Watkins v. Cleveland Clinic Foundation

719 N.E.2d 1052, 130 Ohio App. 3d 262
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1998
DocketNo. 72838.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 719 N.E.2d 1052 (Watkins v. Cleveland Clinic Foundation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 719 N.E.2d 1052, 130 Ohio App. 3d 262 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

James D. Sweeney, Judge.

Defendant-appellant Cleveland Clinic Foundation appeals from the jury verdict in favor of plaintiffs-appellees Birdie Watkins, by and through her guardian (and *269 son), David Pollard, and her husband, Thomas Watkins. 1 For the reasons adduced below, we affirm in part and reverse in part, and vacate the award of punitive damages.

In April 1995, Birdie Watkins, a sixty-year-old woman, went to the appellant complaining of a sinus infection. Watkins was referred to Dr. Isaac Eliachar, an attending surgeon in appellant’s Ear, Nose, and Throat (“ENT”) Department, who noted that no infection was present, but did diagnose a deviated septum in the patient’s nose and advised that a surgical procedure known as septoplasty be performed. When asked by the patient whether he would be performing the procedure, Eliachar stated that he did not operate alone. The doctor testified that he advised the patient on May 4, 1995, of the risks and benefits of the surgery and that he would operate with the participation and assistance of medical residents. It is uncontested that the appellant’s billing records referred to Eliachar as the surgeon of record. Further, the patient did not sign a written consent form.

May 5, 1995, was the date of the surgery. On that morning, Eliachar was scheduled to perform four elective surgeries in two adjoining operating rooms. 2 The anesthesiologist was Dr. Marc Popovich, who was also involved in more than one surgery at the time and, like Eliachar, moved between operating rooms during the patients’ procedures. The nurse anesthetist, who assisted Popovich in Popovich’s absence, was Dennis Woods, B..N. The chief resident of the ENT Department, Dr. Marc Guay, performed the surgery on Watkins. Eliachar, who was listed in the operation records and discharge summary as the performing surgeon, allegedly supervised periodically Guay’s work as Eliachar moved between the adjoining operating rooms.

Guay testified that he first met the patient on the day of the surgery in the preoperation holding area minutes before the patient was transported to the operating room. He also testified that Eliachar assigned the surgery to him and that Eliachar did not even scrub up that morning. Guay, upon meeting the patient, told the patient that he “would be operating on her with Dr. Eliachar.” (Emphasis added.) Guay did not explain to the patient what he meant by that phrase. Guay did not know extubation parameters.

*270 During the operation, which began at 7:30 a.m. and ended at 11:10 a.m., the patient was under a general anesthesia and was intubated 3 by the nurse anesthetist to ensure normal breathing. According to Popovich, he did not inform the patient that a nurse anesthetist would perform the intubation and extubation and did not indicate that he, the anesthesiologist, would not be present throughout the operation. The septoplasty was uneventful. According to Eliachar, it was the surgeon’s ultimate responsibility to ensure that the patient maintained an adequate airway during and after the operation. Yet Eliachar could not recall whether he was present when the patient was extubated. He believed that the nurse anesthetist extubated the patient. Popovich was not present for the extubation and did not evaluate the patient between the operating room and the postanesthesia care unit (“PACU”). The nurse anesthetist stated that the patient was extubated at approximately 10:30 a.m. in the operating room and that he and Guay then transported the patient to the PACU. On the way to the PACU at 10:35 a.m., the patient’s heart rate was eighty-five beats per minute according to nurse Woods’s records. Yet the nurse’s notes from PACU indicate that at 10:35 a.m., when the patient was admitted to the PACU, her heart rate was fifty beats per minute. The nurse anesthetist’s records also indicate that the patient was awake and responsive when he transported her to the PACU, yet the PACU records indicate that the patient was unresponsive, emitting a large amount of clear urine and not moving. At 10:40 a.m., the nurse anesthetist’s records indicate that the patient’s heart rate was seventy-eight to eighty beats per minute, while the PACU nurse’s record states thirty beats per minute, a rate that is admittedly life-threatening, according to the nurse anesthetist. When the heart rate hit thirty beats per minute, the nurse anesthetist recalls, resuscitative measures were begun on the patient. The patient was given cardiopulmonary resuscitation and was reintubated at 10:50 a.m.

Popovich testified that it would have been preferable for the patient to have been awake and responsive when extubated and if the patient was not awake and responsive, it would have been inappropriate to extubate the patient. According to the anesthesia record, Popovich stated that the patient was in trouble at the time she was admitted to the PACU.

Dr. Howard Tucker, a board-certified neurologist and plaintiffs’ expert witness, 4 testified that the patient, who is in a persistent vegetative state but otherwise healthy, is unable to communicate or care for herself, has no cognitive or conscious awareness, and requires full-time care. The patient has a feeding *271 tube, which admits liquid food directly to the stomach, and a tracheostomy to permit a direct airway through her windpipe. It was his medical opinion that the patient had the probability for a full-life expectancy.

George Cyphers, a certified rehabilitation counselor, testified on behalf of plaintiffs as to the life-care plan developed for the patient, which details the medications and health care supplies, equipment, and services, and their attendant costs, that will be needed over the patient’s lifetime.

John Burke, who holds a doctorate in economics, testified for the plaintiffs regarding financial losses of the patient experienced as a result of the patient’s injury. The witness calculated the patient’s statistical life expectancy from the date of the injury as 22.8 years, to an age of 80.1 years. Wage loss from her employment as an autoworker at General Motors was calculated at a present value of $299,360. The amount needed to medically maintain the patient in her home was calculated as $5,511,870. Burke expressed various concerns about the report of defendant’s economic expert, Mr. Morbach, including (1) the forecast estimation of the inflation rate over time, which Burke stated no one could do with any certainty, (2) the use of higher-risk investments as a basis for an annual interest rate to calculate the present value of money for annuity purposes, 5 (3) the fact that Morbach is not an economist, and (4) the fact that Morbach’s analysis used a ten-year time span rather than Burke’s 22.8 year time span, the effect of which would be to lessen the final amount.

Thomas Watkins, the patient’s husband, testified that Eliachar told him that he had performed the operation. Watkins also detailed the personal life he enjoyed with his wife and family and the effect of the injury on the family.

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Bluebook (online)
719 N.E.2d 1052, 130 Ohio App. 3d 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-cleveland-clinic-foundation-ohioctapp-1998.