
Guzman v. Anonymous Physician/Hospital
Dr. Fagel achieved a settlement of $5,500,000 on the behalf of a
child who now suffers cerebral palsy and severe developmental delays
after hospital staff negligently delayed in performing a Cesarean
section for two hours. The mother had a history of Gestational Diabetes
and Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension prior to her arrival at the
defendant hospital for labor and delivery. The fetal monitor initially
showed a non-reassuring pattern, so the obstetrician was called at 9:15
a.m., He ordered a C-section, but the fetal monitor showed an improved
pattern after the mother was given oxygen, IV fluids and was placed in
a new position. At 9:35 a.m., another patient arrived with a footling
breech and was moved to the operating room ahead of the plaintiff’s
mother at 10 a.m. After the defendant obstetrician left to perform
surgery on the new patient, the fetal monitor strip on the plaintiff’s
mother began to dramatically deteriorate and a crash C-section was
called. However, the only other operating room crew in the hospital was
involved in a scheduled surgery and the OB decided to perform surgery
on the breech patient first. The surgery crew and anesthesiologist
eventually finished the scheduled surgery at 10:30 a.m., but the mother
was not brought to the operating room for 35 minutes because the room
was not prepared. Surgery began at 11:10 a.m. and a placental abruption
was diagnosed. The baby was then delivered at 11:15 a.m. with severe
hypoxic brain injuries.
The defense contended that the hospital only had two surgery crews
available at the time and could not have anticipated the need for two
simultaneous emergency C-sections, which had never happened before. The
defense also argued that the plaintiff’s injuries occurred before the
mother entered the hospital, as evidenced by the initial non-reassuring
fetal tracing and unhealthy red blood cells found in the placenta after
delivery. Nevertheless, Dr. Fagel displayed that the hospital was
negligent for failing to provide staff and facilities for an emergency
C-section within 30 minutes of the order. The cause of the plaintiff’s
injuries was the placental abruption, so an earlier delivery clearly
would have improved the outcome. As such, the two-hour delay was well
below the standard of care and was a significant contributor to the
plaintiff’s brain injuries.