound, and the images obtained were read and interpreted by William Grobman,

M.D., a maternal-fetal medicine physician employed by defendant NMFF. It is undisputed that Dr.

Grobman’s involvement in Vyse’s medical care consisted only of reading and interpreting images

that the sonographer obtained from this ultrasound; he did not speak to Vyse or otherwise ascertain

that she had undergone an ultrasound earlier in her pregnancy that had revealed a bicornuate uterus.

Dr. Grobman interpreted and reported the 20-week ultrasound as normal, and he did not note a

bicornuate uterus on the images obtained. A disputed issue at trial, which gives rise to the primary

issue on appeal, was whether Dr. Grobman had any duty to perform a more extensive consultation

with Vyse that would have led him to learn of the earlier ultrasound finding of a bicornuate uterus.

-3- No. 1-23-0575

¶8 Following the ultrasound, Vyse continued receiving prenatal care at Erie. On April 5, 2006,

she began experiencing painful cramps and back pain. She was admitted to NMH, where she

delivered Hayley on April 8, 2006. Hayley was born with multiple medical complications and has

continued to experience disabilities throughout her life.

¶9 In 2009, the plaintiffs filed the present action against NMH and NMFF. Following remand

from the above-referenced appeal, litigation proceeded on a claim that the defendants were

vicariously liable for the medical negligence of their actual or apparent agent, Dr. Grobman, with

respect to the care he provided to Vyse in connection with the 20-week ultrasound of February 21,

2006. The following paragraphs from the operative fourth amended complaint provide a general

summary of claims upon which this case ultimately went to trial:

“13. *** [Vyse] received a 20-week ultrasound at NMH’s Prentice Women’s Hospital

on February 21, 2006. *** [D]uring this visit, no history or questionnaire was done by any

employee, agent, or otherwise prior to, during, or after, her 20 week obstetrical ultrasound

exam, in violation of the standard of care. A fetal anatomy scan was performed as part of

the ultrasound examination. Grobman interpreted the fetal anatomy scan as normal and

Vyse’s pelvis as normal. He recorded his findings in a report, dated February 21, 2006. He

did not diagnose Vyse’s bicornuate uterus or short cervix, in violation of the standard of

care. Grobman did not document any findings regarding the condition of Vyse’s cervix, or

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