Court Opinion

ID: 4218094
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-11-07 08:17:27.443787+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:42:26.078328
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS
                           SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                                FORT WORTH

                               NO. 02-17-00075-CV

WEATHERFORD TEXAS                                               APPELLANTS
HOSPITAL COMPANY, LLC D/B/A
WEATHERFORD REGIONAL
MEDICAL CENTER, PEGGY
GENTZEL, R.N., ALISHA BULLARD,
R.N., AND BONNIE CALHOUN,
R.N.

                                        V.

AMY LYNN LAUDERMILT AND                                          APPELLEES
STEVEN MELTON

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          FROM THE 236TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY
                    TRIAL COURT NO. 236-285372-16

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                          MEMORANDUM OPINION1

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     Appellants Peggy Gentzel, R.N., Alisha Bullard, R.N., and Bonnie Calhoun,

R.N. (collectively, the Nurses) and their employer, Weatherford Texas Hospital
     1
         See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
Company, LLC d/b/a Weatherford Regional Medical Center (Hospital) appeal

from the trial court’s denial of their respective motions to dismiss the claims

brought against them by Appellees Amy Lynn Laudermilt and Steven Melton,

Laudermilt’s husband, for failure to file a sufficient expert witness report as

required by the Texas Medical Liability Act (the Act). See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.

Code Ann. § 74.351 (West 2017). The Nurses and Hospital argue that the trial

court erred by not dismissing the lawsuit because the two expert reports relied on

by Laudermilt and Melton were insufficient as to the applicable standard of care,

each defendant’s breach of that standard of care, and causation. Because we

hold that the expert reports were sufficient, we affirm.

                                I.     Background

      Laudermilt and Melton sued the Nurses and Hospital after several feet of

metal guidewire were left inside Laudermilt following a procedure at Hospital.

They alleged that the Nurses were negligent in attempting to establish an

external jugular or femoral catheterization for Laudermilt, resulting in their losing

and permitting the guidewire to remain in Laudermilt, and by not properly

accounting for and documenting the use and presence of all medical devices,

including the guidewire. The guidewire remained in Laudermilt for nearly two

years. After Laudermilt eventually went to a different hospital for ongoing pain in

different parts of her body, an X-ray and CT scan revealed that the guidewire had

degraded and fragmented, and those fragments had migrated to her head, neck,

chest, abdomen, and pelvis.      Laudermilt underwent surgery in which doctors

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removed most of the wire, but some parts could not be removed due to risk of

“vein damage and catastrophic hemorrhage.”           Laudermilt and Melton then

brought suit against the Nurses and Hospital based on the Nurses’ alleged

negligence. They also asserted negligent hiring, training, and supervision claims

against Hospital.

      Laudermilt and Melton served the Nurses and Hospital with the expert

reports of Theresa Posani, MS, RN and Ralph Terpolilli, MD. Each defendant

objected that the reports were insufficient as to the standard of care, breach, and

causation, and each filed a motion to dismiss.       The trial court overruled the

objections and denied the motions to dismiss. The Nurses and Hospital now

appeal.

                           II.    Standard of Review

      A trial court may grant a motion to dismiss a plaintiff’s claims for failure to

file a sufficient expert report under the Act if the report does not represent a

good-faith effort to comply with the statutory definition of an expert report.

Fagadau v. Wenkstern, 311 S.W.3d 132, 137 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, no pet.).

We review a trial court’s denial of a motion to dismiss under section 74.351 of the

Act for an abuse of discretion. Otero v. Richardson, 326 S.W.3d 363, 366 (Tex.

App.—Fort Worth 2010, no pet.). To determine whether a trial court abused its

discretion, we must decide whether the trial court acted without reference to any

guiding rules or principles; in other words, we must decide whether the act was

arbitrary or unreasonable. Id. Merely because a trial court may decide a matter

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within its discretion in a different manner than an appellate court would in a

similar circumstance does not demonstrate that an abuse of discretion has

occurred. Id.

                                  III.   Analysis

A.    The Standard of Care and the Breach of that Standard

      Both the Nurses and Hospital argue that the expert reports provided by

Laudermilt and Melton do not adequately set forth a standard of care. Regarding

Nurse Posani’s report, the Nurses argue that the report makes no attempt to

define an identifiable nursing standard of care and makes no attempt to

distinguish between the role of each Nurse in Laudermilt’s care.         As for Dr.

Terpolilli’s report, the Nurses argue that it improperly attempts to set forth a

global emergency medical standard of care applicable to multiple categories of

healthcare providers. Hospital makes the same arguments, asserting that Nurse

Posani’s report does not define an identifiable standard of care for either it or the

Nurses.   It further argues that Dr. Terpolilli improperly attempts to hold the

nursing staff to the same standard of care as the emergency department doctor,

that Dr. Terpolilli’s statements about the emergency department nursing staff are

vague and conclusory generalizations, and that Dr. Terpolilli’s report attempts to

impose an improper legal standard on Hospital by opining that the emergency

department nursing staff had a duty to ensure that informed consent was

obtained and appropriately documented.

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      Regarding their alleged breaches of a standard of care, the Nurses argue

that neither report identifies a specific breach of an applicable standard of care

by each individual nurse. Likewise, Hospital argues that Nurse Posani’s report

does not specify a breach for any of the named defendants, that to the extent

that it does, it is conclusory, and that Dr. Terpolilli’s report does not link the

alleged breaches to the harm alleged.

      An expert report must “provide a ‘fair summary’ of the expert’s opinions

regarding the applicable standards of care, the manner in which the care

rendered failed to meet those standards, and the causal relationship between

that failure and the injury, harm, or damages claimed.” Fagadau, 311 S.W.3d at

137. “A ‘fair summary’ of the standard of care is ‘something less than a full

statement of the applicable standard of care and how it was breached.’” Id. at

138 (quoting Am. Transitional Care Ctrs. of Tex., Inc. v. Palacios, 46 S.W.3d 873,

880 (Tex. 2001)). “A fair summary need only inform the doctor what care was

expected but not given.” Id. “[I]n determining whether an expert report sets out

the applicable standard of care with sufficient detail, we consider all provisions of

the entire document, and not merely the portion contained under a subheading

titled ‘Standard of Care.’”   Gonzalez v. Padilla, 485 S.W.3d 236, 250 (Tex.

App.—El Paso 2016, no pet.).

      When, as here, a plaintiff sues more than one healthcare provider, the

expert report must set out the standard of care applicable as to each provider,

but the expert may explain that multiple providers all owed the same standard of

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care. See id. at 247 (holding sufficient an expert report that set forth the same

standard of care for multiple physicians); see also Univ. of Tex. Med. Branch at

Galveston v. Kai Hui Qi, 370 S.W.3d 406, 413 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]

2012, no pet.) (stating that the expert report, which addressed the actions of a

doctor and a nurse, needed to either describe the respective standards of care

for the doctor and the nurse or state that the same standard of care applied to

both the doctor and the nurse).

      1.     The Expert Reports Correctly Set Forth the Applicable Standard
             of Care.

      Dr. Terpolilli’s report sets out a standard of care for emergency department

doctors, a separate standard of care for emergency department nurses, and

another standard of care applicable to both emergency department doctors and

to emergency department nurses.          For emergency department nurses, Dr.

Terpolilli states that they were required to perform the following four actions:

      One: “Document and notify the treating ED [emergency department]
      health care providers of significant changes in the patient’s clinical
      condition including changes in vital signs and response to ED
      treatment interventions.”

      Two: “Insure that informed consent was obtained and appropriately
      documented in the ED medical record using the hospital procedure
      consent form.”

      Three: “Insure that a procedure time out was performed and
      documented prior to the performance of an invasive procedure that
      required informed consent such as [central venous line] placement.”

      Four: “Document serial nursing observations during and after an
      invasive ED procedure including [central venous line] placement.”

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      Dr. Terpolilli then explains that the Nurses breached these standards by

failing to perform and document serial nursing observations of Laudermilt’s

clinical condition, including her response to various treatments; failing to ensure

that informed consent was obtained and documented; failing to insure that a

procedure time out was performed and documented prior to the placement of the

central venous line; and failing to document serial observations during and after

placement of the line.

      As for Nurse Posani’s report, she agreed with Dr. Terpolilli that the Nurses

breached their standard of care by failing to properly document their

observations.    She states in her report that “the nursing staff failed to

appropriately document the care provided to . . . Laudermilt in regards to the

attempt to place a central line”; that “[n]o one documented what was done to

check placement of the central line placed”; that they failed to “document the

collection of data and documentation of care provided [to] . . . Laudermilt”; and

that they failed to document any difficulties with the unsuccessful attempt in

Laudermilt’s chart. She opines that these failures breached the standard of care

that required the Nurses to collect “comprehensive data pertinent to the patient’s

health or the situation.” And she further states that “[i]t is difficult to accurately

determine the names of all the nurses that cared for [Laudermilt] during the

period of time in the emergency department due to the incomplete

documentation exhibited in this chart.”

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      The arguments set forth by the Nurses and the Hospital against the expert

reports of Dr. Terpolilli and Nurse Posani are without merit.

      First, the two expert reports sufficiently put the Nurses and Hospital on

notice of what care was required but not given. As such, the reports sufficiently

set out a standard of care and a breach of that standard. See Columbia N. Hills

Hosp. Subsidiary, L.P. v. Alvarez, 382 S.W.3d 619, 629 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth

2012, no pet.). Although neither report addresses each of the Nurses’ failures

separately, the reports nevertheless adequately put the Nurses on notice of how

each expert believes the Nurses breached their duties. Nurse Posani notes that

the Nurses’ own failure to comply with the standard for documentation made it

difficult for the experts to determine which of the Nurses did what. The Nurses

and Hospital frame that difficulty as a flaw in the expert reports, but Nurse Posani

and Dr. Terpolilli each give their own label to the difficulty: indication of a breach

of the standard of care. Both expert reports note that the Nurses had a duty to

make proper documentation and that this documentation was not done. In other

words, none of the Nurses complied with this standard.

      Second, the reports are not as vague and unspecific as the Nurses and

Hospital portray them. Indeed, Nurse Posani and Dr. Terpolilli opine about the

duties of emergency room nurses in general and with respect to central venous

line placement and how those duties were not performed in this case—meaning,

they were not performed by any of the Nurses. They both name each of the

Nurses in their reports and note that the Nurses all treated Laudermilt in the

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emergency department on the day in question.         In other words, each of the

Nurses had the duties explained in the expert reports, including a duty to monitor

and make proper documentation of observations of Laudermilt’s care, and none

of the Nurses complied with that duty.        See Gonzalez, 485 S.W.3d at 247–

48 (stating that an expert may assert that multiple defendant doctors all owed the

plaintiff the same standard of care and noting that the expert report named both

defendant doctors and stated that there is a generally applicable standard of care

for doctors providing the type of care at issue).

      Third, we disagree that Dr. Terpolilli’s report was conclusory as to the

breach of the standard of care by the Nurses. The Nurses and Hospital assert as

an example of the conclusory nature of his report that while Dr. Terpolilli states

that the Nurses had a duty to write down their nursing observations, he did not

specify which observations. This argument is unpersuasive; Dr. Terpolilli cannot

know what the nurses observed because they failed to document their

observations.

      Fourth, although the Nurses and Hospital contend that Nurse Posani’s

report was conclusory because she opines that the Nurses breached their

standard of care with respect to the unsuccessful attempted placement of the

external jugular central venous line, while Dr. Terpolilli discussed the placement

of the femoral central venous line, this argument also fails. The differences in the

two reports does not make Nurse Posani’s report conclusory; rather, taking the

reports together, they set out breaches of the applicable standard of care for both

                                          9
attempts at placing a line. See Fagadau, 311 S.W.3d at 138 (holding expert

report not conclusory because the expert’s opinions were tied to specific facts).

      Finally, the Nurses and Hospital take issue with Dr. Terpolilli’s statements

that the Nurses had a duty to ensure that informed consent was obtained and

documented and they contend that doctors, not nurses, have such a duty. But,

whether an expert’s opinions are correct is not an issue for a motion to dismiss

under section 74.351. Gonzalez, 485 S.W.3d at 245.

      We therefore hold, based on a review of the expert reports and the

applicable law, that the trial court did not act arbitrarily, unreasonably, or without

reference to guiding principles by determining that the reports constitute a good-

faith effort to explain the bases of the experts’ standard of care and breach

opinions. See Fagadau, 311 S.W.3d at 137–38.

B.    Dr. Terpolilli’s Report Adequately Addresses Causation.

      Next, Hospital and the Nurses argue that the expert reports do not satisfy

the requirements as to causation. The Nurses argue that Nurse Posani cannot

offer causation opinions and that Dr. Terpolilli’s report does not constitute a good

faith attempt to comply with an expert report as to causation because it fails to

link any alleged breach by each nurse to the harm alleged. Similarly, Hospital

contends that Dr. Terpolilli’s report fails to explain how any alleged breaches of

the standard of care by the Nurses caused the harm alleged.

      Hospital and the Nurses are correct that only a physician may opine on

causation. See Alvarez, 382 S.W.3d at 627 (citing Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code

                                         10
Ann. § 74.351(r)(5)(C)).      But as we explain below, Dr. Terpolilli’s report

adequately addresses causation.

      Dr. Terpolilli ties the breaches of the standard of care he sets out in the

report to the result of the doctor leaving the guidewire in Laudermilt. He explains

that “[b]reach of nursing standard [one] directly led to a lack of clinically relevant

information being made available to the treating physicians”; that breach of

standards two and three “directly led to a failure of the ED nursing staff to

organize themselves and prepare their team for the performance of an invasive

procedure” by the emergency room physician, which “directly contributed to the

failure of [the doctor] to perform Ms. Laudermilt’s [central venous line] insertion in

a competent and safe manner”; and that breach of standard four “directly

contributed to [the doctor’s] failure to recognize that he not only lost the guidewire

during the performance of [the central venous line] insertion but then left it inside

Ms. Laudermilt without activating any clinical resources for retrieval.”

      Dr. Terpolilli further explains that “[c]loser nursing attention, monitoring,

and accountability during [central venous line] placement would have resulted in

recognition that the guidewire was missing.” He opines that

      failure of the [emergency department nurses] to keep the treating
      physicians informed of [Laudermilt’s] clinical status, [e]nsure . . . a
      procedure time out were both performed and documented, and
      monitor Ms. Laudermilt during an invasive procedure directly
      contributed to [the doctor’s] failure to perform [the central venous
      line] insertion in a competent manner in which he both lost and left a
      guidewire inside Ms. Laudermilt thereby causing her subsequent
      pain, suffering, need for multiple subsequent invasive procedures,

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      and the potential long term medical risks associated with retained
      non-retrievable vascular and soft tissue foreign bodies.

In other words, Dr. Terpolilli explains that the Nurses breached the standard of

care applicable to them because none of the Nurses documented and performed

a time out, monitored Laudermilt, or documented her observations, and that

these failures contributed to the doctor not recognizing that the guidewire had

been left in Laudermilt.   Dr. Terpolilli further ties the guidewire remaining in

Laudermilt to her injuries. He explains that it “directly resulted in her subsequent

pain, suffering, need for multiple subsequent invasive procedures [to remove the

wire], and the potential long[-]term medical risks associated with” the fragments

of wire that could not be removed.

      Dr. Terpolilli does not expressly state that, had the nurses held the time out

procedure, monitored Laudermilt, thereby observed that the guidewire had not

been removed, and documented their observations that the guidewire remained

in place, the doctor would have acted on those observations and removed the

guidewire. However, Dr. Terpolilli states that leaving a guidewire inside a patient

during a central venous line insertion is a “never event,” and Dr. Terpolilli does

not need to further spell out his assumption that the doctor, upon having it noted

for him that the guidewire remained in Laudermilt, would not have left it there.

Dr. Terpolilli was free to infer that the doctor would not have intentionally or

knowingly left the guidewire inside Laudermilt. See Weatherford Tex. Hosp. Co.

v. Riley, No. 02-10-00453-CV, 2011 WL 2518920, at *4 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth

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June 23, 2011, no pet.) (mem. op.) (holding expert was permitted to infer in

expert report that physician would have performed cesarean section had nurses

discussed issues with the physician); see also Tex. R. Evid. 703 (permitting

experts to draw inferences from the facts or data in a case); Benish v. Grottie,

281 S.W.3d 184, 195 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2009, pet. denied) (noting experts’

ability to make inferences from facts).

      Because Dr. Terpolilli’s report sufficiently connects the Nurses’ failures to

follow the standard of care to Laudermilt’s injuries, the report is sufficient as to

causation. And, accordingly, it is sufficient as to Hospital. See Certified EMS,

Inc. v. Potts, 392 S.W.3d 625, 630 (Tex. 2013) (holding that an expert report that

satisfies the requirements as to one theory of liability entitles the claimant to

proceed with a suit against the physician or healthcare provider, even if it does

not address the plaintiff’s other theories of liability); Gardner v. U.S. Imaging, Inc.,

274 S.W.3d 669, 671–72 (Tex. 2008) (holding that when a plaintiff alleges

vicarious liability against a healthcare provider, an expert report that adequately

implicates the actions of that provider’s agents or employees is sufficient).

      Because the expert reports constitute good faith attempts to comply with

the requirements for an expert report as to the standard of care, breach, and

causation, we overrule Hospital and the Nurses’ two issues.

                                 IV.      Conclusion

      Having overruled Hospital and the Nurses’ two issues, we affirm the trial

court’s denial of the motions to dismiss.

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                                        /s/ Mark T. Pittman
                                        MARK T. PITTMAN
                                        JUSTICE

PANEL: SUDDERTH, C.J.; KERR and PITTMAN, JJ.

DELIVERED: November 2, 2017

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