Quantcast

Justices allow med-mal against Christus to continue, woman delivered baby while sitting on hospital toilet

SOUTHEAST TEXAS RECORD

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Justices allow med-mal against Christus to continue, woman delivered baby while sitting on hospital toilet

Lawsuits
Lanierlong

Mark Lanier

BEAUMONT – The Ninth Court of Appeals has concluded that a challenge to an expert report wasn’t enough for Christus Health Southeast Texas to escape a lawsuit brought by a patient who delivered her baby into a toilet while admitted to St. Elizabeth Hospital.

Back in January 2018, Myranda Carnahan filed a petition in Jefferson County District Court, seeking to obtain the testimony of the custodian of medical records for St. Elizabeth.

According to the petition, on May 30, 2017, Carnahan went to the emergency room complaining of labor pains. She was discharged and told that she had a bladder infection.

She returned the following day and was admitted for observation.

“On the morning of June 1, 2017, Mrs. Carnahan went to the restroom and her water broke and she delivered her child into the toilet,” the petition states. “The child was hospitalized for approximately four months and continues to undergo treatment for serious birth injuries.”

Court records show a nurse found Carnahan sitting on the toilet with the baby hanging out of her vagina. Nurses retrieved the baby and rushed the infant to the NICU.

As required by Texas law, Carnahan served the hospital with an expert report. Dr. James Wheeler, a board-certified obstetrician and gynecologist, authored the report.

He opined that if the nurses had satisfied their applicable standards of care, Carnahan, an obese woman, would have been found to be in preterm labor.

Court records show Christus filed a motion to dismiss challenging the sufficiency of the expert report, claiming it failed to meet the requirements of the Texas Medical Liability Act.

Judge Mitch Templeton, 172nd District Court, denied the motion. Christus appealed and on Dec. 3 the Ninth Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s ruling. 

“Because the expert report … listed the expert’s qualifications and linked the nurses’ breaches of the applicable standards of care to (the baby’s) injuries, it allowed the trial court to conclude the report met the Act’s requirements,” the opinion states.

“We overrule the hospital’s issues and uphold the trial court’s order denying the motion to dismiss.”

Carnahan is represented by the Lanier Law Firm in Houston.

Attorneys for the Cooper & Scully law firm represent Christus.

Appeals case No. 09-20-00108-CV

Trial case No. E-204242

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

More News