Williams v. JEFFERSON PARISH HOSP. SERV. DIST.

604 So. 2d 1046
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 27, 1992
Docket92-CA-224
StatusPublished

This text of 604 So. 2d 1046 (Williams v. JEFFERSON PARISH HOSP. SERV. DIST.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. JEFFERSON PARISH HOSP. SERV. DIST., 604 So. 2d 1046 (La. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

604 So.2d 1046 (1992)

Ella WILLIAMS, Wife of/and John A. Williams
v.
JEFFERSON PARISH HOSPITAL SERVICE DISTRICT # 2 d/b/a East Jefferson General Hospital, Dr. William A. Rolston & Dr. Marian Belleci.

No. 92-CA-224.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

July 27, 1992.
Rehearing Denied October 19, 1992.

*1047 Daryl A. Higgins, Leo R. Hemelt, Gretna, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Lucas J. Giordano, Metairie, for defendants-appellants.

Before BOWES, DUFRESNE and WICKER, JJ.

DUFRESNE, Judge.

This is an appeal by East Jefferson General Hospital from an adverse judgment in a medical malpractice action brought by John A. Williams and his wife, Ella. The trial judge fixed total damages to plaintiffs at $583,000, and found the hospital liable for 60% of this amount. For the following reasons, we reduce the amount of damages by $10,000, and further reduce the percentage of fault attributable to the hospital from 60% to 20%. In all other respects, we affirm the judgment.

This case involves two distinct acts of alleged malpractice, (occurring three days apart) on the part of the defendant hospital staff during treatment of Mr. Williams for a heart attack. The first relates to the staff presenting to the emergency room doctor a normal EKG tracing made during a prior admission of plaintiff, rather than the tracing made shortly after his arrival at the emergency room which showed that he was having a heart attack. The second relates to the failure of the staff to record pulse readings in plaintiff's left leg during surgical insertion of an intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP) in preparation for open heart surgery.

A medical review panel concluded that the confusion of the EKG tracings fell below the proper standard of care, but that plaintiff suffered no damages because of this error. However, it further concluded that the failure of the surgical staff to record the pulses during insertion of the IABP was also below the standard of care and that this was a contributing factor in the eventual loss of plaintiff's lower left leg.

Prior to a bench trial of April 29, 1991, the surgeon who installed the device settled the matter for $250,000, and after trial, but before judgment, the emergency room doctor was dismissed on terms not of record.

In his reasons for judgment of December 30, 1991, the trial judge found that the confusion of the EKG tracings had caused plaintiff seventeen hours of needless suffering. He further found that the failure of the staff to record the pulses was a cause of plaintiff losing his leg. He apportioned 10% of fault to the emergency room doctor, 30% to the surgeon, and 60% to the hospital staff. He fixed general damages to plaintiff at $500,000, and special damages for the hospital bill at $58,253.23, and awarded plaintiff's wife $25,000 for loss of consortium. This appeal by the hospital followed.

As to the confusion of the EKG tracings, the following facts are conclusively established by the hospital records and expert medical testimony. On April 27, 1987, at about 4:40 A.M. plaintiff, a 67 year old farmer with a history of heart problems, for which he had previously been treated at East Jefferson General Hospital, was brought to the hospital emergency room by his daughter. His complaints were of chest pains over the last few days which had not responded to his prescribed nitroglycerine medication. The emergency room physician saw him within a few minutes of his arrival and initially thought he was having a heart attack. She immediately *1048 ordered an EKG, blood tests for cardiac enzymes, electrolytes, and glucose, and a blood count, as well as a chest x-ray. While awaiting these tests results, she treated him for pain with a morphine sulfate IV, nitroglycerine under his tongue and a nitro paste chest rub. He was also given oxygen and placed on a heart monitor.

The result of the cardiac enzyme test was negative, but the EKG showed degeneration of his heart condition in comparison with a 1984 EKG, and indicated that he was in fact having a heart attack. However, through apparent inadvertence on the part of the hospital staff, the doctor was handed an unremarkable EKG tracing from his file, instead of the result of the test just performed.

Dr. Montegudo, the doctor on call for Dr. Welch, plaintiff's treating physician, was informed of the negative enzyme test result and the erroneous EKG tracing by the emergency room physician. On the basis of this misinformation, she determined that plaintiff should be discharged and go to Dr. Welch's office later that morning. Plaintiff's daughter objected to the discharge, however, and plaintiff therefore remained in the emergency room until about 9:30 A.M. when Dr. Welch arrived and had him admitted to a regular hospital room. Some twelve hours later Dr. Entes, another associate of Dr. Welch, noted the mistaken EKG, and upon review of the proper tracing of that morning, he had plaintiff moved to the cardiac care unit (CCU).

On this showing, the medical review panel concluded that although the confusion of the EKGs was not a proper standard of care, plaintiff suffered no damage because of this error. All three members of the panel also testified at trial, as did the emergency room doctor, and all four were in agreement that had the proper tracing been read initially, plaintiff's treatment for pain would have been no different than what it actually was. They all further agreed that the failure to place him immediately in the CCU did not cause any physical damage to his heart.

Based on the above evidence, the trial judge found that, except for the administration of oxygen, nothing was done to alleviate plaintiff's pain and discomfort between his arrival at the emergency room and his being placed in the CCU unit seventeen hours later, when his treating physician arrived at the hospital. These findings are manifestly erroneous, and the conclusion that plaintiff was thereby damaged during this initial treatment must therefore be rejected. Rosell v. Esco, 549 So.2d 840 (La.1989).

The trial judge did not apportion general damages between those which he found to have been caused by confusion of the EKGs, and those relating to the loss of the leg. We conclude, however, that a reasonable award for the pain and suffering erroneously determined by the trial judge to have resulted from the EKG problem is $10,000. We therefore reduce the total award by that amount.

As to the second question, the failure of the staff to record pulse readings during insertion of the IABP, or to properly monitor the pulses, the facts are more complex. After several days of hospitalization, it was determined that plaintiff needed open heart surgery and this surgery was scheduled on April 30th. Prior to the main operation, he underwent heart catherization for diagnostic purposes, and during this procedure, the surgeon decided that because of the extensive damage to the heart, insertion of the IABP was necessary to help him survive the actual surgery. The device was therefore inserted into a left leg artery.

This entire procedure was completed at 12:50 P.M., and plaintiff arrived back in the CCU, and was reattached to the monitoring equipment by 1:30 P.M. During the next 15 minutes, the nurse discovered that there was no pulse in the left foot, notified the surgeon, and as per his orders began administering a blood thinner. After about an hour, the thinner had not resulted in restoration of the foot pulse, and at 3:25 P.M., the IABP was removed. The eventual result of loss of blood flow to the leg *1049 was that it had to be amputated below the knee.

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Related

Watson v. State Farm Fire and Cas. Ins. Co.
469 So. 2d 967 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1985)
Rosell v. Esco
549 So. 2d 840 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1989)
Socorro v. City of New Orleans
579 So. 2d 931 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1991)
Reck v. Stevens
373 So. 2d 498 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1979)
Williams v. Jefferson Parish Hospital Service District 2
604 So. 2d 1046 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1992)

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