Willis v. Smith

999 So. 2d 1244, 2009 WL 81146
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 14, 2009
Docket43,958-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 999 So. 2d 1244 (Willis v. Smith) 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
Willis v. Smith, 999 So. 2d 1244, 2009 WL 81146 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

999 So.2d 1244 (2009)

Fannie WILLIS, Individually and on behalf of the Minor Children, India Walker, Diamond Parker and Ryan Willis, Plaintiff-Appellant
v.
John SMITH, M.D., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 43,958-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 14, 2009.
Rehearing Denied February 19, 2009.

*1245 Nelson & Hammons, by John L. Hammons, A. Cornell Flournoy, Shreveport, for Appellant.

Penick & Greening, by Robert L. Greening, James D. "Buddy" Caldwell, Attorney General, Claude W. Bookter, Jr., Special Assistant Attorney General, for Appellee.

Before BROWN, GASKINS and MOORE, JJ.

MOORE, J.

The plaintiffs, the children of the late Yulonda Willis, appeal a jury verdict that absolved Dr. John Smith of medical malpractice in treating Ms. Willis for massive bleeding at the Homer Memorial Hospital emergency room. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual Background

The 31-year-old Ms. Willis underwent a tonsillectomy at LSU Health Science Center on May 30, 2000, with no reported complications.

Two days later, on June 1 at about 4:00 pm, she came to Homer Memorial's E/R with significant bleeding from her throat; witnesses called it "profuse." Valerie Tuggle, the nurse who checked her in, testified that Ms. Willis was unable to talk, had an unreadable blood pressure and nearly passed out; however, the bleeding had abated by the time the doctor arrived at 4:16. Dr. John Smith, a family practitioner just weeks from completing his residency, *1246 also could not get Ms. Willis to open her mouth. He phoned Dr. Price, her surgeon at LSU; Dr. Price was not called to testify, but according to Dr. Smith, the two agreed that if Ms. Willis was no longer actively bleeding, she could go to LSU by private car. Ms. Willis's family, however, was unable to arrange transportation for the 45-minute drive to Shreveport. She sat in the E/R, relatively stable, for about an hour.

At 5:15, Ms. Willis suddenly began hemorrhaging and gasping, and soon she passed out. Nurses called a Code Blue at 5:17 and again paged Dr. Smith. Following the "ABC" (airway, breathing, circulation) protocol of emergency medicine, Dr. Smith intubated her. He described this as difficult because blood and mucus prevented him from visualizing the back of her throat. The first endotracheal ("ET") tube went down her esophagus. Promptly realizing the mistake, he took out the tube and started again.

The second intubation was at 5:28. Dr. Smith felt it was successful, based on Ms. Willis's breathing sounds and the reading from a device called a capnograph, which indicates CO2 coming out of the lungs. Curiously, however, nothing in the chart or the hospital bill mentioned a capnograph. Dr. Smith admitted he did not order a chest X-ray to confirm proper placement of the ET tube or order an arterial blood gases ("ABG") test for the O2 content of her circulating blood. Instead, he used a standard pulse oximeter clipped to the patient's finger. This showed an O2 saturation level of only 80%, but Dr. Smith felt he had established an airway. He then went to work packing the throat around the ET tube to stop the bleeding. He also administered 10 units of fluid and 6 units of blood, effectively replacing her entire volume of body fluids. The hospital chart recorded no O2 sats until 6:06, when it was 87%; at 6:10 and subsequently it was 99%. Dr. Smith testified that Ms. Willis appeared stable with the standard array of drugs for advanced cardio life support. Timothy Cardwell, an RN in the E/R, testified that the Code Blue ended at 6:03.

Dr. Smith testified that because of her precarious condition, he decided to order a Life Air helicopter to fly her to LSU. Before sending her, he performed a third intubation, explaining that the cuff of the second ET tube might be damaged and could leak in the reduced air pressure of the helicopter. The third intubation was at 6:20; Dr. Smith felt this was successful, again based on breathing sounds, the capnograph display and the pulse oximeter that remained at 99%.

The helicopter carried Ms. Willis to LSU, but she died there about an hour later. A chest X-ray at LSU showed the ET tube was inserted about 4 cm too deep and entered her right lung, allowing the left lung to collapse. An autopsy performed by the late Dr. George McCormick found that she died from severe hemorrhage and hypoxia; it also stated that a nasal catheter inserted during the third intubation had lacerated her lingual artery, causing her to bleed to death.

A Medical Review Panel ("MRP") in February 2005 found that Dr. Smith did not deviate from the standard of care. It noted the difficulty of intubating Ms. Willis because of the large volume of blood in her pharynx, and found his attempts to establish an airway reasonable. It found no evidence as to what caused her acute bleeding, or that anything Dr. Smith did was responsible for it. The MRP accepted Dr. Smith's statement that along with chest and stomach auscultation he used a capnograph to confirm that the second and third intubations were successful, even though this was not charted. Further, X-rays and ABG tests were not required during the intensive efforts to resuscitate *1247 the patient. Still further, the cuff on the second ET tube could have been damaged by contact with Ms. Willis's teeth during insertion, and a leaky cuff is not below the standard of care; Dr. Smith met the standard by attempting to replace the tube before transporting the patient. Finally, the third ET tube achieved an adequate airway but was probably displaced during the helicopter ride. The MRP concluded that Dr. Smith's acts neither deviated from the standard of care nor caused Ms. Willis's death.

Procedural History and Trial Evidence

Ms. Willis's three minor children, represented by their grandmother Fannie Willis, filed this suit against Dr. Smith.[1] By pretrial order filed April 17, 2007, the plaintiffs listed Dr. Sheldon Kottle of Phoenix, Arizona, as one of their expert witnesses. About a month before trial, Dr. Smith filed a motion in limine to exclude Dr. Kottle's expert testimony on grounds that he was not qualified in emergency medicine. Dr. Kottle was board-certified in nephrology and hypertension and once was an associate professor of internal medicine and family practice at LSU, but had no special training (and only limited experience) in emergency medicine. After jury selection, the district court granted the motion and excluded Dr. Kottle.

Trial took place over five days in February 2008. The plaintiffs' lead witness, Dr. Walter Simmons of Phoenix, Arizona, testified as an expert in emergency medicine. He was highly critical of Dr. Smith, stating that he never established an airway for Ms. Willis and damaged the back of her throat in his attempts. Even after the second intubation, Ms. Willis's O2 sat remained around 80% for 50 minutes, dangerously low compared to the normal of 98-100%. Relying on the medical chart, Dr. Simmons accepted that Dr. Smith did not use a capnograph or perform an ABG test or chest X-ray, all breaching the standard of care. He theorized that the eventual elevation of Ms. Willis's O2 sat to 99% resulted from the infusion of six units of fresh blood, not from the second intubation. He testified that even Dr. Smith must have felt the second intubation was a failure, or else he would not have pulled it at 6:20. Dr. Simmons also accepted the coroner's report that Dr. Smith lacerated Ms. Willis's lingual artery while inserting a nasal catheter, causing her to "bleed out."

On rebuttal, Dr. Simmons insisted that when Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
999 So. 2d 1244, 2009 WL 81146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-smith-lactapp-2009.