| Details of the Case |
This was a claim for wrongful death
on behalf of a 17-year old troubled youth who was an in-patient at a
home for troubled youths. The 17-year old plaintiff had been placed in
the defendant’s facility as a result of significant emotional problems
and drug abuse. The patient had in the year prior to her death shown
great improvement in her functioning, motivation and compliance. She
was at the time of her death preparing to apply to college and had
recently successfully taken the SAT examination.
On the morning of her death in
February 2001, a mental health counselor employed by the defendant
institution was required to perform observation checks every five
minutes to ensure that the plaintiff was safe and secure. On one of
those checks, the defendant mental health counselor observed that the
plaintiff was having significant respiratory difficulties. Despite
seeing the young woman with labored breathing and altered facial
coloration, the mental health counselor failed to intervene.
Approximately 45 minutes later, a second mental health counselor
observed the plaintiff in significant distress and called for
assistance. A code blue was called, and emergency resuscitation
commenced. Despite these life-saving measures, the patient died.
The basis for the wrongful death
claim against the clinic and the mental health worker was the failure of
the mental health worker to take action after observing the patient with
compromised breathing at approximately 8:30 a.m. Plaintiffs were
prepared to present expert testimony from an emergency physician, a
cardiologist and a neurologist to the effect that had CPR begun shortly
after the first observation of respiratory distress, more likely than
not, the plaintiff would have been successfully resuscitated. As a
result of the negligence of the mental health worker and the clinic that
employed him, the plaintiff died. |