Wicks v. Antelope Valley Healthcare Dist.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 2020
DocketB297171
StatusPublished

This text of Wicks v. Antelope Valley Healthcare Dist. (Wicks v. Antelope Valley Healthcare Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wicks v. Antelope Valley Healthcare Dist., (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 6/1/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

MARLINE WICKS et al., B297171

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. MC027302) v.

ANTELOPE VALLEY HEALTHCARE DISTRICT,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Randolph A. Rogers, Judge. Affirmed.

Law Offices of Michels & Lew, Philip Michels and Steven B. Stevens for Plaintiffs and Appellants.

La Follette, Johnson, DeHaas, Fesler & Ames, Arthur E. Zitsow, Julie Pollock Birdt and David J. Ozeran for Defendant and Respondent. __________________________ SUMMARY The trial court granted summary judgment to a hospital in a lawsuit brought by the family of an emergency room patient who was released from the hospital and died eight hours later. We conclude no evidence showed that the nursing staff caused or contributed to the patient’s death; no evidence showed the hospital was negligent in the selection and retention of the two emergency room doctors who treated the patient; and the evidence conclusively established the emergency room doctors were not the ostensible agents of the hospital. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment. FACTS 1. The Parties and the Complaint Plaintiffs Marline and Bethanie Wicks are the spouse and daughter, respectively, of decedent Matthew Wicks. They sued two emergency room (ER) doctors (Christopher Belfour and Lawrence Michael Stock); Antelope Valley Emergency Medicine Associates, Inc.; and Antelope Valley Healthcare District, doing business as Antelope Valley Hospital (the hospital), for medical negligence in connection with Mr. Wicks’s death on October 26, 2016. As relevant here, the complaint alleged the defendant hospital selected and assigned physicians to care for and treat Mr. Wicks, and those individuals were the ostensible agents of the hospital. The complaint alleged the hospital was negligent in the “selection, training, retention, supervision and hiring” of the two ER doctors, and its nursing personnel were negligent in the care and treatment of decedent. No details were alleged in the complaint.

2 2. Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment The hospital moved for summary judgment, contending (1) its employees, nurses and nonphysician personnel complied with the standard of care in their care and treatment of Mr. Wicks; (2) no act or omission of the hospital negligently caused or contributed to his death; (3) the hospital was not negligent in its appointment of Dr. Stock or Dr. Belfour to the medical staff; (4) neither doctor was an employee or agent of the hospital; and (5) the hospital did not control, direct or supervise either doctor in his care or treatment of decedent. Defendant relied on the following evidence. a. The Holland declaration A declaration from Dr. J. Paul Holland, who has actively practiced as an emergency physician since 1979, provided the sequence of events at the hospital on October 26, 2016. His recitation of these events was based on his review of decedent’s medical records for that day. Those records were attached as an exhibit to a declaration from defendant’s counsel (the Birdt declaration), and authenticated in a declaration from the hospital’s custodian of records, Laurie Lee Dorsey. The Holland declaration correctly recites what is shown in the medical records, as follows. Mr. Wicks came to the emergency department at the hospital at 4:03 a.m., complaining of “[s]tomach pain[,] tight chest.” His vital signs (blood pressure, pulse, oxygen saturation, etc.) were recorded at 4:17 a.m., and included a pain level of 7 out of 10. At 4:19 a.m. (the noted “triage time”), nurse Krystal Crawford noted Mr. Wicks’s height and weight (including a BMI (body mass index) of 33.9), and that he complained of neck pain, cough, sore throat and “chest congestion x tonight per patient

3 ‘like a dull ache in my throat, like I’m getting strangled below my neck.’ ” She noted the patient was alert, denying any chest pain or shortness of breath, speaking normally, and ambulating without difficulty. After the triage, he was placed in a bed at 4:22 a.m. Mr. Wicks was then evaluated by nurse Amberlyn Aroneo Wildoner. Her detailed notes, recorded at 4:59 a.m., state, among other details, that Mr. Wicks was alert, oriented and cooperative, appeared to be in distress due to pain, and stated he had woken up with a pain in his upper chest/throat. He described the pain as something “ ‘stuck’ ” in his throat. He denied any shortness of breath or inability to swallow, and said “he feels like he needs to clear his throat but when he does it doesn’t clear”; he said he also woke up with epigastric pain. Nurse Wildoner noted no respiratory distress, and “[c]hest pain present, upper, [s]ore throat present.” Her notes at 5:03 a.m. show she placed him on a cardiac monitor, and her notes at 5:46 a.m. show she established an IV site, drew lab specimens and sent them to the lab. Dr. Belfour evaluated Mr. Wicks at 5:10 a.m., ordered an electrocardiogram (ECG) and reviewed the ECG results at 5:34 a.m. Dr. Belfour also ordered a chest X-ray, and the records show radiologist Dr. Kellie Greenblatt reviewed it and noted, at 6:10 a.m., “[n]o radiographic evidence of acute cardiopulmonary disease”; “[n]o significant interval change”; and “[m]ild cardiomegaly” (enlarged heart). Nurse Shelly Macias took over the care of Mr. Wicks from nurse Wildoner at 6:19 a.m. Her notes show he was “[s]tanding at bedside for comfort” at 6:29 a.m., she recorded his vital signs at 6:53 a.m., and at 7:05 a.m. a person from the lab was at bedside for another blood draw.

4 Dr. Stock took over Mr. Wicks’s care after Dr. Belfour’s shift ended at around 6:00 a.m. According to Dr. Holland and the medical records, over the next several hours, in addition to the chest X-ray, various tests were performed, including another ECG, two troponin tests and other blood work. Dr. Stock met and examined Mr. Wicks at 8:42 a.m., but testified he had no independent memory of the interaction. His custom and practice was “obtaining history, understanding the context of how [the patient] got there, doing an exam, and reviewing risk factors . . . for the conditions, and then reviewing any of the lab data or any [test] results” done since the patient’s arrival. Although he had no independent memory of treating Mr. Wicks, Dr. Stock testified it was his custom and practice then and now to look at the electronic records system to see if Mr. Wicks had been treated at the hospital previously. His custom and practice was to look through such documents for “a discharge summary, an old EKG, something to that effect that might be very useful.” (The term ECG is synonymous with EKG.) When asked if part of his custom and practice would be “to look at the patient’s past medical history,” he responded, “Yes, I would talk to the patient, I’d read the chart and—and generally would look in the electronic medical record.” At around 11:00 a.m., Dr. Stock decided to discharge Mr. Wicks. He had seen Mr. Wicks a second time and noted he had “improved”; by this time a second ECG and a second troponin test had been performed. (Vital signs recorded by the nurses at 6:53 a.m., 7:53 a.m. and 9:53 a.m. (blood pressure, pulse, oxygen saturation, etc.) were normal and stable, with pain reduced to 4 out of 10 at 6:53 a.m. and the same thereafter.) The time on Dr. Stock’s discharge order is 11:06 a.m. Mr. Wicks was given

5 discharge instructions; these included a diagnosis of “chest pain of unclear etiology,” and a referral to a cardiologist, as well as a follow-up with his primary care physician in one day. (Decedent’s wife testified that one of the doctors (she said Dr. Belfour) told them he wanted Mr.

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Wicks v. Antelope Valley Healthcare Dist., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wicks-v-antelope-valley-healthcare-dist-calctapp-2020.