Plaintiff’s counsel contended that the defendant PA was negligent in his examination and evaluation of the plaintiff’s digit lacerations and that he was negligent for failing to splint the plaintiff’s hand. Counsel also contended that the defendant was negligent for failing to refer the plaintiff to a hand surgeon (either directly or through the plaintiff’s primary care provider) and/or for failing to seek the assistance of his supervising physician, who was on site at the hospital’s ED and available for consultation.
Defense counsel argued that the defendant met the applicable standard of care at all times, in all aspects of his visit with the plaintiff in the early morning hours of September 1, 2014, and that there was nothing that he either did or did not do that was a substantial factor in causing the plaintiff’s alleged injuries and damages. The defendant claimed that upon his arrival at the patient’s bedside, the plaintiff verbally indicated to him that he could move his fingers (extension and flexion). He also claimed that he visualized the plaintiff moving his fingers while they were wrapped in the dressing that the plaintiff had placed on himself after the injury-producing event. However, the plaintiff disputed the defendant’s claim, denying ever being asked to extend and flex his fingers. The plaintiff also claimed that he never was able to make a full fist with his fingers on the night in question while in the ED, either by way of passive or active flexion.
Defense counsel noted that the defendant’s dictated ED note stated that the range of motion of all the plaintiff’s phalanges were normal, with no deficits, at all times while in the ED. The defendant testified about how he tested and evaluated the plaintiff’s DIP function. He also testified that he had the plaintiff lay his hand on the table, palm side up, and then laid his own hand across the plaintiff’s hand so as to isolate the DIP joint on each finger. He explained that he then had the plaintiff flex his fingers, which allowed him to determine whether there had been any kind of injury to the flexor digitorum profundus tendon (responsible for DIP function in the hand). The defendant claimed that he did the test for all the lacerated fingers and characterized them as active (as opposed to passive) flexion. Thus, he claimed that his physical exam findings were that the plaintiff had full range of motion (ROM) intact following the DIP function testing, which helped him conclude that the plaintiff did not have completely lacerated tendons as of that visit.
The defendant further explained that if the tendons were completely lacerated, the plaintiff would have had nonexistent DIP functioning on examination. The defendant testified that if he suspected a tendon laceration in a patient such as the plaintiff, his practice would be to notify his supervising physician in the ED and then either refer the patient to a primary care provider for an orthopedic hand surgeon referral or directly refer the patient to an orthopedic hand surgeon. He claimed that he took no such actions because there was no indication, from his perspective, that the plaintiff had suffered any tendon damage based on his physical exam findings, the plaintiff’s ability to make a fist, and the x-ray results.
Continue to: VERDICT