Woodard v. Secretary of Health & Human Services

31 Fed. Cl. 617, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 142, 1994 WL 394089
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJuly 14, 1994
DocketNo. 90-1303V
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Fed. Cl. 617 (Woodard v. Secretary of Health & Human Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodard v. Secretary of Health & Human Services, 31 Fed. Cl. 617, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 142, 1994 WL 394089 (uscfc 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBINSON, Judge:

This matter is before the court for review of Special Master Paul T. Baird’s Decision, dated January 19, 1994, finding that petitioners Diane and Robert Woodard failed to demonstrate by a preponderance of the evidence that their daughter’s infantile spasms had been significantly aggravated by a diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus (DPT) vaccine.

Procedural History

On September 25, 1990, Mr. and Mrs. Woodard filed a petition for compensation under the National Childhood Vaccine Injury [619]*619Act,1 or “the Act,” alleging that their daughter, Kerri, had suffered a significant aggravation of her infantile spasms within three days after her second and third administrations of DPT vaccine.

The special master conducted an evidentia-ry hearing on November 24, 1992, for the sole purpose of receiving testimony from fact witnesses. Testimony was heard from both petitioners and from Terri Schaffer, Mrs. Woodard’s sister. Following this hearing, the special master issued a Memorandum and Findings of Fact (“findings of fact”) on January 28, 1993.

The special master conducted a second hearing on November 4, 1993, to take testimony from petitioners’ and respondent’s medical experts. After the second hearing, the special master filed his Decision denying compensation, Woodard v. Secretary of HHS, No. 90-1301V (Fed.Cl.Sp.Mstr. Jan. 19, 1994).

Factual Background

The special master’s findings of fact, based on petitioners’ exhibits and the testimony of fact witnesses,2 can be summarized as follows:

Kerri Woodard is 13 years old and suffers from severe retardation.3 She lives at home with her parents, but she cannot speak normally, is not potty-trained, and is unable to feed herself. Woodard, Findings of Fact at 4. The events in question all occurred during 1981, the year Kem was born.

Kerri was bom in Toledo, Ohio, on March 23,1981. During her first three months, her parents testified, Kerri showed signs of normal development, and they described her as having been bright and alert. She received the first of three DPT shots on July 13 when she was nearly four months old, and she showed no adverse reactions to that shot.4 Shortly after that first DPT shot in July, however, Kerri’s parents testified that they observed her having spells or spasms which lasted a few seconds at a time. During these spells, Kerri would lift up her arms and heave a sigh. Over the course of the summer of 1981, Kerri also began to lose interest in toys and became less physically active. Id. Kerri’s parents testified that Mrs. Woodard brought these problems to their pediatrician’s attention when she brought Kerri in for her second DPT shot on August 31. According to the parents’ testimony, the doctor told Mrs. Woodard that Kerri was probably suffering from an immature nervous system. The doctor administered the second DPT shot that day as scheduled. Id. The pediatrician’s charts contain a record of the August 31 visit and the administration of the DPT shot, but contain no evidence of the alleged conversation concerning Kerri’s spells or of the doctor’s alleged diagnosis of an immature nervous system. Id.; see also Exhibit (Ex.) IV at 2.

When she came home after receiving her second shot, Kerri was tired, and she slept deeply for at least 16 hours. Her parents attempted to rouse her during the evening, but Kerri did not fully awaken until 7:30 the next morning, her normal wake-up time. That next day she behaved and ate normally. Woodard, Findings of Fact at 3.

In the weeks following her second shot, Kerri’s parents observed that her development was regressing. She eventually ceased babbling and cooing, showed no interest in toys or other objects, ceased to roll over and [620]*620became less alert. One night Mrs. Woodard heard Kerri make an unusual scream. Id. at 4.

Kerri received her third DPT shot on October 16. By this time, Kerri was having spasms three to five times per week. Id. At the evidentiary hearing, Mrs. Woodard testified that, during the October 16 visit, she again raised her concerns with Kerri’s pediatrician. In addition to a notation about the DPT shot, the doctor’s records of that visit contain notations that he observed “slow gross motor” activity, “poor reach,” and possible hearing problems. Ex. IV at 3.

In the three days immediately following her third DPT shot, Kerri’s periodic spasms continued without any change in frequency or severity. Woodard, Findings of Fact at 4. Her parents did not observe any other signs of trouble in those days, such as a fever. Id. However, Mrs. Woodard’s sister, Terri Schaffer, testified that she observed an unusual seizure when she was babysitting Kerri on October 19. Mrs. Schaffer said that, during this episode, Kerri stiffened for a few seconds, and her eyes rolled back in her head. Although she had never observed Kerri having a similar seizure before, Mrs. Schaffer admitted that she did not report the incident to Kerri’s parents, believing that they were already aware of Kerri’s condition.5 Id.

The next day, October 20, Kerri’s mother observed another dramatic seizure. Again, Kerri stiffened, her eyes rolled back in her head, and she drooled uncontrollably. Kerri eventually recovered, but Mrs. Woodard was frightened by the incident and called Kerri’s doctor, who told her to bring Kerri to his office the next day. Id.

Because Mrs. Woodard had to work on October 21, Mr. Woodard and Mrs. Schaffer took Kerri to the doctor’s office that day. After an examination, the doctor admitted Kerri to the Toledo Hospital. The notations in Kerri’s chart of that visit to her pediatrician report: “[D]ad describes seizure-like [symptoms] stiffens ... rolls eyes [times] several weeks.” Woodard, Findings of Fact at 5.

Kerri was hospitalized for about two weeks. The doctors performed a battery of tests and observed Kerri suffering several more seizures similar to the one observed by Mrs. Woodard on October 20. They diagnosed Kerri as having infantile spasms. Id. at 6.

Kerri’s hospital admission records contain information which in many respects illuminates the testimony given by Mr. and Mrs. Woodard 11 years later at their hearing before the special master. There are two sets of notes describing Kerri’s case: a “History and Physical” report taken on October 21, Ex. VI at 4, indicating the source of the information was Kerri’s parents; and a “Consultation” report, Ex. VI at 8, written on October 24, by the neurologist who treated Kerri. See also Woodard, Findings of Fact at 5.

The History report recounts the eye-rolling episode of October 20, as the “worst” one Kerri’s parents had yet observed, as well as the apparent abnormalities in Kerri’s development. The History report also indicates that Kerri’s parents first began noticing her seizures about three weeks prior to October 21, while the Consultation report states that they were first observed about a month before October 24. Both records state that, since in the time Mr. and Mrs. Woodard first noticed Kerri’s seizures, they had increased in frequency from a few times per week to “almost daily” (in the History report) or “several times a day” (in the Consultation report).

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Related

Johnson v. Secretary of Health & Human Services
33 Fed. Cl. 712 (Federal Claims, 1995)

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31 Fed. Cl. 617, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 142, 1994 WL 394089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodard-v-secretary-of-health-human-services-uscfc-1994.