The Issue The issues in this case are whether Respondent, Robin L. Cannizzaro, D.V.M. (Respondent), committed the violations alleged in the Administrative Complaint dated July 13, 2009, and, if so, what penalty should be imposed.
Findings Of Fact Petitioner is the state agency with the duty to regulate the practice of veterinary medicine in Florida pursuant to Chapters 455 and 474, Florida Statutes. At all times material to the allegations of this case, Respondent was a licensed veterinarian in Florida fully authorized to practice veterinary medicine. Respondent has been licensed since 1991 and holds license number VM 5903. At all times material to the allegations of this case, Respondent’s address has been 26139 Halsey Road, Brooksville, Florida. At all times material to the allegations of this case, Diane Weigandt was the owner of the cat known in this record as “Maddie.” Maddie was a young cat, and Ms. Weigandt took her to Respondent’s office on or about April 7, 2008. Ms. Weigandt wanted to have Maddie spayed, but another veterinarian had declined to do so because the preoperative blood work indicated an elevated liver enzyme (ALT). During the course of the visit with Respondent, it was determined that Maddie should have a blood draw to test, among other things, Maddie’s ALT. It was expected that, if the enzyme were within or close to a normal range, Maddie could have the procedure. Respondent decided a draw from Maddie’s jugular vein was needed based upon the volume of the sample required to perform the tests. The selected site of the blood draw is not in dispute. The site of the draw did, however, cause Maddie to react uncooperatively. In order to make the blood draw, Respondent determined that Maddie would have to be restrained. It is not uncommon for cats to resist this procedure. Most pets, in fact, are not cooperative with jugular blood draws. During the first attempt to draw the blood, Respondent’s assistant held Maddie by the scruff of her neck on her side with her legs pinned. This position did not contain the struggling feline. As Maddie struggled to avoid the blood draw, Respondent made several attempts, using four different syringes, to acquire the sample. Approximately half-way through the procedure, Respondent’s assistant taped Maddie’s legs together so that they were further restrained. Between each attempt to draw blood, Maddie was afforded a break. “Break” meaning a brief intermission from the struggle that ensued each time Respondent attempted to draw blood. After approximately 20 minutes, Respondent obtained a small sample, but Maddie collapsed at the end of the blood draw. Respondent quickly performed CPR and was able to revive Maddie and get her stabilized within a short period of time. At the conclusion of the visit, Respondent referred Ms. Weigandt to a specialist to deal with Maddie. Respondent advised Ms. Weigandt that another doctor needed to rule out a pulmonary or cardiac medical condition for Maddie’s collapse. Had Maddie not appeared stable, Respondent would not have sent the cat on her way. When Ms. Weigandt presented at the second veterinarian’s office, Respondent faxed the results of the blood draw taken earlier to the second veterinarian. Ms. Weigandt was advised that another blood draw would be necessary as the specimen from Respondent’s office was compromised. It is not disputed that the second veterinarian advised Ms. Weigandt that Respondent’s blood draw was inadequate for the purposes needed. Respondent acknowledged that the blood draw was hemolyzed, but averred that most of the tests were nevertheless valid. The compromised blood draw could have resulted from a number of conditions. First, due to the numerous attempts to draw blood, a hematoma appeared at the draw site. A hematoma is a collection of blood outside the blood vessel, either in the subcutaneous tissue or in the muscle surrounding the vein. When blood is drawn through a hematoma, there can be a breakdown of the red blood cells. Additionally, myoglobin or muscle fluid from the muscle surrounding the vein may also contaminate the sample. Finally, if the draw is done after the animal has eaten (a non-fasting draw), the sample may be lipemic. Lipemic refers to fat appearing in the blood that will show up anywhere from two to six hours after eating. Any of the conditions noted can adversely affect a blood draw and leave the sample compromised. In the instant case, approximately half of the tests performed on Maddie’s sample drawn by Respondent were deemed inaccurate or insufficient for medical purposes. After consideration of the circumstances and effectiveness of Respondent’s blood draw for Maddie, Ms. Weigandt challenged the credit card payment she made to Respondent for the blood testing. Admitting no error in treatment or procedure, Respondent allowed the challenge and voluntarily withdrew the charge. Respondent believed this was a gesture of goodwill and not an admission of any wrong-doing. Subsequently, Ms. Weigandt requested that Respondent provide her copies of Maddie’s medical records. To that end, Respondent gave Ms. Weigandt the option of having the records faxed to her new veterinarian at no charge or picking up a copy of the records for which she would be expected to pay a fee. Ms. Weigandt chose the latter option, as she wanted to keep a personal copy of her pets’ records. As it turned out, Ms. Weigandt was, in effect, seeking the records for all of her pets/patients for whom Respondent had provided services. The seven pets’ records were maintained under Ms. Weigandt’s name and were copied and provided to the owner/client. Respondent charged Ms. Weigandt $55.00 for 55 pages of records. The form verification of completeness executed by Respondent’s assistant provided that the records for Maddie constituted 32 pages. In this case, Respondent kept a file for Ms. Weigandt’s pets based upon the owner’s name and information. Within the single file, Respondent maintained pet data identified by pet name with treatment notes, medications, and other pertinent information. Respondent maintained the record for the seven pets owned by Ms. Weigandt and kept notes for office visits, telephone consultations, and other matters identified by pet name. Pertinent to this case, Respondent’s notation for Maddie for the date of the blood draw indicated “WNL.” The specifics of Maddie’s temperature, heart rate or respiration were not stated. “WNL” is short-hand for “within normal limits.” Data for Maddie’s weight, considered a basic “vital,” was not provided. Instead, Respondent’s note provided, “seems undersized for age.” The process Respondent used to attempt a blood draw from Maddie’s jugular vein is within the standard of care for such procedures. As to both the site of the draw and the restraint used to obtain a sample, Respondent’s conduct was within a standard of care to be expected given the combative nature of the patient. In all likelihood, given the totality of the situation, Maddie experienced a vagal bradycardia that was quickly and appropriately addressed by Respondent. Maddie was resuscitated in an appropriate manner and stabilized before being released. As to the medical records retained by Respondent, it is determined that such records did not contain the data and information expected and required by the standard in Florida. Pertinent information concerning Maddie’s pre-procedure condition was not noted. Finally, as to the charges imposed for the copying of Maddie’s medical record, it is determined that, pursuant to the rule, Respondent was allowed to charge $26.75 for Maddie’s record. Ms. Weigandt requested and obtained records for six other animals. Presumably, the $55.00 charged for such records covered not fewer than 23 pages of records. Assuming Respondent was entitled to charge $1.00 for each of those pages, Respondent would have been authorized to charge $49.75 for the records.
Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Board of Veterinary Medicine enter a final order finding that Respondent failed to keep appropriate records as alleged in Count Two of the Administrative Complaint, imposing a penalty of reprimand and the costs of investigation, and dismissing all other counts of the Administrative Complaint as unfounded. DONE AND ENTERED this 13th day of October, 2010, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S J. D. PARRISH Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 13th day of October, 2010.
The Issue The issue in this case is whether Petitioner is entitled to an award of attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to Section 57.111, Florida Statutes (2007).1
Findings Of Fact On November 2, 2006, the Department filed with the Board of Medicine a one-count Administrative Complaint against Dr. Thompson, alleging that Dr. Thompson violated Subsection 458.331(1)(t), Florida Statutes (2003). The Administrative Complaint was based on a probable cause finding by the Probable Cause Panel of the Board of Medicine (Panel) on October 27, 2006. The Panel included two physicians. Prior to the meeting of the Panel on October 27, 2006, the members of the Panel received the following materials on the cases to be considered: “the complete case files, including any patient medical records, expert opinions, if any, any materials supplied by the licensee or their counsel” and a draft of the Administrative Complaint. The file on Dr. Thompson included the investigator’s file; the expert opinions of Thomas F. Blake, M.D., F.A.C.S.; Dr. Blake’s curriculum vitae; medical records for the treatment of T.C.; and letters from Bruce M. Stanley, Sr., counsel for Dr. Thompson, along with a draft of the Administrative Complaint. At the Panel meeting, the members indicated that they had received the materials with sufficient time to review and familiarize themselves with the materials. The Panel members did not find any problems with the materials such as missing pages or illegible copies. Additionally, the panel members indicated that they had no conflict of interest or prior knowledge of the cases before them that would make it inappropriate to deliberate and vote on the issues. In the case of Dr. Thompson, the Panel was supplied with expert opinions from Dr. Blake. Dr. Blake was a diplomat certified by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology, a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, and a fellow of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. By letter dated December 20, 2004, Dr. Blake rendered the following opinion concerning the care provided by Dr. Thompson: Thompson, M.D. fell below the standard of care by abandoning a patient under general anesthesia and leaving the facility to attend to another patient. However, there were no complications or injury to either patient. The potential problem would be that he would unexpectedly be confronted with complications in the delivery. This could detain him for a prolonged period of time and place the patient under anesthesia in jeopardy of having to have the anesthesia discontinued and subjecting her to further risks. By letter dated December 29, 2004, the Department requested clarification on the issue of whether there were any identifiable deficiencies or problems with the medical records that were maintained by Dr. Thompson. Dr. Blake sent an addendum to his report dated January 11, 2005, in which he gave the following opinion: Medical records utilized in the treatment of the patient are complete and justify the treatment. There are no identifiable deficiencies or problems with the medical records maintained by the subject. At the Panel meeting, an attorney for the Department summarized the case against Dr. Thompson as follows: Patient T.C. presented to the surgery center for several gynecological procedures. While T.C. was under general anesthesia, the Respondent physically left the surgery center to attend to another patient in another building. Respondent delivered a baby of that other patient. T.C. was left under the care of a certified registered nurse anesthetist. After returning from delivering the child, Respondent finished the gynecological procedure. The Department is charging a violation of Section 458.331(1)(t), for violation of the applicable standards of care by leaving T.C. for several minutes in the middle of surgery and in between procedures while she was under a general anesthesia, by failing to notify the patient that Respondent had left and by failing to note in the medical record that Respondent had left the building. The Panel members discussed the case against Dr. Thompson during the meeting and voted on the case, finding there was probable cause to believe a violation had occurred. The findings of the Panel resulted in the issuance of the Administrative Complaint. The case was received by the Division of Administrative Hearings on February 8, 2007, for assignment to an Administrative Law Judge to conduct the final hearing. The Department retained another expert, Jose H. Cortes, M.D., F.A.C.O.G, to provide an opinion concerning Dr. Thompson’s actions relating to the treatment of T.C. By letter dated February 27, 2007, Dr. Cortes opined that Dr. Thompson fell below the standard-of-care while attending T.C. by leaving the operating room and going to another building to attend to another patient. Dr. Cortes was also of the opinion that Dr. Thompson did not adequately maintain the medical records for T.C. by the following actions: The departure from the normal course of surgery such as leaving the operating room was not documented by the attending physician, the outpatient establishment nursing staff, nor the anesthesia attending or nurse anesthetist. A signed consent form not available. * * * As the record documents the evaluation of 07/18/03 and 08/05/03 by the Physician Assistant describes the patient’s complaint and ultrasound study review respectively. The blood count presented from 07/18/03 shows a Hemoglobin of 13.6 gms and Hematocrit of 40.1 percent with normal indices, a pelvic ultrasound which documented fibroids of less than 2.1 cm in size each. With the above findings a conservative management strategy is usually employed initially and the patient is followed prior to recommending any surgical procedure unless declined by the patient. However, all of this has to be documented as recommended by the literature and agencies which review patient care and guidelines such as KePRO. On July 10, 2007, the Department filed a motion to amend the Administrative Complaint, which motion was granted by Order dated July 13, 2007. The Amended Administrative Complaint added a count alleging a violation of Subsection 458.331(1)(m), Florida Statutes (2003), alleging that Dr. Thompson: [F]ailed to keep legible medical records justifying the course of treatment by failing to document in T.C.’s medical records that he left the building during the procedures he performed on T.C. on or about September 11, 2003, and/or by failing to document any discussion with T.C. about alternative treatment options such as discontinuing oral contraceptives, a formal dilation and curettage, and/or the use of a Mirena IUD to address T.C.’s problems or concerns. The final hearing was held on July 27, 2007. A Recommended Order was entered on October 31, 2007, recommending that a final order be entered finding that Dr. Thompson did not violate Subsections 458.331(1)(m) and 458.331(1)(t), Florida Statutes (2003), and dismissing the Amended Administrative Complaint. A Final Order was entered on December 18, 2007, adopting the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the Recommended Order and dismissing the Amended Administrative Complaint against Dr. Thompson. The parties have stipulated to the reasonableness of the fees and costs claimed by Dr. Thompson. Dr. Thompson has incurred $34,851.00 in attorney’s fees and costs. The parties have stipulated that Dr. Thompson is a prevailing small business party and that Respondent is not a nominal party to this action.
The Issue Should discipline be imposed against Respondent's license to practice medicine for violation of Section 458.331(1)(m) and (t), Florida Statutes (2005)?
Findings Of Fact Stipulated Facts: Petitioner is the state department charged with the regulation of the practice of medicine pursuant to Chapter 20.43, Florida Statutes; Chapter 456, Florida Statutes; and Chapter 458, Florida Statutes. Respondent is John B. Milton, M.D. Respondent is a licensed medical doctor in the State of Florida having been issued license ME 53961. Respondent's mailing address of record is 4702 Van Kleeck Drive, New Smyrna Beach, Florida 32169. Additional Facts: Hospital Records (Petitioner's Exhibit numbered 1) On December 31, 2005, Patient W.C. came to the Bert Fish Medical Center (Bert Fish) in New Smyrna Beach, Florida, at 1:40 a.m. He was 40 years old at the time. He was seen in the Emergency Department at Bert Fish. Triage of the patient took place at 1:43 a.m. The triage record reports that he walked in to the hospital complaining of his throat swelling and difficulty breathing. The record reflects that the patient was experiencing pain of an intensity level seven (7) in his throat. At the time his blood pressure was 153/83. His pulse rate was 88. His respirations were 20. His temperature was 98.2. His 02 sat. was 99. In the heading within the Emergency Department Triage Record, statement of "Previous Surgery/Other Medical Hx (referring to history)" it states "allergic reaction to birds with throat swelling, " According to the Emergency Department triage nursing notes Patient W.C. was first seen by Respondent at 1:55 a.m. on the aforementioned date. Respondent was serving in the capacity of emergency room physician at Bert Fish at the time. Among the nursing note entries in the Emergency Department triage record for Patient W.C. are handwritten nursing notes that state: At 2:05 Rocephin was given; at 2:20 a.m. pt. (patient) states throat closing saO2 98%; at 2:25 a.m. pt. (patient) tubed by Dr. Milton- placement checked tube pulled-(pt.) patient vent 100% O2 via ambu; at 2:31 a.m. crick. (cricothyroidotomy) by Dr. Milton tube inserted 100% 02; at 2:35 a.m. H/R 40's - atropine; at 2:37 a.m. b/p 213/90 P-87 Dr. Milton attempting crick 0249 epi 1 mg IV; at 2:41 a.m. Dr. Schreiber here; at 2:43 pt. (patient) tubed by Dr. Schreiber s/r 0 pulses and at 2:54 a.m. code called by Dr. Milton. The Bert Fish Emergency Physician Record refers to Patient W.C.'s chief complaint as "shortness of breath." It states "pt (patient) seems to have acute severe pharyngitis and difficulty breathing and mild stridor at rest." The degree of the condition is further described in the record as "moderate." An associated symptom is listed under "Pulmonary," as "cough." It is noted in this record that the patient is experiencing a "sore throat." The Emergency Physician Record under the "Social Hx (history)," notes that the Patient W.C. was a "smoker" and occasionally used "alcohol." No reference is made to the use of any other form of drugs. On the patient chart describing a physical exam performed on the patient, the categories of "alert" and "anxious" are checked. The level of distress is described as "NAD." There is a reference to "pharyngeal erythema," associated with that entry a handwritten note states "mild stridor at rest." A reference is made to "lymphadenopathy" both right and left "mild." There was no "respiratory distress" and "breath sounds nml (normal);" Again the condition "stridor" is noted while the patient is "at rest." "CVS" is noted as regular rate rhythm with "no JVD." On the same page as discussed in the preceding paragraph, within the patient record maintained by Bert Fish, under "clinical impression," Respondent notes several things in the overall experience in treating the patient. They are in turn: acute severe pharyngitis/epiglottitis; emergency cricothroidotomy cardio pulmonary arrest and ER death. These entries reflect events at the end of the case. The medication administration record at Bert Fish in relation to Patient W.C. notes administration of Decadron (a steroid) at 2 a.m.; Solu-cortef (a steroid) at 2:02 a.m.; Rocephin (an antibiotic) at 2:05 a.m.; Versed (a sedative) at 2:20 a.m. and Anectine (a paralytic agent) at 2:25 a.m. A separate set of entries is made in the Code Blue Record at Bert Fish, noting the administration of Epinephrine, and Atropine during the Code Blue response prior to Patient W.C.'s death due to his cyanotic condition (lack of oxygen). Nurse's notes on the Code Blue Record for Patient W.C. maintained by Bert Fish state: Upon me entering the room Dr. Milton was doing CPR on pt. Dr. Schreiber, Dr. Milton and the ER staff attending to pt. ER staff busy. I started scribing for them. Note pt. was in PRA throughout the code. Pt. was given 3 ep. & 3 atoprine total = (-)response. Respondent signed the Code Blue Record as physician. The ER Physician's Order Sheet, as signed by Respondent concerning Patient W.C., in a shorthand reference, describes orders for nebulized racemic Epinephrine, which is an aerosol adrenaline agent, together with the Solu-cortef, Decadron and Rocephin. In the records maintained by Bert Fish concerning Patient W.C., there is a handwritten note made by Respondent at 3:35 a.m., on December 31, 2005, following Patient W.C.'s death, which says: S/P IV steroids, Racemic epinephrine PT continued to c/o "getting worse" "can't breath." At times his respirations were gasping. .. I discussed with him fact the he may require intubation & he understood. PT placed in TRI and preparation made for intubation. PT had secure IV site, Respiratory TX in Room to assist. S/P preoxygenation 1HR> 80 PT had IV Versed and Anectine to facilitate intubation. The laryngoscope revealed a massive "beefy" appearance of the epiglottis. Attempted X 2 E 8.0 & 7.5 ET to secure an airway but Ø success. PT had attempts to ventilate E BVM? Ø air movement. PT cyanotic @ this point so a scalpel was used to attempt a crichothyroidotomy. When a ETT was passed thru the incision however attempts to ventilate were again unsuccessful. Dr. Schreiber (gen surgery) had been paged and he responded. He was able to place a ETT in the airway but by now PT had arrested. Monitor-bradycardia at this time ACLS measures were undertaken and PT given repeated doses of atropine/epinephrine/CPR-> ventilated E BVM. PT continued to have Ø response to proper ALS measurers and Resus efforts stopped @ 0254. Patient Care Explained Nurse Haas William Haas, R.N., was working at Bert Fish on the early morning that Patient W.C. was seen. Nurse Haas first saw the patient around 1:55 a.m. He hooked the patient up to a monitor and took his vital signs. None of the readings were considered by the nurse to be abnormal. Those readings were blood pressure 153/83, heart rate 88, respirations 20, temperature 98.2. and O2 sat. 99%. Patient W.C. was taken into treatment room 16 and was seen by Respondent and nurse Haas. Nurse Haas asked Respondent what Respondent thought was wrong with the patient. Orders were given by the Respondent for 8 mg. of Decadron and 100 mg. of Solu-cortef IV. The purpose of these medicines was to reduce inflammation. Both medications were steroids designed for that purpose. At that time Respondent gave an order for the antibiotic Rocephin. Respondent also wanted a racemic Epinephrine treatment. That treatment was to be provided by the respiratory therapist. When nurse Haas first saw the patient, the patient was complaining about difficulty breathing. Nurse Haas did not observe any manifestation of those difficulties. At one point the patient told nurse Haas that he, the patient, was experiencing an allergic reaction to feathers or birds. The patient told nurse Haas by way of history that it happened to him in the past. (None of this was true. He had no allergy to birds. The patient's deception was never discovered by the hospital treatment team, and they all proceeded on the basis that the patient had a bird allergy.) On the evening before arriving at the hospital, the patient explained to nurse Haas that he went to bed about 9:00 or 10:00 p.m. and woke up around 1:00 a.m. with a raspy feeling in his throat and he felt like his throat was closing up. So he came to the emergency room for care. After attending to the patient in treatment room 16, nurse Haas left the presence of the patient. He next saw the patient standing in treatment room 17 talking on the phone. This was around 2:20 a.m. The patient was again placed on a monitor to track his vital signs. Nothing about those vital signs appeared abnormal. At that time Mary Boothe, R.N., told nurse Haas that the patient was going to be intubated. Nurse Haas inquired of Respondent on the subject, and Respondent told nurse Haas that the patient wanted to be intubated and to get ready to perform the intubation. The procedure for intubation that was being utilized by Respondent is referred to as rapid sequence intubation or RSI. Nurse Haas retrieved Anectine and Versed to be administered in the intubation. The patient was told about the procedure for intubation. The patient was laid down. Nurse Haas gave the patient Versed and Anectine. The Versed was designed to, as nurse Haas describes it, "muddle the mind." The Anectine was an agent that would promote paralysis in the area where the intubation would occur. When in treatment room 17, at around 2:20 a.m., the patient said to nurse Haas that the patient felt that his throat was closing. Those remarks were made when the patient was being hooked up to the monitor to measure his vital signs. This was the second time that the patient had mentioned his throat closing. He had made similar remarks when nurse Haas first saw him in treatment room 16. Steve Igrec, R.T., participated in the intubation procedure in addition to nurse Haas, nurse Boothe and Respondent. Prior to the laryngoscope being introduced in the intubation procedure, nurse Haas did not notice any sharp decline in Patient W.C.'s vital signs. When Respondent accessed the airway for Patient W.C., nurse Haas heard Respondent say, "Oh, he's got epiglottitis," while proceeding further with the intubation. Respondent was unable to intubate and removed the ET tube. Another tube was used to try and intubate, again without success. Nurse Boothe Nurse Boothe first encountered Patient W.C. after he had undergone his racemic Epinephrine treatment. He came out of the treatment room and told her that he did not feel that the treatment had worked. Respondent came by and the nurse repeated what the patient had told her. Nurse Boothe did not notice anything about the patient that made her believe that he was having difficulty breathing. He coughed and told her, "Can you hear it?" but he was not gasping for air, nor making gestures about his chest or throat. Respondent then offered the patient the option of being admitted to the hospital and continuing treatments by steroids to address his condition or putting him on a ventilator and letting him have the treatments through the ventilator. The patient elected the latter option. The ventilator option would allow the patient to be released the next day. The patient was told by Respondent that he would "knock him out" and put the tube in and give the patient the medication that way and that the patient's release would come the next day. Nurse Boothe did not hear the Respondent make any mention to the effect of what might happen if there were difficulties in intubating the patient. The attempted intubation was made in the treatment room 17, which is also referred to as CC-1. The patient walked into the room. Once in the room nurse Boothe did not notice anything about the patient that indicated any difficulty breathing. The patient did mention that he was not feeling any better. Nurse Boothe overheard the patient talking on the telephone. On his end of the conversation he told his wife that he did not feel any better and that they were going to "knock him out" and put him on a breathing machine overnight and that he would see her the following day. Nurse Boothe noticed that as the attempted intubation proceeded, the patient began to have trouble with the intubation. The equipment that was in the room for those purposes included the laryngoscope, the intubation tube, and a stylet. Before the tube was introduced the patient was being ventilated with a bag and mask. When difficulties arose concerning the intubation, nurse Boothe left the treatment room to get a scalpel and to get what is referred to as a "cric" kit. That kit is a set-up that has been assembled to aid in providing emergency access to the trachea. The kit is not kept in treatment room 17. It was kept in another room on a respiratory cart. Nurse Boothe observed Respondent utilize the scalpel and the "cric." After the Respondent experienced difficulties in this effort, the on-call surgeon was contacted by a secretary at the hospital. The Surgeon Arrives On December 31, 2005, Dr. Schreiber was the on-call surgeon at Bert Fish. When he was paged by the hospital, he called and was told that he needed to go immediately to the emergency room because of an airway problem. He received the call at approximately 2:30 a.m. He arrived at the hospital at 2:41 a.m. Once at the hospital Dr. Schreiber, took over and performed surgery, insertion of the endotracheal tube, thereby ventilating the patient. That procedure by Dr. Schreiber was quickly performed. Mr. Igrec Mr. Igrec administered the racemic Epinephrine treatment to Patient W.C. Prior to providing the treatment Mr. Igrec visibly examined the patient to see if the patient was using assessory muscles to breathe or if he had any stridor, any wheezing or anything of that nature. He did not observe the patient using any assessory muscles to breathe. He did not notice the patient evidencing stridor, that is to say a high- pitched sound that is made when a person experiences upper airway obstruction. Mr. Igrec provided two of the treatments to Patient W.C. Before the second treatment, he visibly examined Patient W.C. and did not notice the patient having difficulty breathing. Sometime during the course of the treatment, near the end, the patient asked the question, "How long is this going to take to work?" Mr. Igrec told the patient to give it time. The patient appeared anxious. He did not appear short of breath. Mr. Igrec reported to Respondent that he had provided Patient W.C. the second treatment. Following the second treatment, Mr. Igrec suggested to Respondent the use of Decadron to aerosolize Patient W.C. The racemic Epinephrine is a short- acting drug, and Decadron is a steroid that takes longer to work. In response, the Respondent told Mr. Igrec "We may have to intubate." Mr. Igrec was called to treatment room 17 where Respondent told him that they were going to intubate Patient W.C. In preparation, an ambu-bag, mask, intubation tube, pressure cuff, stylet and strap were retrieved. The cuff was used to keep the intubation tube in place during the procedure. The stylet keeps the tube rigid. Once the patient was sedated, Mr. Igrec began to use the ambu-bag with the patient. At that time, there was no difficulty using the bag, squeezing the bag to provide air into the patient's lungs. Mr. Igrec had one hand on the mask over the patient's face and one hand on the ambu-bag. Respondent used the laryngoscope in placing the tube, trying to look while placing the tube. The tube went into the stomach and not the trachea, such that ventilation did not occur. After that, when Mr. Igrec was bagging the patient he had a lot more resistance, to the point where Respondent had to hold the mask while Mr. Igrec bagged the Patient W.C. After a second attempt to intubate the patient, Respondent attempted to establish a surgical airway. Respondent was using a scalpel and palpating the patient to try and find the crichothyroid cartilage to create the necessary incision. An incision was created. There was no success in placing an airway because the tube did not pass through the crichothyroid cartilage. Mr. Igrec understood this because the tube that he had cut down to place and to ventilate the patient could not be used because there was no hole in the trachea. Blood was pooling around the patient. Dr. Schreiber arrived and established the surgical airway. During this time, CPR was provided the patient under Code Blue conditions where the patient's heart had stopped beating. Attempts at reviving the patient were not successful. Respondent and Patient W.C. Prior to the occasion when he intubated Patient W.C., Respondent had vast experience in performing intubations. As he describes it, this is a necessary skill for an emergency room doctor, recognizing that having an unobstructed airway is vital to a patient's survival. When intubating a patient, Respondent believes that you would want to do this before they "crash," before they lose their vital signs and become unconscious. Before his attempt to intubate Patient W.C., Respondent had never had an instance in which he could not intubate the patient, a function that he had performed numerous times without the assistance of a surgeon or an anesthesiologist. By contrast, before the circumstance that was confronted in Patient W.C., Respondent had never performed a crichothyroidotomy. He had been trained to perform that procedure. On December 31, 2005, nurse Haas approached Respondent and told Respondent that he placed Patient W.C. in a treatment room, described as the ortho room, and that the patient was having trouble breathing and that he needed to be seen by Respondent. Respondent inquired of the patient about the duration of his problem. He asked the patient if he had asthma. Had this happened before? The patient told Respondent that he was having an allergic reaction to his wife's bird and that this problem that he was experiencing had occurred once years before. Respondent asked the patient if he was telling Respondent that an hour ago he was fine and that now he was not. Patient W.C. said "absolutely." When listening to the patient's lungs Respondent did not notice any wheezing. There was no fever in the patient and the patient had not been sick. Unlike the other health care providers attending the patient, Respondent observed that Patient W.C. was having trouble getting air in, the patient was having inspriatory stridor. Respondent believed that the presentation by Patient W.C. was that of someone having an allergic reaction, with some airway compromise, he refers to as laryngospasm. Respondent told nurse Haas to start an IV on the patient and get respiratory therapy to provide a racemic Epinephrine treatment. The reasons for this decision was Respondent thought the patient was having an allergic reaction. In particular, Respondent's impression at that moment was that the patient was someone having an allergic reaction to birds. Patient W.C.'s case was comparable to another case that Respondent had with a woman who had experienced an allergic reaction. In the case of the woman, the patient worsened and quickly had to be intubated. The differential diagnosis that Respondent was proceeding with was that of a patient having an allergic reaction. The orders Respondent gave concerning administration of medications were designed to alleviate an airway problem associated with an allergic reaction. Consistent with Respondent's orders, the nurse started the IV and provided medications, and the respiratory therapist came to provide the aerosol treatment. Respondent observed that Patient W.C. was sitting up in bed and did not appear to be doing anything unusual. Respondent received the report on the patient's status. Respondent went to see Patient W.C., who at that time was anxious and restless. He was having trouble getting air in and telling Respondent that he could not breathe and that his airway was closing off. Patient W.C. told Respondent that "you guys ain't helping me at all." Respondent told the patient that the treatment already provided was the normal thing that was done. Respondent got more history from the patient by asking the patient, "You were perfectly fine until an hour ago?" The response was "yes." Respondent asked the patient if he had not been sick at all. Again the response was "no." The Respondent asked the patient if he had a sore throat. The patient said a little bit. Respondent took a tongue depressor and looked in the patient's throat. It looked pretty normal. (The Emergency Physician Record indicated the patient had a sore throat.) The patient had very mild prominent lymph nodes but nothing out of the ordinary. There was still no wheezing. At that juncture, the decision was made to give Patient W.C. another aerosol treatment. In addition, the decision was made to provide antibiotics in case there was some tracheitis, pharyngitis. It was anticipated that the antibiotics would take 24 hours to have any effect. Epiglottitis was a condition at the bottom of the list on the differential diagnosis. Respondent's experience with that condition was that a patient would be sick for a period of time before the condition worsened. Nothing in Patient W.C.'s presentation led Respondent to believe that he had epiglottitis at that point. By way of history, there was no indication from the patient that he had used cocaine within 24 hours of the time of his visit to the emergency room. (Indeed subsequent toxicology studies revealed recent use of cocaine.) Had such use been reported Respondent would have acted differently in treating Patient W.C. In his second encounter with the patient on the night in question, the patient told him several times that his airway was closing off and that he believed that any second he was not going to be able to breathe. In reply, Respondent told Patient W.C. that the normal things to address his condition had been done, but there was one other thing that could be done and that would be to intubate Patient W.C. Respondent explained that it meant that they would lay the patient in a critical care room and render him unconscious and take a breathing tube and put it into his lungs and admit Patient W.C. to the hospital. This would then be followed by 24 to 48 hours of ventilatory support with use of steroids to address swelling. Patient W.C. told Respondent "let's do it quick." Respondent told a nurse to gather the standard rapid sequence medication, which in this instance involved the use of Versed and Anecitine. In the procedure room where the intubation was attempted, the procedure commenced with the patient having a good heart rate. There was a crash cart available in case there were problems. At the moment, Respondent continued to believe that the patient was experiencing an allergic reaction. Although the patient could have been experiencing epiglottitis secondary to infection, the patient did not show any signs or symptoms of that condition, indications of an on-going infection such as a fever. He was not sweating, his heart rate was not rapid. Once in the treatment room where the intubation was attempted, the patient worsened. Patient W.C. was gasping. He closed his eyes a second. The respiratory therapist Mr. Igrec experienced problems bagging the patient. Efforts by Respondent and the respiratory therapist were not succeeding in getting air into the patient. When Respondent looked in, using the laryngoscope, he noticed something that he had not encountered before. Patient W.C.'s epiglottis had the appearance of a "mushroom." It did not appear as normal anatomy. Respondent described it as a "moonscape." When Respondent looked into the patient using the laryngoscope, he describes the "picture" as looking like a scorched airway when viewing the larynx and the epiglottis. Now that he had observed the epiglottitis, Respondent decided to try and "get under it" using the ET tube. He encountered a complete blockage. Respondent then asked for a smaller tube. The smaller tube did not work. Efforts at bagging the patient were not successful. Respondent concluded that he could not intubate the patient and could not ventilate the patient in that manner, leaving him the only choice, in his perception, to deal with the obstruction by establishing a surgical airway. Respondent asked for a scalpel to perform a "cric." Respondent also told someone to call and get the surgeon and indicate that there was an airway emergency and to come immediately, as Dr. Schreiber did. Respondent took the scalpel and located the crichothyroid membrane below the crichothyroid cartilage and made an incision and air bubbled out. Respondent widened the incision, as he had been trained to do in a course dealing with trauma associated with the airway. Respondent took the ET tube that he had been using and inserted it. It went in smoothly and the treatment team was able to bag the patient. Respondent then noticed that the heart rate was dropping and that the "stats" were not coming up. Respondent then observed that the patient's neck was bigger. What had happened was that the tube had slipped out of the incision, tracking anteriorly over the trachea and the air was being introduced into the neck. Once the subcutaneous emphysema was seen in the neck, it occurred to Respondent that the tube was in the wrong place. The patient was bleeding profusely. There was an effort at reintroducing the tube but the neck had become more swollen, and the tube could not be replaced. A nursing supervisor, Tom Frith, went to the next trauma room and took one of the crichothyroidotomy kits and brought it back. Respondent was not trained to use that kit. He had seen the kits used at a demonstration. The kit was opened. Respondent took a needle from the kit and tried to find an airway but was unable to locate the airway that had been created because efforts at aspiration produced more blood. Other equipment in the kit was utilized to try to replace the endotracheal tube back in the patient, but the field would quickly fill with blood and the tube could not be placed into the membrane. When Dr. Schreiber arrived, using the skill of a surgeon, not that of an emergency room doctor, he performed an emergency tracheotomy on Patient W.C. Respondent acknowledges that persons suffering from an allergic reaction have a common presentation where they experience hives and itching. Some people have wheezing. Patient W.C. had none of these symptoms. Nonetheless, the patient appeared to Respondent to be having an allergic reaction involving the airway Respondent describes as laryngospasm. Respondent understood the patient's condition to be one in which he was able to move about and speak but he was unable to get air in. While able to compensate for that condition for awhile, that ability did not last. Respondent had never seen a patient with epiglottitis. Hypothetically, if a patient were perceived as having that condition, Respondent would consult with a surgeon or an anesthesiologist, if he had time. If confronted with classic signs of epiglottitis, Respondent would start an IV, give the patient supplemental oxygen and not attempt intubation unless the case was emergent. Given sufficient time, the patient would be taken to an operating room and an anesthesiologist could attempt intubation, failing which a surgeon would be available to address the obstruction by placing a surgical airway. This case became one of an emergency, and Respondent took the measures he deemed appropriate. Concerning notes made pertaining to treatment provided Patient W.C., that record was provided after Patient W.C. died. Given the volume of patients that were being seen in the emergency room, other patients as well as Patient W.C., five sets of records and tests were being established aside from Patient W.C. As a consequence, Respondent was doing paperwork on those patients and telling nurses what to do for Patient W.C. Only after the attempts at trying to save Patient W.C. were unsuccessful and after talking to Patient W.C.'s family did Respondent turn his attention to the medical records for Patient W.C. Expert Opinion Dr. John Murray is an emergency physician at Central Florida Regional Hospital in Sanford, Florida. He is licensed to practice in Florida and has been since 1983. He is also licensed to practice in Alabama. Dr. Murray attended medical school at the University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida. He did his residency at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. His residency was in family practice. Dr. Murray practiced in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, in emergency medicine, until four or five years ago. He then entered family practice for about three years. Following that time, he returned to practice in emergency medicine. Dr. Murray is board-certified in family practice and emergency medicine. Dr. Murray was received as an expert in emergency medicine to allow him to offer his opinion as an expert. Dr. Murray served as Petitioner's consultant in the case and was presented as its witness at hearing. To prepare himself to testify, Dr. Murray reviewed the Bert Fish hospital records relating to Patient W.C., the autopsy report, the Administrative Complaint, correspondence from Respondent's attorney, Respondent's deposition, the deposition of the nurses who treated Patient W.C. at Bert Fish, the deposition of the respiratory therapist involved with Patient W.C.'s patient care, and the toxicology report pertaining to Patient W.C. Having prepared himself Dr. Murray testified concerning Respondent's performance when measured against the expected "standard of care." In offering his opinion, Dr. Murray conformed to the expectation that Respondent's performance meet what was minimally acceptable in the standard of care. Dr. Murray does not believe that Respondent met the standard of care incumbent upon Respondent. In Dr. Murray's opinion, when a patient is seen in an emergency room the development of the differential diagnosis begins with the worse case scenario. In Patient W.C.'s case, the first consideration in the differential diagnosis should have been epiglottitis, recognizing that the main problem in the condition is inspiratory stridor, the closing of the airway or the upper airway which may cause the patient to die. Therefore, the physician should do everything possible to assure that this does not happen. Dr. Murray believes that the patient was presenting with signs and symptoms of epiglottitis when he arrived at the emergency room at Bert Fish. Dr. Murray believes that when Respondent decided to intubate Patient W.C., it should have been anticipated that there was going to be a very difficult procedure if the patient had acute epiglottitis. Sometimes the intubation fails and there is the need to provide a surgical airway. Because Respondent did not anticipate that difficulty, the intubation procedure was not properly "setup," according to Dr. Murray. That setup would envision dealing with intubation to potentially be followed by the need to provide a surgical airway. Given the possibility that the patient had epiglottitis, it was important to have the most experienced person available to perform the intubation. Dr. Murray believes that would be an anesthesiologist. Beyond that point, if the surgical airway is needed, a surgeon should be available to provide a surgical airway. Dr. Murray believes there was time to have a successful intubation, or if not, the provision of a successful airway by surgery and these arrangements were not made. Notwithstanding the patient's reported history, recognizing the symptoms present, Dr. Murray did not believe that the patient was suffering from an allergic reaction. Nothing in the medical records suggested to Dr. Murray that Patient W.C. was under the influence of cocaine when he was seen at Bert Fish. Commenting on the medical record where the term "pharyngeal erythema" was circled, Dr. Murray explained that pharyngitis is a form of infection either viral or bacterial in relation to the red or sore throat seen in the back of the throat of Patient W.C. when examined by Respondent. Respondent also made reference to lymphadenopathy both right and left, swollen lymph nodes. Patient W.C. was experiencing inspiratory stridor, difficulty in getting air in to his lungs. With inspiratory stridor, swollen lymph nodes and a red and painful throat, Dr. Murray said he would be concerned about Patient W.C.'s having an infection. Dr. Murray was concerned that if Patient W.C. had a lot of inspiratory stridor that the condition might be epiglottitis. With infection and stridor, the airway can close quickly. These circumstances could make intubation of the patient difficult, if not impossible. Dr. Murray acknowledges that epiglottitis was on Respondent's differential diagnosis for Patient W.C. Respondent's orders for use of racemic Epinephrine through nebulization and the provision of steroids, Decadron and Solu-cortef were appropriate in Dr. Murray's view. Repeating the nebulization would have been appropriate in dealing with an allergic reaction which was the number one condition treated by Respondent. Dr. Murray speaks of the use of antihistamines as well. Dr. Murray opined that as long as Patient W.C. was perceived as having an allergic airway problem, the patient would be treated with updraft treatments and antihistamines, if the patient remained stable and did not appear to be "going down hill and crashing." If the patient is "crashing," stops breathing, then a response to the condition would be necessary before the patient had respiratory arrest. However, with epiglottitis most patients would have to be intubated to protect the airway. The condition would be treated as an infection with use of an antibiotics and steroids over time while being cautious about the patient having his or her airway close off. Criticism that Dr. Murray has of Respondent's care was not the basic idea that the patient was intubated to address epiglottitis. It was the expectation that intubation need not be done unless it was absolutely an emergent circumstance, i.e., the patient had stopped breathing. If there is suspected epiglottitis, the physician should not use a tongue blade that may cause spasms or a laryngoscope. The physician should not paralyze the patient. The doctor is going to be confronted potentially with the fact that there is "no hole" to put the tube, in an attempt at intubation and it becomes necessary to "do something and get an airway in." Again the arrangement that needs to be made, in Dr. Murray's opinion, is the double setup to address the intubation and possible surgical airway. Dr. Murray does not believe that Respondent had the needed equipment to address the patient's condition when he began the intubation. In particular, the necessary equipment for the second step in the double setup, that of providing a surgical airway had not been sufficiently arranged by Respondent. Only in the instances where the patient had stopped breathing and Respondent had no time to call in other physicians would it be appropriate to paralyze the patient and attempt the intubation. Dr. Murray does not believe that the patient was dying, and there was the opportunity to call in the surgeon who was available in eight minutes, to provide assistance if one anticipates difficulty. Dr. Murray described three methods of addressing the surgical airway. One is crichothyroidotomy, which was attempted here. The second method is jet insufflation used in pediatrics but also taught for use in adults. The third method is the use of a needle with a catheter. Dr. Murray explained that if using the crichothyroidotomy is a procedure that is comfortable to the physician, then there is no necessity for redundancy beyond the use of that method for providing a surgical airway. Redundancy would be the use of the kit known as Seldinger that causes a small puncture wound. This method is a new technique, an alternative to needle crichothyroidotomy and regular crichothyroidotomy. The Seldinger method is the jet insufflation. Jet insufflation is not a common procedure in adults and is used more in pediatric care. In Dr. Murray's opinion, a reasonably prudent emergency room doctor would know of the availability of that option for ventilating a patient whether the patient is an adult or a child. Dr. Murray criticizes Respondent's medical records for Patient W.C. In his review, Dr. Murray did not find an explanation why it was necessary to intubate Patient W.C. at that moment and by the method employed. The record does not justify attempting a paralytic intubation under the existing circumstances, according to Dr. Murray. Dr. Marlon Priest, witness for Respondent, graduated from the University of Alabama with a degree in chemistry. He attended the University of Alabama School of Medicine from 1974 until 1977. He completed an internal medicine residency. From 1981 through November of 2006, Dr. Priest was on the faculty of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama, and served as a professor of emergency medicine and director of critical care transport. Over the years, Dr. Priest has had extensive experience in emergency medicine in a hospital setting. He is licensed to practice medicine in Alabama. Dr. Priest was accepted as an expert and allowed to testify concerning his opinion of Respondent's care provided Patient W.C., whether Respondent met the standard of care. Dr. Priest reviewed the Administrative Complaint, the medical records from Bert Fish concerning Patient W.C., Respondent's deposition, the deposition of Thomas Beaver, M.D., and the deposition of Michael A. Evans, Ph.D. to prepare himself to testify. He found the information sufficient to prepare to offer his opinion concerning the care provided Patient W.C. When asked whether Respondent violated the standard of care for failing to consult with or gain the assistance from an anesthesiologist or the on-call surgeon prior to inducing paralysis and attempting RSI, referring to rapid sequence intubation on Patient W.C., fell below the standard of care for an emergency room physician, Dr. Priest indicated that he felt that Respondent met the applicable standards. Dr. Priest believes emergency medicine has evolved to the point where emergency room physicians are able to assess and carryout that form of intubation. In Dr. Priest's experience, on numerous occasions, he has intubated patients without consulting a surgeon or an anesthesiologist. Based upon those insights Dr. Priest does not believe that Respondent was obligated to consult a surgeon or an anesthesiologist before attempting the intubation on Patient W.C. Specific to Patient W.C.'s case, the patient presented with shortness of breath and stridor and having failed to improve following treatment to address a possible allergic reaction, the decision was made to oxygenate the patient prior to some event where the patient could not breathe. Based upon the symptoms of the patient and gravity of the situation, Dr. Priest is persuaded that it was appropriate to attempt intubation. Concerning the allegation that Respondent failed to meet the standard of care by inducing paralysis in Patient W.C., Dr. Priest indicated that RSI is the preferred method of gaining access to a patient's airway where the patient is awake and alert and who might struggle if that method was not employed in an effort to intubate the patient. In his opinion, Dr. Priest makes mention of the progression in the case from having stridor, complaining of not being able to breathe and Dr. Priest's expectation that the airway was becoming smaller over time. Dr. Priest believes that the principal diagnosis in the differential pertaining to Patient W.C., possible allergic reaction was a reasonable diagnosis based upon information in the patient records. Concerning the allegation about Respondent's medical records related to alleged failure to document symptoms in Patient W.C. that would justify paralysis and RSI, as opposed to other less risky forms of securing the airway, Dr. Priest believes that there is sufficient evidence in the medical record to justify the intubation. Related to the second allegation dealing with record keeping by Respondent alleging that Respondent failed to document Patient W.C.'s O2 sat. and cardiac activity during the RSI attempt and subsequent procedures, Dr. Priest believes that this information would have been written down by someone else on the treatment team during the course of the treatment, the attempt to intubate. Even beyond that point, Dr. Priest believes that standard protocol would call upon the respiratory therapist or the nurse to create the record or potentially someone else on the hospital staff, not the Respondent. The inaccurate report by Patient W.C. concerning his past history with bird allergies changes the priorities in the differential diagnosis, in Dr. Priest's opinion. That history meant that allergic reaction was placed at the top of the differential diagnosis, in particular with a physical examination that was consistent with the history. Dr. Priest holds this belief even in the absence of fever, sweating, or questionable vital signs in the patient. When Dr. Schreiber entered the treatment room, he noticed a group including a physician and nurses who were attending Patient W.C. They were trying to resuscitate the patient. The patient did not have an airway. The patient was cyanotic. The patient was bloated and did not have a pulse. An attempt was being made to revive the patient from arrest. A valve bag mask was being used and drugs administered that would support the patient's blood pressure. An effort at gaining a surgical airway had not succeeded. There was a surgical incision on the patient's neck. Blood was on the patient and on the floor. At the moment no attempt was being made to establish a surgical airway. Dr. Schreiber observed that the patient had a protruding tongue that was obstructing this mouth and airway. Dr. Schreiber observed that the Petitioner's upper check and abdomen were bloated. Dr. Schreiber noted that the patient evidenced crepitancy, indicating subcutaneous air in the patient's neck and chest. This would be consistent with the placement of an airway tube into the subcutaneous tissue outside the trachea and air blown into the area. Dr. Schreiber made a nick in the trachea and placed a number 8 ET tube into the trachea. Following the placement of the ET tube in the trachea, Dr. Schreiber observed air movement in the lungs. However, the patient did not regain a pulse or adequate saturation of oxygen. On January 3, 2006, Dr. Thomas Beaver, Chief Medical Examiner and pathologist, performed an autopsy on Patient W.C. As part of his Medical Examiner's report on Patient W.C., special studies had been done, and a comprehensive toxicology analysis performed by AIT Laboratories. Dr. Beaver determined the cause of death as complications of acute epiglottitis and that the manner of death was of natural causes. The complications of acute epiglottitis were explained as a status post crichothyroidotomy. Dr. Beaver also noted atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease involving coronary arteries, mild. In particular, Dr. Beaver found that the epiglottis was swollen to an extent that it obstructed the deceased's airway. The condition observed was not the result of an attempted intubation of the patient, in Dr. Beaver's opinion. The condition observed was a disease process that Dr. Beaver felt was on-going for a matter of hours or perhaps a number of days before the attempted intubation. This type of mechanical obstruction in the epiglottitis would obstruct the airway and disable the patient from breathing, according to Dr. Beaver. The condition of the epiglottitis was not perceived by Dr. Beaver to be in association with some form of allergic reaction. The exact cause was not clear. Dr. Beaver does not believe that the ingestion of cocaine, whose metabolites were in the body caused the death. Marie Herrmann, M.D., is the present Medical Examiner and pathologist in the jurisdiction where Dr. Beaver served. Dr. Herrmann had the opportunity to review Dr. Beaver's autopsy report on Patient W.C. and to examine some evidence available to Dr. Beaver in performing his examination. She too was not persuaded that cocaine was a contributing factor to Patient W.C.'s death. In offering this opinion Dr. Herrmann was aware of the toxicology report from AIT Laboratories. Dr. Herrmann agrees with Dr. Beaver's opinion concerning Patient W.C.'s cause of death. Dr. Herrmann was unable to determine within a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the efforts by Respondent to intubate Patient W.C. caused the blockage in the airway. Michael Evans, Ph.D., is the founder, president and CEO of AIT Laboratories. He is an expert in toxicology. He testified concerning the findings in his laboratory related to Patient W.C. using established protocols for examination of the samples provided his facility. Based upon his analysis, Dr. Evans believes that Patient W.C. had ingested cocaine as recent as three hours and no longer than 24 hours before his death based upon values found in the blood and urine samples provided. Bruce Goldberger, Ph.D., is an expert in forensic toxicology. He is a professor and director of toxicology at the University of Florida College of Medicine, Departments of Pathology and Psychiatry. He is familiar with the medical examiner's report prepared by Dr. Weaver and the AIT Laboratories' report on Patient W.C. Dr. Goldberger offered the opinion that Patient W.C. could have been using cocaine a day or two before his death. He defers to the medical examiner as to the cause of the patient's death. It is accepted from the findings made in the autopsy report by Dr. Beaver that Patient W.C. died from complications of acute epiglottitis, from natural causes, not as a result of Respondent's attempt to intubate the patient. Having considered the facts and the opinions of experts, clear and convincing evidence was not presented to establish the violations alleged in Count One (Section 458.331(1)(t), Florida Statutes) paragraph 27. a). and b). related to consultation with or assistance from an anesthesiologist or the on-call surgeon prior to inducing paralysis in the patient as part of RSI. Likewise, the violation alleged in Count Two (Section 458.331(1)(m), Florida Statutes) paragraph 30. a). relating to failure to document symptoms justifying paralysis and RSI was not proven by clear and convincing evidence. Concerning the alleged violation in Count Two (Section 458.331(1)(m), Florida Statutes) paragraph 30. b). involving the documentation of Patient W.C.'s O2 sat. and cardiac activity during the RSI attempt and subsequent procedures, the opinion of Dr. Priest is compelling. Based upon that opinion Respondent would not be expected to provide that documentation and maintain the record beyond that point in time. Respondent's Background Respondent received his undergraduate education from the University of Tennessee, earning a B.S. in biology. He attended medical school in Nashville, Tennessee, at Harry Medical College and worked as an emergency physician in Tennessee. He undertook a flexible internship at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, Tennessee. In 1987 Respondent went to Jacksonville, Florida, to do a three-year residency in pediatrics, graduating from that program in 1990. During that time he worked in local emergency rooms in St. Augustine, Palatka, and Tallahassee, Florida. He took courses in Advanced Trauma Life Support and Advanced Cardiac Life Support. Since 1990 Respondent has been a full-time emergency room physician living in New Smyrna Beach, Florida. At present, Respondent works for M. Care Emergency Services in Jacksonville, Florida. Mitigation and Aggravation Respondent has no prior violations related to his license to practice medicine in Florida. Patient W.C.'s Family Patient W.C. was married to F.C. and had two young children. At his death his daughter was approximately two-and- a-half years old and his son was 14 months old. Following Patient W.C.'s death, the family has had a difficult time coping with their loss.
Recommendation Based upon the findings of facts found and the conclusions, RECOMMENDED: That a final order be entered, which dismisses the Administrative Complaint, as amended. DONE AND ENTERED this 14th day of April, 2008, in Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida. S CHARLES C. ADAMS Administrative Law Judge Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060 (850) 488-9675 SUNCOM 278-9675 Fax Filing (850) 921-6847 www.doah.state.fl.us Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 14th day of April, 2008.
Findings Of Fact At all times material hereto, Respondent has been a licensed practical nurse in the State of Florida, having been issued license number PN 0867041. At all times material hereto, Respondent was employed by American Nursing Service, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and was assigned to work at Broward General Medical Center, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. On July 30-31, 1989, Respondent worked both the 3:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. and the 11:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. shifts at Broward General Medical Center. She was responsible for 20 patients on that double shift. An hour or two before her double shift ended, she checked the I.V. of a patient near the end of the hall. The I.V. was not running, and Respondent attempted to get it running again by re-positioning the I.V. several times. She then went to the medication room and obtained a syringe to use to flush the I.V. to get it operating again. When she returned to the patient's room, the I.V. was running and Respondent tucked the syringe inside her bra. The syringe was still packaged and unopened. She then continued with her nursing duties. At 7:00 a.m. on July 31, while Respondent was "giving report" to the oncoming nursing shift and making her entries on the charts of the patients for whom she had cared during the double shift she was just concluding, one of the other nurses noticed the syringe underneath Respondent's clothing. That other nurse immediately reported the syringe to her own head nurse who immediately reported the syringe to the staffing coordinator. The head nurse and the staffing coordinator went to where Respondent was still completing the nurse's notes on the charts of the patients and took her into an office where they confronted her regarding the syringe. They implied that she had a drug problem and offered their assistance. Respondent denied having a drug problem and offered to be tested. They refused her offer to test her for the presence of drugs. Instead, they sent her off the hospital premises although she had not yet completed making her entries on the patient's charts. Hospital personnel then went through Respondent's patients' charts and found some "errors." A month later an investigator for the Department of Professional Regulation requested that Respondent submit to a drug test on one day's notice. She complied with that request. She asked the investigator to go with her to Broward General Medical Center so that she could complete the charts on the patients that she had not been permitted to complete before being sent away from the hospital. Her request was denied. At some subsequent time, the Department of Professional Regulation requested that Respondent submit to a psychological evaluation. She did so at her own expense and provided the Department with the results of that evaluation. Respondent has had no prior or subsequent administrative complaints filed against her.
Recommendation Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is recommended that a Final Order be entered finding Respondent not guilty and dismissing the Second Amended Administrative Complaint with prejudice. RECOMMENDED this 18th day of November, 1991, at Tallahassee, Florida. LINDA M. RIGOT Hearing Officer Division of Administrative Hearings The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1550 (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of the Division of Administrative Hearings this 18th day of November, 1991. APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER, CASE NO. 91-1775 Respondent's proposed findings of fact numbered 1-3, 6, and 8 have been adopted either verbatim or in substance in this Recommended Order. Respondent's proposed findings of fact numbered 4 and 7 have been rejected as not constituting findings of fact but rather as constituting conclusions of law or argument of counsel. Respondent's proposed finding of fact numbered 5 has been rejected as being subordinate. COPIES FURNISHED: Jack McRay, General Counsel Department of CProfessional Regulation 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0792 Judie Ritter, Executive Director Department of Professional Regulation/Board of Nursing Daniel Building, Room 50 111 East Coastline Drive Jacksonville, Florida 32202 Roberta Fenner, Staff Attorney Department of Professional Regulation 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0792 Christopher Knox, Esquire 4801 S. University Drive, #302 W. Box 291207 Davie, Florida 33329-1207
Findings Of Fact Respondent Ahmed Elkadi, who holds a license to practice medicine in Florida, No. 0031490, was one of two surgeons (among some half dozen physicians) on the staff of Weems Memorial Hospital in Apalachicola, Florida, in August of 1988. Whether the physicians on staff who were not surgeons had other specialties and, if so, what they were, the proof did not show. A duly licensed 29-bed general hospital, Petitioner's Exhibit No. 7, Weems Memorial had, "on a . . . stat basis," (Fitzgerald Deposition at 13), despite its small size, "24-hour respiratory therapy capability, 24-hour laboratory coverage, [and] 24-hour radiology coverage," (Fitzgerald Deposition at 5), which did not, however, include computed tomographic scanning or magnetic resonance imaging technology, both available only at facilities some 60 or 70 miles away. Continuous cardiac monitoring was available in house. Id. at 16. Weems Memorial had a physician in house 24 hours a day and a registered nurse on duty 24 hours a day, along with "at least one LPN," (Fitzgerald Deposition at 6), and two nurse's aides. Id. On average, Weems Memorial only had five or six inpatients at any one time during 1988. Staff off premises but on call were required to report within 30 minutes of being summoned. Fitzgerald Deposition at 13. On August 22, 1988, Dr. Elkadi admitted A. L. as a patient, in preparation for gastric bypass surgery the following day. A 29-year-old woman, A. L. (who worked as a nurse at the hospital) stood 5 feet 1.5 inches tall and weighed 303 pounds, when admitted. A chest x-ray taken before she was admitted uncovered no abnormalities other than obesity. Because she "was in excess of twice her standard weight for height," (MacGregor Deposition, p.7) and had "blood cholesterol elevation and [elevated levels of] blood triglycerides," Id., p.8, and because of her age, A. L. was an appropriate candidate for gastric bypass surgery, Corwin Deposition. She signed a form consenting to the operation. Roux-en-Y Dr. Elkadi performed the surgery, a "gastric bypass with Roux-en-y gastrojejunostomy," Petitioner, Exhibit No. 2, p. 7, on August 23, 1988. A. L., who was anxious about the impending operation, received Valium as well as anesthesia before the procedure began. While A. L. lay on her back anesthetized, he cut open her abdomen and partitioned her stomach with staples, thus reducing the capacity of her stomach to receive food; and joined the small, newly segregated, upper portion of her stomach directly to the small intestine. In a contemporaneous operative note, Dr. Elkadi described the procedure: . . . . The TA 90 stapler was used twice to proximal gastric from the proximal apply a double staple line across the stomach to separate a small proximal pouch with a capacity of about 30 cc remaining stomach cavity. A loop of in side using inner for was jejunal completed. 14 the the jejunum was pulled up through an opening the transverse mesocolon and anastomosed to side to the proximal gastric pouch a running suture of 3-0 chromic for the layer and interrupted 3-0 silk sutures the outer layer. A naso-gastric tube passed into the distal limb of the loop before the anastomosis was The gastrojejunostomy measured about 12- mm in diameter. The proximal limb of jejunal loop was then disconnected just proximal to the gastrojejunostomy using GIA stapler, and the cut end was anastomosed to the distal limb about 60 cm distal to the also gastrojejunostomy. The GIA stapler was used for the entero-enterostomy supported by a running 3-0 silk suture for the serosal transverse loop layer. The edges of the opening of the mesocolon were sutured to the jejunal . The using a fascia, a of using interrupted 3-0 silk sutures. . . abdominal wall was closed in layers running suture of #1 Dexon for the running suture of #3-0 Dexon for the subcutaneous layer, and a running suture #3-0 Nylon for the skin. . . . Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2. As reported and as is customary, Dr. Elkadi severed the small intestine just above the newly fashioned connection to the "small proximal gastric pouch." Because gastric juices continue to leave the distal stomach and travel through the disconnected intestinal segment, the procedure was not complete until this segment of the jejunum was rejoined to the small intestine lower down. In manipulating the jejunum to accomplish the reconnection, it was necessary to cut and tie off various blood vessels, including tributaries of the mesenteric vein. Dr. MacGregor, one of petitioner's expert witnesses, testified that "[t]he record indicates that [the surgery] was done appropriately." T.15. On deposition, petitioner's counsel asked and Dr. MacGregor answered: Q. It seems to be a normal surgery? A. Right. Q. Except for the amount of time? A. Correct MacGregor deposition 15. The operation took four hours. The other surgeon petitioner called as an expert testified that "probably four hours would be a reasonable time." Corwin Deposition at 12. Petitioner produced no witness who testified that respondent's work in the operating room failed to meet standards of any kind. Sequelae In the wake of operations of this kind, "mortality can be as high as 2.7 to 2.9 per cent at training centers who have documented teams of specialists and post op care specialists." T.15. Complications "tend to be in two major groups . . . pulmonary embolism and infections." Id. The "most important complication of gastric bypass surgery is perforation or leakage," (MacGregor Deposition at 16) which leads to infection. In many hospitals, nursing administration routinely assigns a formal nursing plan for postoperative patients, after consulting with the surgeon. MacGregor Deposition at 15. But practices vary (Corwin Deposition at 13) and the omission of a formal nursing plan altogether "in and of itself . . . is not unusual," (Fitzgerald Deposition at 12) at least in smaller hospitals. No formal, written nursing or contingency plan was drawn up for A. L. Dr. Elkadi did not originally direct care for A. L. "beyond what [staff] would normally do [for] any postoperative surgical patient." Fitzgerald Deposition at 11. A. L. left the operating room at ten before two on the afternoon of August 23, 1988. An hour and 40 minutes later, her pulse rate was 84 and her respiration was 28. Petitioner's Exhibit NO. 2. At ten o'clock that night, her pulse was 112 and her respiration was 36; and, at or about the same time, her temperature was approximately 97.2o F. A half hour later, with Dr. Elkadi present, A. L. was standing by her bedside and taking a few steps. The next morning she sat up, first on the side of her bed, then in a chair. At half past one on August 24, 1988, she walked to the nursing station, which she "tolerated well." But, after she returned to her bed, she complained of "surgical pain." At six o'clock that evening she walked a short distance in the hall, returned to her room, sat in a chair and, after she had gone back to bed, again complained of "surgical pain." A chest x-ray taken the day after the operation revealed "[s]mall areas of linear atelectasis . . . in the lung bases," Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2, p. 43, which a radiologist attributed to A. L.'s not having taken a full breath. He found that a "full inspiration was not taken during filming," Id., and that the atelectasis was "probably for this reason." Id. On the evening of August 24, 1988, the nursing notes reported "slight drainage of dark green fluid" from the nasogastric tube. Earlier that day, bloody drainage ("scant") was reported for what may have been the first and only time. The last entry in the nurse's notes characterized the drainage as dark brown; "scant amt greenish drainage," Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2, was reported as late as four o'clock on August 26, 1988. Also at four o'clock on the afternoon of August 26, 1988, the nurse's notes reported, "Bowel sounds [were] audible in all 4 quadrants." Petitioner's Exhibit NO. 2. At seven o'clock that evening, according to the same source, A. L. "had small tan colored lo[ose] stool." Id. A blood specimen drawn at nine o'clock on the morning of August 26, 1988, yielded a "WBC" test result of "19.9." Id. at an unnumbered page. The white blood cell count had "c[o]me down to 11,000 on the day of [A. L.'s] admission." Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2, p. 7. On the morning of August 25, 1988, another walk in the hall ended with A. L.'s sitting in a chair. The nurses' notes reported that she was "[t]olerating activity well." Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2. At eleven o'clock that night, "belching incessantly," she complained of back and stomach pain, and a nurse helped her take a walk. She was still up (sitting in a chair) at midnight, when a second walk resulted in "much relief in stomach." Pain and belching persisted, nevertheless, and Dr. Elkadi was called, arriving at ten before one o'clock in the early morning of August 26, 1988. After seeing A. L., respondent ordered an enema and a dose of Vistaril. At quarter past one, she was pushing on her stomach to relieve gas pains. The nurses' notes reported that she was "extremely anxious," and Dr. Elkadi prescribed five milligrams of Valium. She continued to belch, and Dr. Elkadi was notified of her distress and anxiety at three o'clock in the morning. After she received another five milligrams of Valium (presumably at Dr. Elkadi's behest), she fell asleep. At 5:20 that morning, she was given a third five milligram dose of Valium, and at seven o'clock three milligrams more. In each instance, it was administered intravenously by "slow push." Awake by seven, when she complained of abdominal pain, she was given two milligrams of Levodromoran, after walking to and from the nursing station. When the respiratory therapist saw her at nine o'clock, she was sitting in a chair, again complaining of abdominal pain. But an hour later, when she went to the shower, she said she had less gas pain. That afternoon, she rested in bed, sat in a chair, and walked in the hall. The day after the operation, A. L.'s temperature had risen to 100.5o F., and her pulse had reached 128. When her pulse declined on the following day, August 25, 1988, her temperature remained elevated. On August 26, however, her temperature dropped to normal and her pulse leveled off at the low to mid 90s. On August 23, 1988, the day of the surgery, and again on each of the two following days, Dr. Elkadi ordered extra intravenous fluids. On more than one occasion, the nurse's notes reported that intravenous solution was infusing with difficulty, or words to that effect. While a 1500-milliliter per day discrepancy between fluid intake and urine output is to be expected, the discrepancy averaged some 3500 milliliters per day in A. L.'s case, following her surgery. After surgery, she was given morphine in five-milligram doses, intravenously, as needed. The day after the operation, A. L. also received Levodromoran for pain. On August 25, 1988, although she again received both pain-killing medications, she required less morphine. On August 26, 1988, however, in response to complaints of pain, the amounts both of morphine and of Levodromoran she received increased over the previous day's totals. Dr. Elkadi also prescribed Valium and Vistaril; and A. L. received a total of 100 milligrams of the latter, on August 26, 1988, in multiple doses. In addition, Dr. Elkadi prescribed and A. L. received Nubain, an analgesic that, according to Dr. MacGregor, "is a narcotic antagonist." Petitioner's Exhibit No. 1 to MacGregor Deposition. It is therefore possible that Nubain offset the increased dosages of narcotics in whole or in part. The Last Day A. L. awoke at half past six on the morning of August 27, 1988, complained of pain, and received an injection of Nubain. Only 30 minutes later, she complained of "pain between shoulders," but she received no more pain medication, according to the nurse's notes, until five after two that afternoon, when she was given an injection of five milligrams of Valium. (Twelve hours earlier, she had received ten milligrams of Valium.) At seven o'clock on the morning of August 27, 1988, the nurse's notes again reported "good bowel sounds heard in all quad." Id. Early that afternoon, after an enema, according to the nurse's notes, "pt had good results of flatus & sm amt of lg stool." Id. At four o'clock, she "passed some flatus." Id. At quarter of eight that morning, and again at nine, A. L. used a spirometer. Dr. Solman saw her at eight o'clock. She complained of shortness of breath at nine. A chest x-ray taken August 27, 1988, showed "areas of atelectasis in each lung base, somewhat more pronounced on the right side." Id. at 44. At three o'clock that afternoon, she was hyperventilating. When Dr. Loutfi saw her at half past three, her lungs were clear, and the X-ray taken earlier in the day had evidently not yet been seen by a radiologist. At half past four, a nurse gave A. L. ten milligrams of Valium "for relaxation/rest," Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2, and, fifteen minutes later, a "bag to breathe in," which A. L. used for about five minutes. The nurse initialled A. L.'s chart next to a physician's order that concluded: "Valium 10 mg. IV slowly." Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2. Asked on deposition who ordered the Valium, Dr. Corwin testified: And then it says. I can't read what it says. record to Loutfi in far as NAR? I don't know. DR. ELKADI: Dr. Ludwig [sic]. BY DR. ELKADI: Q. All right. In patients having - - MRS. SMALL: I would object for the the questioner testifying. Corwin Deposition at 42. Perhaps Dr. ordered the Valium. The order was not, any event, given by the respondent, as the evidence shows. At quarter past five, the nurse "encouraged [A. L.] to slow/deep breathe." Id. Ten minutes later she found A. L., whom she had last seen sitting on the side of her bed, sprawled across it. Cyanotic around the mouth, she was not breathing. After Drs. Loutfi and Elkadi tried in vain to resuscitate A. L., respondent pronounced her dead, at 6:30 p.m. on August 27, 1988. Cause of Death Unclear Each of the four physicians who testified at hearing or on deposition assigned a different reason for A. L.'s death. Dr. Elkadi reported the following in a discharge summary: The postoperative course during the first 4 occasional the blood of be Patient the The was patient was days was uneventful except for episodes of anxiety, usually related to incisional pain or discomfort caused by NG-tube, and which always responded to sedation or analgesis medication. The oxygenation was measured during several these anxiety episodes and was found to satisfactory with 02 saturation level of 95-97% using the finger tip oxymeter. was walking outside the room already on first postoperative day. By the fourth postoperative day the Foley catheter was removed and she had 2 bowel movements. incision was healing well, and the chest clear to auscultation. On 8/27/88, about 5:20 p.m., the suddenly arrested, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation was carried out. There heart to over an The of considerable airway resistance, and the was in asystole which failed to respond large doses of cardiac drugs. After hour of intensive resuscitative efforts, patient was pronounced dead at 6:30 p.m. course of events was strongly suggestive massive pulmonary embolism. Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2. After the autopsy revealed that the only blood clots in the lungs had formed post mortem, Dr. Elkadi refined his hypothesis, and posited a fat embolus or emboli in the lungs, which, he surmised, degraded into free fatty acids before the autopsy took place, perhaps before death occurred. He testified that free fatty acids produce serotonin, which causes bronchospasms, and he cited resistance the airway offered during the unsuccessful attempt to resuscitate A. L. Ventilation and oxygenation were virtually impossible, even though the endotracheal tube was already in place. Although Dr. Mahoney, the pathologist who performed the autopsy, found a fatty liver, he ruled out a pulmonary fat embolism because he saw no evidence of infection or trauma to the liver (which might have dislodged fat) and because examination of lung and brain tissue (a single section of each) revealed no fat globules. "No intravascular lipid vacuoles were identified in the lung." Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2. On the other hand, "[o]ccasional perivascular lipid vacuoles were seen . . . in the brain section . . . ," Id., indicating fat cells must have passed through the lungs at some point. The autopsy report made no mention of any mechanical blockage or of distension of any part of the gastrointestinal track. Nor was there evidence of alimentary leakage. All sutures held. "Inspection [during the autopsy] of the surgical sites where the surgeon had done anastomotic, reanastomosis of stomach and bowel . . . [showed] these sites were intact and grossly appeared viable." T. 9. Dr. Mahoney listed as a major finding in the autopsy report "[i]schemic enteritis with focal necrosis of the proximal jejunal segment at the entero-enterostomy junction of the Roux-en-y procedure; mesenteric vein thrombosis." Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2. But at hearing he testified, consistently with reported results of microscopic examination, that "major findings at the autopsy . . . [included] a segment of intestine, the jejunal segment, which had undergone a hemorrhagic necrosis." T. 8. Ischemic changes occur when blood supply is insufficient, while hemorrhagic changes are the result of insufficient ability to remove blood. Blood clots blocked veins serving the necrotic tissue. At hearing, Dr. Mahoney concluded "that the most probable cause [of A. L.'s death] was this dead bowel segment essentially causing sepsis." T. 13. Microorganisms penetrating the transmural necrosis caused localized infection outside the bowel or peritonitis, he testified, which led to infection in the blood stream. Septic toxins circulating in the blood caused cardiovascular failure, he theorized. These conclusions rest on autopsy findings of serositis and "approximately 1 liter of cloudy brown fluid with fibrin strands," (Petitioner's Exhibit No. 2) in the abdominal cavity. But Dr. Mahoney did not find "certain types of cells" (T.94) usually found two and a half to three days after peritonitis sets in. In fact, the autopsy findings "are not unusual findings after abdominal surgery without any complication." T.130. Dr. Corwin, one of two surgeons testifying as experts for petitioner, testified that "the autopsy report . . . [contained] essentially no indication of peritonitis." Corwin Deposition at 46. In a report petitioner put in evidence, Dr. Corwin had earlier written that "there really is no evidence of peritonitis." Dr. Corwin wrote, on June 25, 1990, after examining A. L.'s records, "In my opinion the heavy dose of intravenous Valium within the hour before the patient's sudden cardiac arrest almost certainly caused apnea, respiratory shutdown and subsequent to this, the patient suffered a cardiac arrest from which she could not be resuscitated." Petitioner's Exhibit No. 3. Dr. Mahoney testified that the final administration of Valium "may have actually contributed to a respiratory arrest" (T.15) and so to A. L.'s death. A. L. received her last dose of valium 45 minutes before she was last seen alive and 55 minutes before she was found dead. Dr. Corwin conceded that he had ordered Valium for patients in circumstances comparable to A. L.'s over a period of some 17 years, but always, he said, in situations where the patient would be watched, until the effects of the drug wore off. When administered intravenously, Valium has its maximum effect within five minutes. As far as the evidence showed, A. L. did not have an adverse effect to any earlier dose of Valium. For moderate anxiety, the Physicians' Desk Reference (1987 ed.) recommends dosages of "2 mg to 5 mg, I. M. or I. V. Repeat in 3 to 4 hours, if necessary." For severe anxiety, the same reference recommends dosages of "5 mg to 10 mg, I. M. or I. V. Repeat in 3 to 4 hours, if necessary." "Valium is indicated for the management of . . . short-term relief of the symptoms of anxiety." Respondent's Exhibit No. 2. Contraindications are "known hypersensitivity" and glaucoma. Dr. MacGregor, the other surgeon whose opinion petitioner relied on, testified that the "fundamental cause [of A. L.'s death was hypovolemic shock . . . [shock brought on by l]ow blood volume." MacGregor Deposition at 30. When asked, Dr. MacGregor agreed that Valium "may have contributed," id. at 29, to A. L.'s death. But his principal contention was that the focal necrosis created an ileus or physiological obstruction, which caused distension of the stomach and upper gastrointestinal tract which in turn led to a loss of fluid into the lining of the stomach and bowel and ultimately to hypovolemic shock. Recordkeeping Petitioner presented evidence from the same two surgeons on the question whether respondent had adequate medical records while treating A. L. In a letter attached to Dr. Corwin's deposition as an exhibit, he wrote: Did the subject prepare and keep written medical records justifying the course of treatment of the patient, including history, examination and test results? The answer to this question is yes. Deposition of Corwin, Petitioner's Exhibit No. 3. Dr. MacGregor testified that respondent's operative note was "inadequate in terms of . . . [d]etails of sutures and the techniques that were used . . . the instruments used . . . not the number of sutures but the type of sutures and the number of layers." Deposition of MacGregor at 12. But on cross-examination, Dr. MacGregor conceded that "similar operative notes [are] found in many other surgeons' records." Deposition of MacGregor at 35. The hospital records contain a separate, presumably complete list of the surgical instruments Dr. Elkadi used. Although Dr. Elkadi ordered arterial blood gas evaluations, and blood tests specifically to determine oxygen saturation, results of these tests are not in the hospital records, insofar as the hearing officer could discover. Dr. MacGregor testified the results were not in the copy of the records he was furnished. He testified: I think a blood gas was obtained but it's not two helpful normal in the records; and oxygen saturation on occasions. . . . [T]hey would be quite because they might well indicate fairly levels in a patient who has a rapid respiratory rate . . . Deposition of MacGregor at 24. Dr. MacGregor testified that he "would have thought that [it] would have been standard hospital procedure for whoever obtained those, to have recorded them in the record." Deposition of MacGregor at 25.
Recommendation It is, accordingly, RECOMMENDED: That petitioner dismiss the administrative complaint against respondent. DONE and ENTERED this 25th day of January, 1991, in Tallahassee, Florida. Administrative Hearings 1550 the Administrative Hearings 1991. ROBERT T. BENTON, II Hearing Officer Division of The DeSoto Building 1230 Apalachee Parkway Tallahassee, FL 32399- (904) 488-9675 Filed with the Clerk of Division of this 28th day of January, APPENDIX TO RECOMMENDED ORDER Petitioner's proposed findings of fact Nos. 1 through 7, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 21, 22 and 28 have been adopted, in substance, insofar as material. With respect to petitioner's proposed findings of fact Nos. 8 and 9, see paragraphs 11 through 28 of the findings of fact. With respect to petitioner's proposed findings fact No. 10, the record showed dosages, before the final dose, of five, five, five, three, ten and five milligrams. With respect to petitioner's proposed finding of fact No. 11, some tests were done; others were not. Petitioner's proposed findings of fact Nos. 13, 19, 23, 24, and 26 pertain to subordinate matters. With respect to petitioner's proposed findings of fact Nos. 17 and 25, the cause of death was not clear. Petitioner's proposed findings of fact Nos. 27 and 29 were not proven. Petitioner's proposed findings of fact No. 31 is immaterial. Respondent's proposed findings of fact Nos. 1, 2 and 3 in Part 1 and 3 in Part 2, have been accepted, in substance, insofar as material. With respect to respondent's proposed finding of fact No. 4 in Part 1 and No. 10 in Part 3, these matters are not material to the allegations of the administrative complaint. With respect to respondent's proposed finding of fact No. 5 in Part 1 and Part 2, the cause of death is unclear. With respect to respondent's proposed findings of fact Nos. 1, 2 and 8 in Part 3, see findings of fact Nos. 11 through 28. With respect to respondent's proposed finding of fact No. 4 in Part 3, the autopsy report does not reflect this but he so testified at hearing. Respondent's proposed findings of fact Nos. 5, 6, 7 and 9 pertain to subordinate matters. COPIES FURNISHED: Wellington H. Meffert, II, Esquire Department of Professional Regulation 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, FL 32399-0792 Ahmed Elkadi, M.D. 236 S. Tyndall Parkway Panama City, FL 32404 Jack McRay, General Counsel Department of Professional Regulation 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, FL 32399-0792 Dorothy Faircloth Executive Director Board of Medicine 1940 North Monroe Street Tallahassee, FL 32399-0792