Whitney v. Anonymous Physician/Medical Center
Dr. Fagel obtained a settlement of $3.55 million on behalf
of a woman who suffers from
neurologic injuries after physicians failed to
diagnose and treat her inverted uterus. The plaintiff had a normal vaginal
delivery of a healthy baby, after a prior C-section three years earlier. The
defendant OB delivered the placenta and noted increased vaginal bleeding. The defendant
anesthesiologist checked the patient and confirmed low blood pressure. He
assumed blood loss was a likely cause and ordered a stat hemoglobin and
hematocrit before returning to his call room. Over the next 1 ½ hours, the
patient continued to bleed. Her mother and sister saw the blood and complained
to a nurse but were told it was normal post delivery bleeding. The OB then
decided to take the plaintiff to the main operating room to explore her abdomen
because the main OR had equipment that was not available in the labor and
Delivery OR. However, the room was not set up so she had to be returned to the
Labor and Delivery OR. As the patient was being moved, she went into cardiac
arrest and was immediately intubated and given blood prior to surgery. During
surgery, the OB discovered that her uterus was inverted. After her uterus was
re-inverted, the plaintiff was moved to the ICU and remained comatose for over
two weeks. Since awakening, her condition has slowly improved and she can walk
with assistance and communicate, but, due to the nature of her neurologic
injuries, has memory loss and requires assistance with all activities of daily
living.
The defendant anesthesiologist contended that he properly
treated the patient’s drop in blood pressure with medication and expected the
OB to call him if bleeding continued. The defendant OB claimed that the
bleeding was not excessive and that he was prepared to take the plaintiff back
into surgery before she arrested, but was turned away by the surgery nurse and anesthesiologist.
The defendant hospital claimed that its nurses all complied with the proper
standard of care. However, Dr. Fagel proved that all three defendants were
responsible for the patient’s injuries. First, the anesthesiologist was
negligent for failing to investigate the patient’s dropping blood pressure and
continued bleed. Second, the OB was negligent for failing to recognize and
diagnose an inverted uterus until after the patient arrested. Finally, the
hospital was negligent for failing to provide adequate emergency surgery
facilities.