Microsoft word - miller v. gmc 398 of 2003 mot. in lim. order immunity su. …
STATE GEISINGER HEALTH SYSTEM, STEPHEN J. PAOLUCCI, M.D., SCOTT HOFFER, M.D., L.E. BAXTER, M.D., AND JAMES LAUFFLER, R.N., AND CHRISTINA WOLFE, RNC Defendants APPEARANCES: ANDREW E. DIPIERO, JR., ESQUIRE, Attorney for the Plaintiffs BENJAMIN POST, ESQUIRE, Attorney for the Defendants TARA REID, ESQUIRE, Attorney for the Defendants March 28, 2006.
This is a medical malpractice case. On March 15, 1999,
Decedent was admitted to the mental health ward of defendant
Geisinger Medical Center (hereinafter GMC) for mental health
treatment. He died in the hospital on March 18, 1999.
Extensive discovery has been completed, and the matter is
scheduled for trial. Defendants have filed a “Motion in Limine
to Preclude Any Evidence Against Them at the Time of Trial as
Plaintiffs’ Claims Are Barred by the Pennsylvania Mental Health
Procedures Act and Summary Judgment is Otherwise Appropriate at
This Time.” They assert that the evidence does not establish
a prima facie case for “gross negligence” by defendants, thus
providing them immunity under the Mental Health Procedures Act
In summary, decedent Mark Miller was admitted to GMC on
March 15, 1999, for inpatient mental health treatment. He was
primarily treated with medication. He died on March 18, 1999,
at the hospital. Plaintiffs allege that his death was the
result of overmedication. In what is in essence a summary
judgment motion, defendants assert immunity from liability.
The issue is whether under the undisputed facts of this case,
as a matter of law, defendants’ acts or omissions constitute
gross negligence. If so, they are not immune from liability.
The Mental Health Procedures Act states:
It is the policy of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to seek to assure the availability of adequate treatment to persons who are mentally ill, and it is the purpose of this act to establish procedures whereby this policy can be effected. The provisions of this act shall be interpreted in conformity with the principles of due process to make
voluntary and involuntary treatment available where the need is great and its absence could result in serious harm to the mentally ill person or to others. Treatment on a voluntary basis shall be preferred to involuntary treatment; and in every case, the least restrictions consistent with adequate treatment shall be employed. Persons who are mentally retarded, senile, alcoholic, or drug dependent shall receive mental health treatment only if they are also diagnosed as mentally ill, but these conditions of themselves shall not be deemed to constitute mental illness.
50 P.S. §7102 (Statement of Policy). Furthermore:
Adequate treatment means a course of treatment designed and administered to alleviate a person's pain and distress and to maximize the probability of his recovery from mental illness. It shall be provided to all persons in treatment who are subject to this act. It may include inpatient treatment, partial hospitalization, or outpatient treatment. Adequate inpatient treatment shall include such accommodations, diet, heat, light, sanitary facilities, clothing, recreation, education and medical care as are necessary to maintain decent, safe and healthful living conditions. Treatment shall include diagnosis, evaluation, therapy, or rehabilitation needed to alleviate pain and distress and to facilitate the recovery of a person from mental illness and shall also include care and other services that supplement treatment and aid or promote such recovery.
50 P.S. § 7104 (Provision for Treatment).
In the defining case of Allen v. Montgomery Hospital, 548
Pa. 299, 307, 696 A.2d 1175, 1179 (1997), the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court decided that “treatment” included treatment for
other ailments while the patient was treated for mental
Therefore, applying the rules of statutory construction to the immunity provision of Section 114 of the MHPA, we conclude that the General Assembly decided to ameliorate certain risks by granting limited immunity to doctors and hospitals who have undertaken the treatment of the mentally ill, including treatment for physical ailments pursuant to a contract with a mental health facility to provide such treatment. Policy reasons also support this interpretation of the immunity provision in Section 114 of the MHPA. If the provision were interpreted narrowly such as urged by appellees so that it only applied to treatment specifically directed at a mental illness, it could reduce or eliminate the willingness of doctors or hospitals to provide needed medical care to a mentally ill patient who is referred by a mental hospital for medical treatment. Even if doctors or hospitals still provided treatment for physical ailments in such a situation, it could lead such providers of medical care to minimize their risks by placing the mentally ill patients in a more restrictive environment than is necessary or adopting other precautionary measures which would increase the costs of the medical care provided to the mentally ill. (emphasis provided).
A subsequent Pennsylvania Superior Court case added:
The immunity provision of the MHPA provides in pertinent part as follows: § 7114. Immunity from civil and criminal liability
In the absence of willful misconduct or gross negligence, a county administrator, a director of a facility, a physician, a peace officer or any other authorized person who participates in a decision that a person be examined or treated under this act, . shall not be civilly or criminally liable for such decision or for any of its consequences. 50 P.S. § 7114(a).
Under the MHPA, a "facility" is "any mental health establishment, hospital, clinic, institution, center, day care center, base service unit, community mental health center, or part thereof, that provides
for the diagnosis, treatment, care or rehabilitation of mentally ill persons, whether as outpatients or inpatients." 50 P.S. § 7103. "Treatment" is defined as "diagnosis, evaluation, therapy, or rehabilitation needed to alleviate pain and distress and to facilitate the recovery of a person from mental illness and shall also include care and other services that supplement treatment and aid or promote such recovery." 50 P.S. § 7104. Thus, we must determine if Crozer was a "facility" providing treatment to Defendant for, if it was, Crozer is immune from suit in the absence of "gross negligence." Our Supreme Court has determined that the immunity provided by the MHPA extends to institutions, as well as natural persons, that provide care to mentally ill patients. Farago v. Sacred Heart General Hospital, 522 Pa. 410, 562 A.2d 300, 303 (1989). Additionally, our Supreme Court has interpreted § 7114(a) to include not only treatment decisions, but also, "'care and other services that supplement treatment' in order to promote the recovery of the patient from mental illness." Allen v. Montgomery Hospital, 548 Pa. 299, 696 A.2d 1175, 1179 (1997). As a hospital that provides inpatient psychiatric care, Crozer is most certainly an institution to which the provisions of the MHPA apply. See Farago, 562 A.2d at 303. Decedent was involuntarily committed to the inpatient psychiatric care of Crozer, and its staff monitored Decedent as part of her medical care. In Allen, our Supreme Court interpreted the MHPA to apply to the daily care and other services provided to a patient as part of the patient's overall psychiatric treatment. See Allen, 696 A.2d at 1179. Therefore, we conclude that the MHPA applies to Crozer and consequently, that the trial court did not err by applying its immunity provisions when it granted summary judgment.”
Downey v. Crozer-Chester Medical Center, 817 A.2d 517, 524-525
Thus, it has been determined by the Pennsylvania courts
that the immunity provision of the Mental Health Procedures Act
applies to any treatment a patient is receiving in a
medical/mental health facility incidental to his or her mental
health treatment. In case at bar, there is no question that
the complained of treatment was incidental to decedent’s mental
health treatment. Therefore, the controlling issue is whether
the defendants’ actions present a question for a jury or
whether gross negligence has not been established sufficiently
The Superior Court has recently reiterated the definition
Clearly in this case patient is not attempting to prove willful misconduct; therefore, her burden would be to present sufficient facts to the jury from which it could making a finding of gross negligence. Our Supreme Court adopted this court's definition of gross negligence in Albright v. Abington Memorial Hosp., 548 Pa. 268, 696 A.2d 1159 (1997): “It appears that the legislature intended to require that liability be premised on facts indicating more egregiously deviant conduct than ordinary carelessness, inadvertence, laxity, or indifference. We hold that the legislature intended the term gross negligence to mean a form of negligence where the facts support substantially more than ordinary carelessness, inadvertence, laxity, or indifference. The behavior of the defendant must be flagrant, grossly deviating from the ordinary standard of care.” Id. at 278, 696 A.2d at 1164, quoting Bloom v. DuBois Regional Medical Center, 409 Pa.Super. 83, 597 A.2d 671, 679 (1991).”
Walsh v. Borczon, 881 A.2d 1, 7 (Pa.Super. 2005).
In light of the definition of gross negligence, we must
decide when a case involving gross negligence is appropriate
for jury determination and when is it appropriate for court
determination. The Pennsylvania courts have clearly addressed
this issue and established the standard for when a court should
We recognize that the limited immunity provided by section 7114 would mean little if the persons or entities covered by that provision were required to undergo trial in every case and leave it to a jury to determine if the complained of misdeeds (if there were any) rose to the level of gross negligence. On the very issue of whether the jury has the sole right to determine gross negligence, Justice Cappy declared:
While it is generally true that the issue of whether a given set of facts satisfies the definition of gross negligence is a question of fact to be determined by a jury, a court may take the issue from a jury, and decide the issue as a matter of law, if the conduct in question falls short of gross negligence, the case is entirely free from doubt, and no reasonable jury could find gross negligence. Id.(Albright) at 1164-65, citing Willett v. Evergreen Homes, Inc., et. al., 407 Pa.Super. 141, 595 A.2d 164 (1991), alloc. denied, 529 Pa. 623, 600 A.2d 539 (1991).
Downey v. Crozer-Chester Medical Center, 817 A.2d 517, 525-526
Thus, based on the undisputed facts, our determination is
whether the conduct of the defendants falls short of gross
negligence; whether the case is entirely free from doubt; and
whether no reasonable jury could find gross negligence.
Plaintiffs argue that even if the acts or omissions of each
individual defendant amount to negligence, not gross
negligence, their combined negligence amounts to gross
negligence. Plaintiffs argue that the resulting gross
negligence of the “group” of individuals renders the individual
defendants grossly negligence, even though their individual
acts constituted ordinary negligence. Plaintiffs cite no
authority for this proposition, and the court knows of no legal
theory which would subject an individual defendant to liability
for gross negligence allegedly created by the independent
actions of several people, with the exception of vicarious
liability. Thus, this court will determine whether a prima
facie case for gross negligence has been established for each
These are the facts of this case as alleged by plaintiffs
and evidenced through numerous depositions, medical records,
and expert reports. Decedent, Mark Miller, age 27, was
admitted to the inpatient psychiatric unit of GMC on March 15,
1999, for further assessment and treatment of major depression.
He had been expressing suicidal ideations during outpatient
treatment. He also had a history of chronic pain from an eight
year old vehicle accident and had heart problems treated with a
pacemaker. On admission he was kept on his outpatient
medications. The next day (March 16, 1999), per admitting
physician defendant Doctor Paolucci, the medications were
changed, including adding methadone and Librium. On March 17,
1999, per physician assistant Albright (who was supervised by
defendant Doctor Baxter), the dose of methadone was increased.
In accordance with that increase, the physician assistant
ordered an increase in the frequency of vital sign monitoring
from twice a day to “please check vital signs at shift change.”
Friends and relatives found decedent to be sleepy during the
day of March 17. The records indicate that he was somnolent at
At midnight at the start of March 18, 1999, he was awake
with other patients. His vital signs were taken at midnight,
just before he went to bed and the vital signs were found to be
good and steady. At 1 a.m. on March 18, he was sleeping in his
bed. Defendant Nurse Wolfe and/or other nurses saw him asleep
hourly thereafter through the night. At 6:00 a.m. defendant
Nurse Lauffer1 checked on decedent and found him to be difficult
to arouse and sedated. Defendant Nurse Lauffer checked
decedent’s vital signs which continued to be good, consistent,
and in accord with the vital signs of the last day and one-
half. However, immediately, defendant Nurse Lauffer called
defendant Doctor Hoffer (a psychiatrist who dealt with
outpatient care but who was on call at home) to inquire as to
whether decedent’s medication could be withheld in light of his
condition. Defendant Nurse Lauffer told defendant Doctor
Hoffer that decedent “appeared to be sedated, that he was
arousable, that his vital signs -- I gave him his vital signs,
specifically as to what they were. And I informed him that
they were consistent with what had been taken at midnight.”
Defendant Doctor Hoffer gave permission to withhold the
medication and directed that the patient be evaluated later at
the beginning of the day shift, or in the morning. Defendant
Nurse Lauffer did nothing else for decedent and finished other
work. He returned to decedent’s room at 6:55 p.m. and found
the decedent in cardiopulmonary arrest. Decedent was
The question is whether any of the parties were grossly
negligent in causing decedent’s death. Plaintiff has several
expert reports addressing the issue of negligence and assigning
responsibility. However, it is troublesome that most of these
allegations of negligence or gross negligence lump defendants
together without explaining what each defendant did or did not
do which amounted to gross negligence. Although Dr. Eric Fine
opines that decedent would have survived had he been treated
1 Nurse Lauffer is referred to as “Lauffler” in the caption.
within the accepted standard of care, he assigns blame
generally by saying there as a gross deviation from the
accepted standard of care “by his physicians and nursing staff
at Geisinger Medical Center.” Likewise, Dr. Cyril Wecht opines
that ”Mr. Mark Miller died as a direct result of the toxic
effects of the combination of several drugs that depressed his
central nervous system. More frequent check-ups after midnight
would have detected increasing respiratory depression and
thereby would have led to appropriate and timely intervention,
which would have prevented his death.” There is no specific
assignment of negligence to any individual. In addition,
without assigning individual liability to any one person, Dr.
Harold Palevsky states that “[t]he failure of the staff at
Geisinger Medical Center and the physicians involved in Mr.
Miller’s care to recognize the potential for respiratory
compromise from the medications he was on, the failure to
administer any antagonists for either narcotics (methadone) or
benzodiazepines (Librium) was a deviation from accepted
Three other plaintiff experts are more specific. Nursing
expert Jeanne Geiger-Brown, PhD, APRN, BC, states that
generally “the professional accountability for monitoring his
condition and acting on those observations was not clear.” But
this is not a corporate liability case dealing with faulty
procedures and protocols. This is a case against individual
defendants and against GMC based on vicarious liability.
However, Dr. Geiger-Brown does assign individual liability to
Similarly, Richard A. Pessagno, MSN, APRN, BS, generally
criticizes the nursing care for decedent from midnight until
6:55 a.m. on March 18. He says that the “lack of monitoring of
Mr. Miller’s condition” was below the standard of care.
Specifically, he states that Nurse Lauffer acted below the
standard of care when he left decedent alone and unattended
after 6:00 a.m. He also opines that there was no “code cart
actually on the psychiatric unit when Mr. Miller needed to be
resuscitated” and that this was below the standard of care.
Dr. Fayer assigns general liability and specific
liability. Generally, he says that “Drs. Paolucci, Hoffer and
Baxter all deviated from care consistent with that of a trained
psychiatrist, internist and resident respectively and did not
employ prudence in meeting standards of care.” Specifically,
he makes several direct criticisms of Dr. Paolucci. He states
that Dr. Paolucci failed to “conduct a proper and appropriate
medical work-up for his medical condition,” i.e., a cardiac
work-up. Second, he states that Dr. Paolucci “failed to
prescribe, manage and administer appropriate medications for
the treatment of his major depressive disorder and
detoxification from opoid analgesics (Vicodin). Dr. Paolucci
did not appreciate the drug-drug interactions of the various
medications.” Third, he says that “Dr. Paolucci did not
communicate concerns regarding the clinical status and
interaction of various medications with Dr. Baxter, who was
called to consult in regard to detoxification.” Finally, he
says that “[t]here was a failure on the part of Dr. Paolucci as
the attending of Mark Miller and the other physicians who were
involved in his treatment to follow the procedures for medical
situations on the unit set up by the Geisinger Medical Center
for Inpatient Psychiatry Procedure #18. I note that for
medical problems during off hours which are judged to be
serious, a nurse will remain with the patient, observe and care
for the patient, and document findings in the medical unit.
This was not done and the serious state with obvious somnolence
and possible respiratory depression was not addressed on
3/18/99 after Mr. Miller was seen at 6:00 a.m.”
With regard to Dr. Hoffer, Dr. Fayer states that when
Nurse Lauffer called Dr. Hoffer, “[t]here was no discussion
about the other medications that Mr. Miller was on and the only
thing done was to hold the Librium. Dr. Hoffer did not at that
time give an order for Mr. Miller to be examined by a physician
on call. Nor was there any change in his vital signs. He did
not instruct Nurse Lauffer to remain with the patient and to
monitor what clearly was a very dangerous situation.”
The only reference in Dr. Fayer’s report about Dr.
Baxter’s liability (except general statements) is that “on 3/17
Dr. Baxter did not see Mr. Miller or communicate to Dr.
Paolucci or to David Albright, a Physician’s Assistant who was
apparently assigned to evaluate and treat Mr. Miller under the
supervision of Dr. Baxter. On 3/17 at 2:00 p.m. Mr. Miller was
noted to be somnolent. Despite this his methadone dosage was
increased from 20 mg.b.i.d. to 30 mg.b.i.d. This was never
communicated to Dr. Baxter or Dr. Paolucci. This failure to
communicate Mr. Miller’s clinical condition and increasing the
dose of methadone knowing he was already on other medications
which caused respiratory depression was clearly a gross
deviation from accepted psychiatric medical practice.” Query:
In light of the expert reports and the allegation of
gross negligence on the part of each defendant, it is crucial
to examine the facts which plaintiffs allege establish a prima
facie case for gross negligence. First, in regard to defendant
Nurse Wolfe, she is alleged to have not monitored the decedent
closely enough during the hours of midnight to 6:00 a.m.
Experts Geiger-Brown and Pessagno do not address defendant
Nurse Wolfe specifically, but generally state that the
monitoring of decedent from midnight to 6:00 a.m. was below
standards. There are no facts or any expert opinions which
establish any negligence, gross or ordinary, on the part of
defendant Nurse Wolfe. There is no cause of action against
Second, in regard to Doctor Baxter, the only facts alleged
upon which liability is founded are that Doctor Baxter
consulted on this matter and prescribed a certain regimen of
medications for decedent which were increased by his physical
assistant on March 17, 1999. The only contact between decedent
and Doctor Baxter was on March 16, 1999. In addition,
Plaintiffs’ experts do not link any specific acts or admissions
with any opinions which constitute flagrant acts or omissions
or with acts or omissions which amount to a form of negligence
substantially more that ordinary carelessness, inadvertence,
laxity, or indifference. Doctor Baxter’s alleged actions do
not constitute a prima facie case for gross negligence.
Third, in regard to Doctor Hoffer, the only facts alleged
upon which liability is founded are that he was called at home
by Nurse Lauffer who asked him whether decedent’s medications
could be withheld that morning. Doctor Hoffer received similar
calls quite often about seemingly sedated patients. In this
case he was told by Nurse Lauffer that Mark Miller’s vital
signs were good and consistent and that Mark Miller was
arousable and could open his eyes. Plaintiffs’ only expert who
speaks directly to Dr. Hoffer’s alleged negligence is Dr.
Fayer. Dr. Fayer says that “Dr. Hoffer did not at that time
give an order for Mr. Miller to be examined by a physician on
call. Nor was there any change in vital signs. He did not
instruct Nurse Lauffer to remain with the patient and to
monitor what clearly was a very dangerous situation.” Even if
these allegations, under the circumstances, amounted to
ordinary negligence, Doctor Hoffer’s alleged actions were not
flagrant and do not amount to a form of negligence
substantially more that ordinary carelessness, inadvertence,
laxity, or indifference. These actions do not amount to gross
Fourth, in regard to Doctor Paolucci, the only facts
alleged upon which liability is founded are that he was the
admitting physician and, thus, the attending physician to Mark
Miller. Upon admission, he examined Mark Miller. He had no
contact with him after that time. Once again, plaintiffs’ only
expert who speaks directly to Dr. Paolucci’s alleged negligence
is Dr. Fayer. Dr. Fayer says that Doctor Paolucci failed “to
conduct a proper and appropriate medical work-up for his
medical difficulties.” Dr. Fayer referred to his heart
problems. However, plaintiffs’ pathologist, Dr. Wecht opines
that “Mark Miller died as a result of the toxic effects of the
combination of several drugs that depressed the central nervous
system.” There is no connection with this allegation of
Dr. Fayer also states that Dr. Paolucci failed to
“prescribe, manage and administer appropriate medications for
the treatment of his major depressive disorder and
detoxification from opoid analgesics (Vicodin). Dr. Paolucci
did not appreciate the drug-drug interactions of the various
medications Mr. Miller was placed on while a patient in the
hospital This included Librium, methadone, Efflexor, Benadryl,
Depakote, and Trazodone. All of these medications together
have an addictive effect in relation to side effects including
sedation and respiratory depression.” In light of the alleged
acts or omissions of Dr. Paolucci and the expert opinion that
these acts or omissions amounted to negligence, there is
nothing in the record or expert opinion which would lead a
reasonable jury to conclude that these alleged acts of
negligence rise to the level of gross negligence. There is
nothing to indicate that Dr. Paolucci’s alleged acts or
omissions were flagrant or substantially greater than ordinary
Dr. Paolucci did not communicate concerns regarding the clinical status and interaction of various medications with Dr. Baxter who was called in to
consult in regard to detoxification. I should also note that Mr. Miller was not seen by Dr. Baxter on a daily basis while in the hospital. In fact, on 3/17 Dr. Baxter did not see Mr. Miller or communicate to Dr. Paolucci or to David Albright, a Physician’s Assistant who was apparently assigned to evaluate and treat Mr. Miller under the supervision of Dr. Baxter. On 3/17 at 2:00 p.m. Mr. Miller was noted to be somnolent. Despite this his methadone dosage was increased from 20 mg.b.i.d. to 30 mg.b.i.d. This was never directly communicated to Dr. Baxter or Dr. Paolucci. This failure to communicate Mr. Miller’s clinical condition and increasing the dose of methadone knowing he was already on other medications which caused respiratory depression was clearly a gross deviation from accepted psychiatric medical practice.
“This failure to communicate” seems to lump unspecified
defendants together and to add their respective allegations of
failure to communicate together to establish gross negligence.
Certainly, there is nothing in the record to indicate that Dr.
Paolucci’s alleged acts or omissions were flagrant or
substantially greater than ordinary negligence. “An expert's
opinion must be supported by references to facts, testimony or
empirical data and must delineate how the opinion, based on the
record, gives rise to a genuine issue of material fact. Without
such support, there can be no prima facie case of gross
negligence sufficient to overcome a summary judgment motion.
Kenner v. Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc., 808 A.2d 178
(Pa.Super.2002) (affirming entry of summary judgment where an
expert's opinion contained within a report, failed to point to
specific facts, testimony or empirical data for support)
(citing Checchio v. Frankford Hospital, 717 A.2d 1058, 1062
(1998)) (affirmed summary judgment when expert opinion was
based entirely on subjective assessments).” Downey v. Crozer-
Chester Medical Center, 817 A.2d 517, 528-529 (Pa.Super. 2003).
The facts referred to by the expert regarding Dr. Paolucci
simply do not give rise to a prima facie case for gross
negligence. Simply using the magic words “gross negligence” in
the expert report does not give rise to a prima facie case for
gross negligence without sufficient supporting facts.
Moreover, Dr.Fayer’s allegation of gross negligence appears to
arise from the increase in the methadone dosage, which was not
There was a failure on the part of Dr. Paolucci as the attending of Mark Miller and the other physicians who were involved in his treatment to follow the procedures for medical situations on the unit set up by the Geisinger Medical Center for Inpatient Psychiatry Procedure #18. I note that for medical problems during off hours which are judged to be serious, a nurse will remain with the patient, observe and care for the patient and document findings in the medical unit. This was not done and the serious clinical state with obvious somnolence and possible respiratory depression was not addressed on 3/18/99 after Mr. Miller was seen at 6:00 a.m.
This allegation of negligence cannot be defined as flagrant nor
is it an allegation of more than ordinary negligence. In fact,
it appears to address the acts or omissions of the nursing
staff or nurses individually rather than the physicians. It
certainly does not rise to the level of gross negligence on
In regard to defendant Nurse Lauffer, expert Dr. Geiger-
Brown refers to Nurse Lauffer’s acts or omissions between 6:00
a.m. and 6:55 a.m. Dr. Geiger-Brown states that Nurse Lauffer
“did not remain with the patient, nor direct the other R.N.
that was present on the shift to continuously monitor the
patient. He did not summon a physician to come and examine the
patient. This is a failure to rescue. At the point where Mr.
Lauffer made the decision to leave the patient unattended, he
had no way of knowing if the patient’s level of consciousness
was ascending or descending. There was no call placed to a
nursing supervisor who could have obtained additional staff to
assist with the care of this patient, or arranged for a
transfer to a medical unit once seen by a physician.” Under
the circumstances, Dr. Geiger-Brown adds that “[l]eaving a
patient alone without monitoring would be unthinkable. Mr.
Lauffer correctly held the Librium medication. What he did NOT
do is seek immediate medical attention for the patient (i.e.,
calling a physician to the patient’s bedside), and remain with
him to continuously monitor the patient’s vital signs and
airway.” Although he called Dr. Hoffer at home, the call
primarily dealt with withholding medications. Dr. Hoffer was
told that the patient’s vital signs were consistent and that he
was arousable. Dr. Geiger-Brown opines that among other
things, Nurse Lauffer should have summoned an in-house doctor
to address issues with Mark Miller. The alleged facts and Dr.
Geiger-Brown’s expert report establish a prima facie case for
gross negligence vis-à-vis Nurse Lauffer which could be
Finally, defendant GMC may be vicariously liable for the
acts or omissions of defendant Nurse Lauffer. Thus, GMC shall
remain a defendant in this case on that basis. This court has
ruled pursuant to the parties’ stipulation that GMC is not
liable corporately. However, plaintiffs alleged that GMC is
still vicariously liable for not only the alleged gross
negligence of Nurse Lauffer, but also for the ordinary
negligence of all of the individual defendants, the combination
of which, they allege, amounts to gross negligence. This court
will defer ruling on this issue until the parties further brief
this issue and argue/discuss the issue with the court.
STATE GEISINGER HEALTH SYSTEM, STEPHEN J. PAOLUCCI, M.D., SCOTT HOFFER, M.D., L.E. BAXTER, M.D., AND JAMES LAUFFLER, R.N., AND CHRISTINA WOLFE, RNC Defendants
AND NOW this 28th day of March 2006, after
consideration of Defendants’ “Motion in Limine to Preclude Any
Evidence Against Them at the Time of Trial as Plaintiffs’
Claims Are Barred by the Pennsylvania Mental Health Procedures
Act and Summary Judgment is Otherwise Appropriate at This
Time,” summary judgment is GRANTED IN REGARD TO defendants
Stephen J. Paolucci, M.D., Scott Hoffer, M.D., L.E. Baxter,
M.D., and Christina Wolfe, RNC, and is DENIED IN REGARD TO
defendants Geisinger Medical Center and James Lauffer.
VERNON B. WILLIAMS, M.D. 6801 Park Terrace. Los Angeles, CA 90045 EDUCATION University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI Inteflex Accelerated Pre-Medical/Medical Program POST-GRADUATE TRAINING 1996 - 1997 Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care 1993 - 1996 University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, MD 1
GRIPE MEXICA A Agro. Jorge L. González Ortiz Especialista en Cerdos Servicio de Extensión Agrícola ¿Qué es una pandemia? Una pandemia es una epidemia que se extiende a la casi totalidad de una población de uno o varios continentes, como ya se ha dado en ciertos casos, ya sea con la aparición (o reaparición) de un "nuevo" microbio o un virus contagioso, patógeno