Personal Application
10/1/2020 Legal Aspects of Health Care Administration
https://openpage-ebooks.jblearning.com/wr/viewer.html?skipLastRead=true&oneTimePasscode=ST-9fea61d6-d406-435a-9f0a-1663fe4ad042&language=en-US#boo… 1/5
Premier Access for Legal Aspects of Health Care Administration, 13e (Kippenhan - CFC993) ISBN 9781284239850
Chapter 10 Medical Staff Organization and Malpractice Discharge and Follow-Up Care
▸ DISCHARGE AND FOLLOW-UP CARE The premature discharge of a patient is risky business. The intent of discharging
patients more expeditiously is often a result of a need to reduce costs. As pointed
out by Dr. Nelson, an obstetrician and board member of the American Medical
Association, such decisions “should be based on medical factors and ought not be
relegated to bean counters.”
As noted in Doan v. Griffith, discharge instructions must be clear and complete. In
this case, an accident victim was admitted to the hospital with serious injuries,
including multiple fractures of his facial bones. The patient contended that the
physician was negligent in not advising him at the time of discharge that his facial
bones needed to be realigned by a specialist before the bones became fused. As a
result, his face became disfigured. Expert testimony demonstrated that the
customary medical treatment for the patient’s injuries would have been to realign
his fractured bones surgically as soon as the swelling subsided and that such
treatment would have restored the normal contour of his face. The appellate court
held that the jury reasonably could have found that the physician failed to provide
timely advice to the patient regarding his need for further medical treatment and
that such failure was the proximate cause of the patient’s condition.
Untimely Discharge Barbara Jupiter, executrix of the estate of Warren Jupiter, brought an action against
the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in Jupiter v. U.S. The suit alleged that Mr.
Jupiter sustained personal injury, pain, and suffering prior to his death, which was
allegedly caused by the negligence of the defendant’s agents and employees while
he was a patient at the VA hospital. A bench trial was conducted over a period of 7
days.
66
67
68
10/1/2020 Legal Aspects of Health Care Administration
https://openpage-ebooks.jblearning.com/wr/viewer.html?skipLastRead=true&oneTimePasscode=ST-9fea61d6-d406-435a-9f0a-1663fe4ad042&language=en-US#boo… 2/5
Mr. Jupiter had elected to undergo bariatric surgery for weight loss at the VA
hospital. One step in the operation was claimed to be a departure from the
accepted practice of performing bariatric surgery, and it was this step that lead to an
infection, and ultimately, resulted in the Jupiter’s death. The record showed that the
distal stomach was removed at that time. The removal of the distal stomach was
determined to be a departure from the standard of care.
Evidence in this case included testimony from 14 witnesses, medical records, reports
of approximately 6,000 pages, and multiple anatomic diagrams and images. One
witness, Dr. Randall, who had performed over 6,000 bariatric surgeries, testified that
in his opinion there was no surgical reason for removing the distal stomach. He
explained that the basis for that opinion was the positive postoperative
management opportunities of which Jupiter was deprived by the removal of the
distal stomach. Jupiter was discharged with an elevated white blood cell (WBC) count
without timely treatment. Dr. Randall was of the opinion that the elevated WBC
count indicated that there was an ongoing infection at the time Jupiter was
discharged.
Jupiter was readmitted to the VA hospital on June 13, 2003, and an evaluation of his
condition revealed a urinary tract infection (UTI), which was successfully treated. By
June 23, 2003, even though his WBC count remained high, he was discharged from
the VA hospital and sent to St. Alban’s Hospital. Dr. Telzak testified that that decision
departed from accepted medical practice. Additionally, he testified that the early
departure from the VA hospital on May 14, 2003, also was unacceptable medical
practice because no determination was made as to why his WBC count remained
elevated. His testimony was further supported by the fact that several months later,
in November of 2003, an abdominal CT scan evidenced a gastric leak and fluid in the
ultra-abdominal cavity. This, he testified, was the cause of the elevated WBC count
on June 23.
The surgeon had failed to address Jupiter’s condition 2 months earlier when there
were signs of infection. Furthermore, he was indifferent as to whether or not his
recommendation to address the possibility of an internal gastric leak attributable to
his surgery was addressed. He claimed it was the medical service’s responsibility and
not his. His testimony is startling given the testimony of Dr. Weinshel, the Deputy
Chief of Staff of the VA hospital who, when asked whether the department of
surgery was responsible for the patient’s follow-up care, answered “sure.”69
10/1/2020 Legal Aspects of Health Care Administration
https://openpage-ebooks.jblearning.com/wr/viewer.html?skipLastRead=true&oneTimePasscode=ST-9fea61d6-d406-435a-9f0a-1663fe4ad042&language=en-US#boo… 3/5
The failure to make or attempt to make a differential diagnosis which the
undiagnosed elevated white blood count, the fever (the inexplicable failure to
take his temperature for weeks), his progressive debilitation, failure to thrive,
anorexia, virtually cried out for is, that if that were done and the relationship
between an intra-abdominal leak and the infection was revealed and corrective
surgery performed at or about June 2003, the likelihood of a successful outcome
was better than it was when that surgery was finally performed approximately 5
months later, in November. Tr.76, 195-96.
The court concluded that the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the
patient’s pain and suffering. The plaintiff’s estate was awarded $5.9 million.
Failure to Provide Follow-up Care Failure to provide follow-up care can result in a lawsuit if such failure results in injury
to a patient. In Truan v. Smith, the Tennessee Supreme Court entered judgment in
favor of the plaintiffs, who had brought action against a treating physician for
damages alleged to have been the result of malpractice by the physician in the
examination, diagnosis, and treatment of breast cancer. In January or February of
1974, the patient noticed a change in the size and firmness of her left breast, which
she attributed to an implant. She later noticed discoloration and pain on pressure.
While being examined by the defendant on March 25, 1974, for another ailment, the
patient brought her symptoms to the physician’s attention but received no
significant response, and the physician made no examination of the breast at that
time. The patient brought her symptoms to the attention of her physician for the
second time on May 6, 1974. She had been advised by the defendant to observe her
left breast for 30 days for a change in symptoms, which at the time of the
examination included discomfort, discoloration, numbness, and sharp pain. She was
given an appointment for 1 month later. The patient, on the morning of her
appointment, June 3, 1974, called the physician’s office and informed the nurse that
her symptoms had not changed and that she would like to know whether she
should keep her appointment. The nurse indicated that she would pass on her
message to the physician. The patient assumed she would be called back if it was
necessary to see the physician.
By late June, the symptoms became more acute, and the patient made an
appointment to see the defendant physician on July 8, 1974. The patient also was
scheduled to see a specialist on July 10, 1974, at which time she was admitted to the
70
10/1/2020 Legal Aspects of Health Care Administration
https://openpage-ebooks.jblearning.com/wr/viewer.html?skipLastRead=true&oneTimePasscode=ST-9fea61d6-d406-435a-9f0a-1663fe4ad042&language=en-US#boo… 4/5
hospital and was diagnosed as having a malignant mass. A radical mastectomy was
performed. Expert witnesses expressed the opinion that the mass had been
palpable 7 months before the removal. When the defendant undertook to give the
plaintiff a complete physical examination and embarked on a wait-and-see program
as an aid in diagnosis, the physician should have followed up with his patient, who
died before the conclusion of the trial.
The state supreme court held that the evidence was sufficient to support a finding
that the defendant was guilty of malpractice in failing to inform his patient that
cancer was a possible cause of her complaints and in failing to make any effort to
see his patient at the expiration of the observation period instituted by him.
Failure to Follow Up on Test Results The patient in Downey v. University Internists of St. Louis, Inc. entered the hospital
in December of 1996 for heart bypass surgery. Two chest X-rays were taken during
this hospitalization. The X-rays were interpreted as showing a lesion in the patient’s
left lung and that a neoplasm could not be completely ruled out. If clinically
warranted, CT scanning could be performed. No further tests or evaluations were
ordered in response to these reports. A jury found that the now-deceased patient
had a material chance of surviving his cancer and that his chance of survival was lost
as a result of the physician’s negligence. The jury, however, did not award damages
to compensate for the harm suffered. The Missouri Court of Appeals found that the
verdict of no-damage award was inconsistent with the evidence and remanded the
case for a new trial.
Abandonment Lack of patient care follow-up can sometimes be the result of the physician
abandoning his patient for a variety of reasons. It can be the result of a personality
conflict or it could be pure negligence in following up on the patient’s care needs.
The relationship between a physician and a patient, once established, continues
until it is ended by the mutual consent of the parties, the patient’s dismissal of the
physician, the physician’s withdrawal from the case, or agreement that the
physician’s services are no longer required. A physician who decides to withdraw his
or her services must provide the patient with reasonable notice so that the services
of another physician can be obtained. Premature termination of treatment is often
the subject of a legal action for abandonment—the unilateral termination of a
71
10/1/2020 Legal Aspects of Health Care Administration
https://openpage-ebooks.jblearning.com/wr/viewer.html?skipLastRead=true&oneTimePasscode=ST-9fea61d6-d406-435a-9f0a-1663fe4ad042&language=en-US#boo… 5/5
physician–patient relationship by the physician without notice to the patient. The
following elements should be established in order for a patient to recover damages
for abandonment:
Medical care was unreasonably discontinued.
The discontinuance of medical care was against the patient’s will. Termination of the
physician–patient relationship must have been brought about by a unilateral act of
the physician. There can be no issue of abandonment if the relationship is
terminated by mutual consent or by dismissal of the physician by the patient.
The physician failed to arrange for care by another physician.
Foresight indicated that discontinuance might result in physical harm to the patient.
Actual harm was suffered by the patient.