TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND. I.
FINDINGS OF FACT. II.
A. Uncontested Facts.
B. Contested Facts.
STANDARDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT. III.
LEGAL ANALYSIS. IV.
A. The Hospital’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
1. The History and Purpose of the EMTALA.
2. EMTALA Standards for a Claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(a) ...
a. Treatment or Appropriate Medical Screening.
b. Failure to Stabilize Claim.
c. Failure to Provide Emergency Medical Care Because of Improper Motive. U5
i. The Split In Authority On Requiring Economic Motive to Be Shown. ^ Q
ii. Analysis. Oí
B. Defendant Allender’s Motion for Summary Judgment. LO O
C. Defendant Allender’s Third Motion for Summary Judgment and For Ruling Under Federal Rule of Evidence 104(a). O LQ O
CONCLUSION. iC Oí
ORDER REGARDING MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This lawsuit arises out of the medical treatment the decedent Kendall E. Broder-sen (“Kendall”) received or failed to receive from Defendants, a hospital, a chiropractor, and two physicians, in the days prior to his death on January 27,1991. At issue in these pending motions for summary judgment are allegations in Plaintiffs complaint, inter alia, that Defendant Sioux Valley Memorial Hospital (“the Hospital”) violated the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (“EMTALA”) by failing to provide Kendall with appropriate medical screening, and by failing to stabilize Kendall’s condition before discharging him. The Hospital has moved for summary judgment on Plaintiffs EMTALA claims. The Hospital’s motion on Plaintiffs screening claim requires the court to determine if a material question of fact has been generated on the issue of whether the Hospital provided Kendall with treatment which deviated from the Hospital’s standard procedures for similarly situated patients.
Plaintiff further alleges a state law negligence claim against Defendant Frank Allen-der, a chiropractor who treated Kendall in the days before his death. Allender has filed two motions for summary judgment. One motion raises the question of whether the court has subject matter jurisdiction over
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Debbie Brodersen (“Brodersen”), on behalf of herself and as executrix of Kendall Brodersen’s estate, filed her complaint against Defendants on February 17, 1993. First, in count I of the complaint, Brodersen alleges a violation of the EMTALA by the Hospital. Count II of the complaint contains a state law negligence claim against the Hospital. In count III, Brodersen alleges a negligence claim against Defendant Frank Allen-der. Count IV alleges negligence against Defendants Stephen Veit and Thomas Gary, treating physicians, in both their individual and corporate capacity. The second division of the complaint alleges loss of consortium by Plaintiff Debbie Brodersen.
The Hospital has moved for summary judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(b) on each of Brodersen’s claims against it. 1 The Hospital asserts that no genuine dispute exists as to the fact that Kendall Brodersen received an “appropriate” medical screening examination within the capability of the Hospital’s emergency department, see 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(A). The Hospital asserts that it provided Kendall with treatment which did not in any way deviate from the Hospital’s standard procedures for similarly situated patients. It further asserts that, because of the symptoms presented by Kendall, the protocols at the Hospital regarding the conducting of EKGs and the placement of patients in the Hospital’s cardiac unit were both followed in this instance. The Hospital also asserts that no genuine dispute exists as to the fact that Kendall did not have an “emergency medical condition” at the time he was hospitalized and, even if he did, his condition was “stabilized” at the time of his discharge, see 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(c)(l)(A)(ii). Additionally, the Hospital contends that Brodersen is unable to meet a second requirement under EMTALA, demonstrating that the disparate treatment Kendall received was the result of an economic motive on the part of the Hospital. Finally, the Hospital contends that, once the EMTALA claim is dismissed, Plaintiffs remaining pendent claims should likewise be dismissed.
Defendant Frank Allender has also filed two motions for summary judgment. In the first, he asserts that the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment is meritorious and therefore the court does not have subject matter jurisdiction over him pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1395. 2 He further asserts that the court should not exercise supplemental jurisdiction over him under 28 U.S.C. § 1367. In his “third” motion for summary judgment, Allender contends that Brodersen’s evidence cannot, as a matter of law, establish a violation of the applicable standard of care because none of Brodersen’s experts are qualified to testify as to the standard of care for a chiropractor and that, because Brodersen does not have a qualified expert, she can establish neither the standard of care nor a violation of it.
A hearing on Defendants’ motions for summary judgment was held on September 5, 1995. At the hearing Plaintiff was represented by Roxanne B. Conlin and Donna Laddy of Roxanne Conlin & Associates, P.C., Des Moines, Iowa. Defendant Sioux Valley Memorial Hospital was represented by Edwin Evans of Davenport, Evans, Hurwitz & Smith, Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Defendants Stephen Veit, M.D., Gene Michel, M.D., and Stephen Veit, M.D., P.C. were represented by Joseph L. Fitzgibbons of Fitzgibbons Brothers, Estherville, Iowa, and Mark R. Cozine of Martin, Wibe & Cozine,
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
A. Uncontested Facts
For the purposes of this summary judgement motion only, the court finds the following facts:
The record reveals that the following facts are undisputed. Kendall Brodersen worked on Thursday, January 24, 1991. That evening, Brodersen complained to his wife, Debbie Brodersen, about suffering both back and chest pain. Kendall told Debbie to contact a chiropractor regarding treatment. Debbie arranged for Kendall to be seen by Defendant Frank Allender, D.C., that evening. Al-lender examined Kendall the evening of January 24, 1991. Kendall reported that he was suffering from upper and middle back pain, neck pain, chest pain, sore throat and headaches in the temple area. Kendall indicated that, at approximately 4:30 p.m., someone at work had grabbed him about his neck and pulled him backwards, and that he had begun to have pain at 6:00 p.m. that evening.
Kendall returned to Dr. Allender the next day, January 25, 1991. On Saturday, January 26, 1991, Kendall saw both Dr. Allender and Defendant Stephen Veit, M.D., a general practitioner in Cherokee, Iowa. Kendall informed Veit that he had been coughing up bloody phlegm for two days, was nauseous, and had pain when breathing in deeply. At the time of his examination by Dr. Veit, Kendall had normal blood pressure levels, but had a slightly elevated temperature. Dr. Veit’s diagnosis was that Kendall had a bronchial infection. Dr. Veit prescribed Augments for Kendall.
Kendall’s condition did not improve during January 26, 1991, and in the early morning hours of January 27, 1991, Debbie called Dr. Veit and informed him that Kendall’s condition had not improved and that he had vomited the Augments. Dr. Veit instructed Debbie to let Kendall rest his stomach and then have him take another dose of the Augments. If Kendall was unable to keep the Augments down, then she was told to take Kendall to an emergency room.
Kendall and Debbie arrived at the Hospital’s emergency room at 3:50 a.m. on January 27, 1991. Kendall had health insurance through Blue Cross and Blue Shield. Bonnie Weise, a nurse, was in charge of the Hospital’s emergency room on the mornSg of January 27, 1991. Kendall complaSed of back and chest pain, nausea, spitting up blood, and that he had been unable to eat anything for two days. He also reported that he had seen Dr. Veit the day before and that Dr. Veit had told him to go to the emergency room that evemng if Ms condition did not improve.
Weise conducted an examination of Kendall. Kendall had a low grade fever of 99.9, he was not coughing and his lungs sounded clear when listened to with a stethoscope. The Hospital does not have an emergency room physician on site at all times. Rather, the Hospital has a physician who is on call. She called the on call physician that evening, Defendant Thomas Gary, M.D., and spoke with him eoncermng Kendall’s condition. Weise did not consider Kendall to be in acute distress. Dr. Gary instructed Weise to have Kendall return at 7:30 for an x-ray. No electrocardiogram (“EKG”) was performed on Kendall at this time. The Hospital has a written policy regarding EKGs on emergency room patients which states:
Patients presenting to Emergency Room with chest pain are to have an EKG simultaneous to the physician being notified. This EKG is ordered at the discretion of the Patient Care Coordinator’s evaluation of the patient.
Plaintiffs Ex. 16. Weise informed the Bro-dersens of Dr. Gary’s instructions, and they left the emergency room at 4:15 a.m.
Nurses informed Dr. Gary of Kendall’s condition throughout the day. Dr. Gary saw Kendall at 6:15 p.m. At this time, Nurse Barrie Black informed Dr. Gary of Kendall’s low oxygen saturation, his pulse rate and that Kendall was growing more anxious. Dr. Gary prescribed Valium for Kendall, spoke to the Brodersens, and then left. At 6:30 p.m. Kendall went into cardiac arrest. At 9:30 p.m., Kendall was transferred by air ambulance to Marian Health Center in Sioux City, Iowa. Kendall went into cardiac arrest again while being air lifted. He died at approximately 10:40 p.m. on January 27, 1991.
An autopsy was conducted by Dr. Thomas Bennett. Dr. Bennett diagnosed the cause of Kendall’s death as acute myocardial infarction due to the right coronary artery thrombosis which was due to atherosclerotic coronary artery disease. Dr. Bennett opined that the myocardial infarction occurred three to five days prior to Kendall’s death.
B. Contested Facts
1. Is it standard policy at the Hospital to conduct an EKG on a patient who presents with chest pain?
2. Is it standard policy at the Hospital to place a patient suffering from chest pains in the Hospital’s cardiac unit?
3. Did the staff at the Hospital consider or believe that Kendall was a Title XIX patient at any time while he was being treated at the Hospital?
4. Did the staff of the Hospital know that Kendall Brodersen was suffering from an emergency medical condition at the time of his release on January 27, 1991?
III. STANDARDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals recognizes “that summary judgment is a drastic remedy and must be exercised with extreme care to prevent taking genuine issues of fact away from juries.”
Wabun-Inini v. Sessions,
The standard for granting summary judgment is well established. Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure states in pertinent part:
Rule 56. Summary Judgment
(b) For Defending Party. A party against whom a claim ... is asserted ... may, at any time, move for summary judgment in the party’s favor as to all or any part thereof.
(c) Motions and Proceedings Thereon.... The judgment sought shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(b) & (c) (emphasis added);
see also Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Procedurally, the moving parties, Defendants, bear “the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for their motion and identifying those portions of the record which show lack of a genuine issue.”
Hartnagel,
“When a moving party has carried its burden under Rule 56(c), its opponent must do more than simply show there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts.”
Matsushita,
In
Anderson,
IV. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. The Hospital’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Brodersen has brought a claim against the Hospital under the EMTALA, 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd. The EMTALA states in relevant part:
In the case of a hospital that has a hospital emergency department, if any individual (whether or not eligible for benefits under this subchapter) comes to the emergency department and a request is made on the individual’s behalf for examination or treatment for a medical condition, the hospital must provide for an appropriate medical screening examination within the capability of the hospital’s emergency department, including ancillary services routinely available to the emergency department, to determine whether or not an emergency medical condition ... exists.
42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(a). 4 The Hospital asserts in its motion for summary judgment that Brodersen is unable to demonstrate that the Hospital violated the EMTALA by either failing to provide Kendall Brodersen with appropriate medical screening or failing to stabilize Kendall’s condition. After discussing the history and purpose behind the EM-TALA, the court will then discuss each of Brodersen’s claims seriatim.
1. The History and Purpose of the EM-TALA
President Reagan signed the Comprehensive Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986 (“COBRA”) into law on April 7, 1986. EMTALA was part of COBRA. EMTALA requires that hospitals having emergency departments and which participate in the Medicare program provide a medical examination within the capability of the hospital’s emergency department to any person requesting one. The examination’s purpose is to determine whether the person is suffering from an “emergency medical condition” as that term is defined under EMTALA.
5
An individual found to be in an emergency medical condition must either be provided with medical treatment or transferred in accordance with EMTALA.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(b)(l). A person in an emergency medical condition may be transferred without restriction once stabilized.
6
If the patient has not been stabi
EMTALA, commonly known as the “Patient Anti-Dumping Act,” was enacted “in response to a growing concern about ‘the provision of adequate emergency room medical services to individuals who seek care, particularly as to the indigent and uninsured.’ ” H.R.Rep. No. 241 (III), 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 5, reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N., 42, 726-27. EMTALA’s anti-dumping provisions took effect August 1, 1986. “The statute was designed principally to address the problem of ‘patient dumping,’ whereby hospital emergency rooms deny uninsured patients the same treatment provided paying patients, either by refusing care outright or by transferring uninsured patients to other facilities.”
8
Gatewood v. Washington Healthcare Corp.,
2. EMTALA Standards for a Claim under 42 U.S.C. § 139Sdd(a)
a. Treatment or Appropriate Medical Screening
The court now turns to the standards applicable to Brodersen’s EMTALA claims. Under 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(a), those hospitals with an emergency medical department must provide an appropriate medical screening to determine whether an emergency medical condition exists for any individual who comes to the emergency medical department requesting treatment.
11
See Williams v. Birkeness,
As the court has previously noted, EMTA-LA is not a federal malpractice statute.
See Brooks,
Here, the Hospital has presented the affidavit of Dr. Gary, who avers that:
9. To the best of my knowledge, the medical screening procedure at the time of the 3:50 a.m. 1-27-91 admission was performed in accordance with standard operating policy at the hospital for treatment of patients with the same or similar symptoms. Furthermore, to the best of this Affiant’s knowledge, all hospital protocols and procedures applicable to screening examinations of patients in the same or similar circumstances as Mr. Brodersen’s presentation at the emergency room were, in fact, followed.
10. To the best of this Affiant’s knowledge and belief, Mr. Brodersen received the same standard medical screening examination as other patients presenting with similar complaints and symptoms under the same or similar circumstances.
Gary Aff. at ¶¶ 9-10. In addition, the Hospital has presented the affidavits of nurses Bonnie Weise and Karen Rupp. 12 Rupp, the Hospital’s nurse manager for the emergency room, states in her affidavit that:
3.I have now had an opportunity to review the entire chart of Kendall Broder-sen and am familiar with the care and treatment provided to Mr. Brodersen at the time of his emergency room admission at 3:50 a.m., 1-27-91.
4. Based upon my review of the chart, as well as my knowledge of the general policies and procedures at the hospital for emergency room care, Mr. Brodersen was accorded the same medical screening examination as other patients reporting the same or similar symptoms under the same or similar circumstances.
5. Based upon my review of the medical records, as well as my knowledge of hospital protocols and procedures, the medical screening procedure accorded Mr. Brodersen at about 3:50 a.m., on 1-27-91, was in accord with standard hospital policy and procedure utilized for other similarly situated patients.
Rupp aff. at ¶¶ 3-5.
The court concludes that the Hospital, as the moving party has met its “initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for their motion and identifying those .portions of the record which show lack of a genuine issue.”
Hartnagel,
In response, Brodersen has presented the affidavits of two nurses who were employed by the Hospital at the time Kendall was treated there on January 27, 1991, Lorna Jahde and Janet Kohn. 13 Jahde avers, in pertinent part, in her affidavit that:
7. When I first arrived at work on January 27, 1991, at approximately 2:15 p.m., I was told that there was a very sick patient on the floor who had chest pains.
8. I asked, “Why isn’t [this patient] in the [cardiac] unit?” I was told that the sick patient Kendall Brodersen, was a Title XIX patient — a person who does not have his own medical insurance but for whom the state pays medical and hospital expenses — with a history of drug abuse.
9. Throughout the afternoon, I observed Mr. Brodersen’s condition deteriorate. I was not assigned to act as Mr. Brodersen’s nurse, but I could see Mr. Brodersen clearly whenever I walked back and forth between the nurse’s station and my patients’ rooms.
10. I observed that Mr. Brodersen suffered from classic signs of heart failure. In addition to suffering from chest pains, he had difficulty breathing, he was ashen, and he was not alert. I understand that the hospital chart and assessment records show that the recording nurse noted that Mr. Brodersen denied that he had any chest pains. Contrary to this notation, I observed Mr. Brodersen complain of terrible chest pains repeatedly. Both Mr. Bro-dersen and Ms. Brodersen expressed the fact that Mr. Brodersen was experiencing chest pains.
Jahde aff. at ¶¶ 7-10. In her supplemental affidavit, Jahde states that it was Barrie Black, Kendall’s primary nurse, who informed her that Kendall was a Title XIX patient with a history of drug use. Jahde supplemental aff. at ¶¶ 18-19. Kohn was working the 6:30 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. shift on January 27, 1991. She states, in pertinent part, in her affidavit that:
6.On January 27, 1991, I first learned that Kendall Brodersen, who was distantly related to me by marriage, was in the hospital after his code status was announced. When a code is in progress, it means that a patient is not breathing on his own or has no pulse.
7. Upon learning that Kendall Broder-sen’s condition reached code status, I went to Kendall Brodersen’s room.
8. When I arrived at Kendall Broder-sen’s room, Dr. Gary was not there. I was told that Barrie Black, Kendall Broder-sen’s primary nurse, had been calling Dr. Gary all day trying to get him to come to the hospital. Throughout the day Barrie Black had called Dr. Gary frequently about the deterioration of Kendall Brodersen’s condition. Usually, a doctor who has been called and advised about a patient’s deteriorating health status as many times as Barrie Black called Dr. Gary that day, will come in to the hospital to see the patient.
Kohn Aff. at ¶¶ 6-8. Kohn further avers in her affidavit that shortly after Kendall was ah' transferred Dr. Gary took all of Kendall’s hospital records from the nursing station. After taking the records, the Hospital’s light system indicated that Dr. Gary was no longer on the Hospital’s premises. Finally, Broder-sen points out that Kendall was not administered an EKG even though he had complaints of chest pain. Such action would be in apparent contravention of the Hospital’s EKG policy. Indeed, in his affidavit, Dr. Phillips avers:
10. I have reviewed 48 summary sheets for patients who were provided with EKGs by Sioux Valley Hospital from June 1, 1991 [sic] to February 1, 1991. In each instance, based on the history provided, the patients had symptoms medically identical to those of Kendall Brodersen, similar to Kendall Brodersen’s in medically significant ways, or even less serious than Kendall Brodersen’s symptoms upon presentation to the emergency room on both occasions and thereafter while in the hospital. The records reviewed show that Kendall Brodersen was treated differently by Sioux Valley Hospital than other patients similarly situated. He was not given a medical screening examination consistent with or comparable to that given to other patients.
Phillips aff. at ¶ 10. 14
The trial judge’s function in considering a motion for summary judgment is not to eval
Furthermore, the court finds that the material produced by Brodersen in the form of the affidavits of Dr. Phillips and Loma Jahde raises a question as to whether a similarly situated patient who presents with chest pains would have been told to return to the emergency room nearly four hours later for x-rays without the benefit of an examination by a physician or the conducting of an EKG. Dr. Phillips states in his affidavit that Kendall “was not given a medical screening examination consistent with or comparable to that given to other patients.” Phillips Aff. at ¶ 10. Thus, the court concludes that Broder-sen has produced sufficient evidence such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for her.
See Anderson,
Therefore, summary judgment is inappropriate on Brodersen’s claims against the Hospital on the grounds that the Hospital violated EMTALA by failing to provide Kendall with appropriate medical screening.
b. Failure to Stabilize Claim
The court next takes up Brodersen’s failure to stabilize claim. Brodersen also asserts that the Hospital inappropriately transferred Kendall when it released him on the morning of January 27, 1991. EMTALA requires that a hospital which has determined that a patient has an “emergency medical condition” must stabilize the patient before transferring him. 15 See 42 U.S.C.A. § 1395dd(c).
To succeed on a section 1395dd(b) claim, a plaintiff must present evidence that the patient had an emergency medical condition, the hospital knew of the condition, the patient was not stabilized before being transferred, and the hospital neither obtained the patient’s consent to transfer nor completed a certificate indicating the transfer would be beneficial to the patient and was appropriate.
Holcomb v. Monahan,
Here, the Hospital asserts that because Brodersen has failed to present any evidence that the Hospital knew Kendall had an emergency medical condition at the time of his transfer, the court need not inquire as to whether he was stabilized prior to his transfer. In response, Brodersen first as
While conceding that the vast majority of case law is against her on this issue, indeed she cites no contrary ease law and the court has not located any such authority, Brodersen argued at the hearing and in her supplemental brief that the determination of whether the Hospital had actual knowledge of Kendall’s emergency medical condition when he was released on the morning of January 27, 1995, is a question for the trier of fact. Although the court finds this to be an extremely close question, given the evidence generated to date, the court concludes that a material fact question exists on the issue of whether or not the Hospital knew Kendall had an emergency medical condition when he presented on the morning of January 27, 1995.
The Hospital has presented the affidavits of both nurse Weise and Dr. Gary. Each indicate in their respective affidavit that they did not deem Kendall to be suffering from an emergency medical condition when he was released on the morning of January 27, 1991. In response, Brodersen directs the court’s attention to the emergency room records and affidavit of Dr. Phillips indicating that on the morning of January 27, 1991, Kendall was experiencing symptoms which would appear to raise a question of fact as to whether the Hospital’s personnel actually determined that Kendall had an “emergency medical condition.” "When Kendall presented on January 27, 1991, he complained of back and chest pain, nausea, spitting up blood, and that he had been unable to eat anything for two days. He also reported that he had seen Dr. Veit the day before and that Dr. Veit had told him to go to the emergency room that evening if his condition did not improve. Weise conducted an examination of Kendall and found that he had a low grade fever. He was told to return for an x-ray. Brodersen has further presented the affidavit of Dr. Phillips, who states, in pertinent part, that:
When Kendall Brodersen was discharged from the hospital at approximately 4:10, January 27, 1991, he was not stable, he was suffering from an emergency medical condition requiring immediate hospitalization and any competent medical professional must recognize that.
Phillips aff. at ¶ 9. Given this record, caution would dictate toward allowing a jury to decide whether the Hospital did in fact determine that Kendall had an “emergency medical condition” at the time of his release on the morning of January 27, 1991, despite the Hospital’s emphatic denial of this claim. In sum, Dr. Phillips’ affidavit clearly generates a material question of fact if the standard is
Therefore, summary judgment is inappropriate on Brodersen’s claim against the Hospital on the grounds that the Hospital violated EMTALA by failing to stabilize Kendall before releasing him.
c. Failure to Provide Emergency Medical Care Because of Improper Motive
The Hospital further asserts that even if Brodersen is capable of generating a material fact question on the issue of Kendall’s treatment, she is unable to meet a second requirement under EMTALA: that the disparate treatment received was the result of an economic motive or bias. This issue requires the court to first determine if a cause of action under EMTALA will lie only when the Hospital’s actions or inactions are the result of economic motive. If the court concludes that this is a valid requirement then it must ascertain whether Brodersen has generated a material fact question regarding an economic motive behind the Hospital’s treatment of Kendall.
The court notes first the significant split in authority on the issue of whether economic motive or bias must be demonstrated as a prerequisite under EMTALA and the silence of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals on this issue. Although the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals was confronted with the issue of EMTALA’s requirements in
Williams,
One side of the debate is exemplified by the Sixth Circuit’s decision in
Cleland,
[A]ny departure from standard screening procedures constitutes inappropriate screening in violation of the Emergency Act. The motive for such departure is not important to this analysis, which applies whenever and for whatever reason a patient is denied the same level of care provided others and guaranteed him or her by subsection 1395dd(a).
Id.
Instead, “ ‘appropriate’ screening is properly determined ... by reference to a hospital’s screening procedures.”
Id.
Thus, under this analysis, any deviation from normal procedure may be construed as inappropriate under EMTALA. The motive underlying that deviation is irrelevant. Thus, the
Gatewood
court differed substantially from the
Cleland
court which had ruled that impermissible motive is a determining factor in proving an EMTALA violation. The
Gate-wood
decision, too, has been followed by a number of courts.
See Power v. Arlington Hosp. Ass’n,
EMTALA’s legislative history suggests that Congress enacted EMTALA in order to remedy incidents where emergency care was denied because of economic motive. Yet, any reference to economic or an illegitimate motive are conspicuously absent from EMTA-LA’s provisions. The court therefore concludes that, between the two groups of cases, the better reasoned approach is found in those decisions holding that a defendant’s motive in failing to provide appropriate emergency treatment is irrelevant.
See Gatewood,
The best means for determining whom Congress intended to protect under EMTA-LA is an examination of the language of EMTALA. “The task of resolving the dispute over the meaning of [a statute] begins where all such inquiries must begin: with the language of the statute itself.”
United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc.,
Wfiien the language of the statute is plain, the inquiry also ends with the language of the statute, for in such instances “the sole function of the courts is to enforce [the statute] according to its terms.”
Ron Pair,
However, “[p]lain meaning, like beauty, is sometimes in the eye of the beholder,”
Florida Power & Light Co. v. Lorion,
by a strict construction of the words of the Act, nor by application of artificial canons of construction. On the contrary, we are to read the statutory language in its ordinary and natural sense, and if doubts remain, resolve them in the light, not only of the policy intended to be served by the enactment, but, as well, by all other available aids to construction. But it is not our function to engraft on a statute additions which we think the legislature logically might or should have made.
Bacon,
Here, the plain meaning of EMTALA’s language does not require the showing of an economic motive for a hospital’s failure to provide appropriate care. As the Fourth Circuit noted in its Power decision:
We are persuaded that the D.C. Circuit’s rejection of an improper motive requirement is indeed the correct approach. See Jones v. Wake County Hosp. Sys., Inc.,786 F.Supp. 538 , 544 (E.D.N.C.1991); Deberry v. Sherman Hosp. Ass’n,769 F.Supp. 1030 , 1034 (N.D.Ill.1991) (both following Gatewood and rejecting motive requirement). First, there is nothing in the statute itself that requires proof of indigence, inability to pay, or any other improper motive on the part of a hospital as a prerequisite to recovery. The language of subsection 1395dd(a) simply refers to “any individual” who presents to the emergency room. Second, it seems to us that the expanse of motives suggested by the Sixth Circuit in Cleland is so broad as to be no limit at all, and as a practical matter amounts to not having a motive requirement. Anyone who alleges that she did not receive an appropriate medical screening examination can simply find an improper motive that fits, whether it is sex, nationality, income, or occupation, and simply allege it. Which leads, thirdly, to the most fundamental problem with the motive requirement: the proof predicament. We agree with Power’s position that having to prove the existence of an improper motive on the part of a hospital, its employees or its physicians, would make a civil EMTA-LA claim virtually impossible. We do not believe that proving the inner thoughts and prejudices of attending hospital personnel is required in order to recover under EMTALA.
Id. at 857-58. The court concurs in all regard with the Fourth Circuit’s assessment of the weaknesses of the Cleland decision and its progeny. Accordingly, the court concludes that EMTALA should apply to any person denied sufficient emergency medical care regardless of the defendant’s motive. 19
Defendant Allender’s motion for summary judgment is premised on the assumption that the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment is valid. However, because the court has concluded that Brodersen has generated material fact questions regarding whether the Hospital provided Kendall with treatment which deviated from the Hospital’s standard procedures for similarly situated patients, summary judgment is inappropriate on Bro-dersen’s claims that the Hospital violated the EMTALA by failing to provide Kendall with appropriate medical screening. Therefore, the basis for Allender’s motion for summary judgment, that the Hospital’s summary judgment motion is meritorious, is incorrect. As a result, the court does have subject matter jurisdiction over Defendant Allender pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1395 and his motion for summary judgment shall also be denied. This holding also disposes of Defendants Veit and Gary’s joinder in the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment.
C. Defendant Allender’s Third Motion for Summary Judgment and For Ruling Under Federal Rule of Evidence 104(a)
Defendant Allender has moved to have the court declare that Brodersen’s experts, Thomas L. Bennett, James D. Kimball and Steven J. Phillips are not qualified to testify regarding the applicable standard of care to which Allender must be held. Defendant Allender has also filed a companion motion for summary judgment which raises the issue of whether Plaintiffs experts, Dr. Bennett, Dr. Kimball, and Dr. Phillips, are qualified to testify against Allender regarding the appropriate standard of care. Brodersen has identified -three expert witnesses to testify as to the negligence issue, Drs. Bennett, Kimball and Phillips. Dr. Bennett is the Iowa State Medical Examiner and has an extensive background in forensic pathology. Dr. Kim-ball is a medical doctor who is on the faculty at Broadlawns Medical Center. Dr. Phillips is a cardiovascular surgeon. None, however, is a chiropractor. Defendant Allender filed his third motion for summary judgment on the ground that Brodersen’s evidence cannot, as a matter of law, establish a violation of the applicable standard of care. Specifically, Al-lender argues that none of Brodersen’s experts are qualified to testify to the standard of care for a chiropractor and that, because Brodersen does not have a qualified expert, she cannot establish either the standard of care or a violation of the standard of care, two essential elements of a malpractice claim. 20
Under Iowa law, in order to establish a prima facie case of medical malpractice, “plaintiff must show evidence which establishes the applicable standard of care, demonstrate this standard has been violated, and develop a causal relationship between the violation and the alleged harm.”
Kennis v. Mercy Hosp. Medical Ctr.,
“One is through expert testimony, the second through evidence showing the physician’s lack of care so obvious as to be within comprehension of a layman, and the third, (actually an extension of the second) through evidence that the physician injured a part of the body not involved in the treatment. The first means is the rule and the others are exceptions.”
As the Iowa Supreme Court has held: The general rule is that one sued for malpractice is entitled to have his treatment tested by the rules and principles of the school of medicine to which he belongs, not those of some other school. If he treats the patient with the ordinary skill and care of those of his school he is not answerable for poor results.
Correll v. Goodfellow,
In
Taormina v. Goodman,
In the instant action to recover damages predicated upon the malpractice of a chiropractor, plaintiffs’ proof at the trial did not include the testimony of any chiropractic experts, but rather medical doctors, whose knowledge of chiropractics was admittedly quite limited. The testimony of these doctors only served to establish defendant’s deviation from a medical standard of care in his treatment of the plaintiff husband. Accordingly, there was no competent trial evidence upon which the jury could have predicated its finding (in accordance with the court’s charge) that defendant had failed to exercise ‘that degree of care that a reasonably prudent chiropractor would exercise under the circumstances.’ Under present New York law, the practice of chiropractic is separate and distinct from the practice of medicine (see Education Law, art. 132; Vidra v. Shoman,59 A.D.2d 714 ,398 N.Y.S.2d 377 [(1977) ]), so that a physician’s standard of care can no longer be considered controlling upon a chiropractor in the practice of his profession (cf.Brown v. Shyne, 242 N.Y. 176 ,151 N.E. 197 [ (1926)]).
Id.,
Applying the principles of the cases discussed above to this case, a medical doctor cannot be permitted to offer testimony to a jury to establish what the proper chiropractic standard of care was in this case and what, if any, departures from that standard of care was committed by Dr. Allender.
See Morgan v. Hill,
The evidence produced by Brodersen includes the testimony of three medical doctors, but does not include chiropractic testimony as to the standards of the chiropractic profession. The lack of testimony by a li-
censed chiropractor defeats Brodersen’s malpractice ease against Allender. While the orthopedic surgeons certainly are experts in their own field, none of the physicians admitted to any expertise or skill in the chiropractic field. Thus, even under the most liberal standard, as exemplified by the Rosenberg case, none of the three physicians .are qualified to testify as to the standard of care required of a chiropractor.
Finally, Brodersen contends that the testimony of her medical experts is unnecessary to establish a violation of a chiropractic standard of care since Allender, by his own admission, has conceded that he would be required to refer, to a physician, a patient with the medical problems presented by Kendall. Brodersen is correct that Allender himself has testified to the chiropractic standard of care on this issue and that testimony on this narrow question need not be offered by Brodersen’s experts. The fighting issue thus becomes whether Allender in fact referred Kendall to a medical doctor. Brodersen asserts that there is at least a genuine issue of material fact as to whether or not Allender referred Kendall to a physician, because Al-lender’s records on Kendall’s visits do not reflect such a referral.
Brodersen’s argument is founded on the admissibility of the “absence of entry” or “negative evidence” of an entry under an
When a book purports to contain all items transacted within the scope of the book’s subject, the absence of an entry of transaction of a specific purport is in plain implication a statement by the maker of the book that no such transaction was had. The psychology of it is the same as that of testimony on the stand by a person who denies that a sound took place in his presence because he heard no such sound. The practical reliability of it is shown by every day’s practice in every business house. All industry and commerce is daily conducted on the negative as well as on the affirmative showings of the regular books of entry.
5 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 1531 (Chadbourn ed. 1974).
The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has described the effect of the “absence of entry” rule found in Rule 803(7) as follows: “Rule 803(7) provides that evidence of the absence of an entry in records regularly kept is admissible as affirmative proof of the nonoccurrence or nonexistence of
a matter normally recorded.” Kaiser Aluminum & Chem. Corp. v. Illinois Cent. Gulf R.R. Co.,
It is apparent from the language of Rule 803(7) that the “absence of entry” rule may only be invoked where the record from which the entry is absent is one “kept in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (6)” of Rule 803. Fed.R.Evid. 803(7). Rule 803(6) identifies the appropriate record as one that is “kept in the course of a regularly conducted business activity,” and further a record that “it was the regular practice of that business activity to make.” Fed.R.Evid. 803(6). Allender asserts that it was not his regular business practice to enter referrals to physicians into the records of patients so referred. Brodersen contends that what Al-lender may or may not regularly do is irrelevant, because the standard for the keeping of records of referrals is an “industry-wide” one. Brodersen’s argument for an “industry-wide” standard of recording referrals, while perhaps appealing as a standard of practice, does not state the proper standard for the kind of records to which the “absence of entry” rule applies under the language of Rule 803(6) or the pertinent case law.
Courts with some consistency describe the requirements for admissibility of a record
For example, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that it was “significant, and essential to admissibility” of a record under Rule 803(6) that
the record be the product of a “regular practice” of the business, see United States v. Freidin,849 F.2d 716 , 719-22 (2d Cir.1988), in the “usual course” of that business. See [United States v.] Hawkins, 905 F.2d [1489,] 1494 [(11th Cir.1990), cert. denied,498 U.S. 1038 ,111 S.Ct. 707 ,112 L.Ed.2d 696 (1991) ].
United States v. Jacoby,
Allender has stated that he did not regularly enter into his records referrals to physicians. The next question the court must consider is whether Allender is qualified to state that his records would not regularly contain entries regarding referrals. It is not necessary that the person laying the foundation for the admissibility of business records have personal knowledge of their preparation.
United States v. Franks,
The question is whether Allender was some “other qualified witness” rather than whether he was the “custodian” of the records. “Other qualified witness” may mean someone capable of testifying as to the nature of regularly kept records of the business, because that person is familiar with what is normally recorded and with the process whereby the records are created, recorded, and stored.
United States v. Kail,
Although Allender’s characterization of what information is regularly recorded in the records of his practice might be subject to some concerns about trustworthiness, because Allender is a litigant in this matter, there were ways Allender’s characterization could have been challenged. Brodersen could have deposed other custodians or “other qualified witnesses” concerning Allender’s records or could have subpoenaed other records to determine whether Allender regularly, frequently, or ever recorded referrals to physicians in those records. Neither of these steps was taken here. Allender’s characterization of his records therefore stands uncontroverted.
Although Brodersen asserts that Allender should have recorded referrals in his notes, he did not regularly do so. The “absence of entry” rule does not require that Allender’s records meet some “industry-wide” standard for contents, only that Allender’s records regularly contain such entries. Allender has stated that they do not. Thus, the absence of an entry regarding referral of Kendall to a physician is not admissible here to show that no referral was made.
The result of Brodersen’s inability under the circumstances to rely on the “absence of entry” rule is that Brodersen has produced no evidence to generate a genuine issue of material fact as to whether or not Allender actually referred Kendall to a physician. Brodersen’s assertion that had Kendall been told to go to a physician he would have mentioned that to someone else and would have gone to a physician sooner does not rise
Thus, Brodersen has not produced any admissible evidence which would generate a material fact question that Allender violated the appropriate standard of care. Therefore, summary judgment is appropriate here, and the court grants Allender’s Third Motion for Summary Judgment.
V. CONCLUSION
The court concludes that the Hospital’s Motion for Summary Judgment is denied. First, the court finds that the material produced by Brodersen in the form of the affidavits of Dr. Phillips and Loma Jahde raises a question as to whether a similarly situated patient who presents with chest pains would have been told to return to the emergency room nearly four hours later for x-rays without the benefit of an examination by a physician or the conducting of an EKG. The court concludes that Brodersen has produced sufficient evidence such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for her.
See Anderson,
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants Thomas Gary, M.D., and T.M. Gary, M.D., P.C. have joined the Hospital’s Motion for Summary Judgment. Although Broder-sen's EMTALA claim is inapplicable to them, these Defendants contend that once the EMTALA claim against the Hospital is dismissed, Plaintiff's remaining pendent claims, including all of Brodersen’s claims against them, should likewise be dismissed because the court does not have subject matter jurisdiction over them.
. This motion is entitled Frank Allender's First Motion for Summary Judgment (# 82). His subsequently filed motion for summary judgment is entitled Defendant Frank Allender's Third Motion for Summary Judgment.
. An issue of material fact is genuine if it has a real basis in the record.
Hartnagel v. Norman,
. Section 1395dd(d)(2)(A) permits a personal right of action to "[a]ny individual who suffers personal harm as a direct result of a participating hospital's violation of a requirement of this section.” 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(2)(A).
. "Emergency medical condition” is defined as follows:
(1) The term "emergency medical condition” ' means a medical condition manifesting itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity (including severe pain) such that the absence of immediate medical attention could reasonably be expected to result in—
(A) placing the patient's health in serious jeopardy,
(B) serious impairment to bodily functions, or
(C) serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.
42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(e)(l).
.EMTALA contains parallel, but separate, definitions of the terms "to stabilize" and “stabilized.” The term “to stabilize” indicates what the hospital must do to a patient in an emergency condition who is not transferred in accordance with subsection (c). “Stabilized” refers to the condition the patient must be in to transfer him other than in accordance with the restrictions of subsection (c). The terms are defined as follows:
(4)(A) The term "to stabilize" means, with respect to an emergency medical condition, to provide such medical treatment of the condition as may be necessary to assure, within reasonable medical probability, that no material deterioration of the condition is likely to result from the transfer of the individual from a facility.
(B) The term "stabilized” means, with respect to an emergency medical condition, that no material deterioration of the condition is likely, within reasonable medical probability, to resultfrom the transfer of the individual from a facility.
42 U.S.C. §§ 1395dd(e)(4)(A)-(B).
. 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(c)(l)(A)(ii) requires that a physician or other qualified medical person sign a certification which states:
based upon the reasonable risks and benefits to the patient, and based upon the information available at the time, the medical benefits reasonably expected from the provision of [care at another facility] outweigh the increased risks the [transfer poses to the person's condition] ....
. Examples of the dangers to patients from the dumping practices employed by hospitals was detailed in a summary report of a House of Representatives' subcommittee investigating patient dumping:
In Contra Costa County, Eugene Barnes was a crime victim with a knife wound to the brain. No neurosurgeon would agree to come to any of the East Bay hospitals to treat him. After several hours, he was transferred to the county hospital in San Francisco, where he died. Mr. Barnes had no health insurance.
About to deliver, Sharon Ford was turned away from two private hospitals, although a fetal monitor showed fetal distress. By the time she was admitted to the country [sic] hospital, it was too late and the baby died. Although Ms. Ford was a Medical patient enrolled in a health maintenance organization, a computer error did not show her on its list. The hospitals, by mistake, thought she was uninsured.
William Jenness bled to death 6¡4 hours after a car accident in Stanislaus County. The private hospital where he was taken asked for a $1,000 advance deposit. Because he couldn't pay, he was transferred to the county hospital where it took 4 hours before he reached the operating room, Mr. Jenness was uninsured.
In labor and uninsured, Anna Grant went to a private hospital. The hospital kept her in a wheelchair in their lobby for 2 hours and 15 minutes. She was checked only once, and no tests were done which would have shown that the fetus was in profound distress. She was told to "get herself” ' to the county hospital. The transferring hospital misrepresented her condition to the county hospital via phone. The baby was later stillborn at the county hospital, where doctors spent 40 minutes in an attempted resuscitation.
David Rios was critically wounded with two gunshot wounds and was brought to a private hospital in Ventura County. One hour and fifteen minutes later, he was received in a medically unstable condition and in shock at the county hospital. He died later that night. Mr. Rios was uninsured. The private hospital had claimed he was stable when he was transferred.
William Trumbull sought treatment for chest pain and an unexplained shortness of breath. He died of a massive blood clot in his lung, after being discharged by a private hospital in Hayward. The hospital had not done the basic diagnostic test that would have uncovered the treatable cause of his breathing problem. Mr. Trumbull, employed as a truck driver, had no health insurance.
Equal Access to Health Care: Patient Dumping: Subcomm. on Human Resources and Intergovernmental Relations to the House Comm, on Government Operations, H.R.REP. No. 531, 100th Cong., 2d Sess., at 6-7 (1988).
. The House Committee on Ways and Means reported as follows:
The Committee is greatly concerned about the increasing number of reports that hospital emergency rooms are refusing to accept or treat patients with emergency conditions if the patient does not have medical insurance. The Committee wants to provide a strong assurance that pressures for greater hospital efficiency are not to be construed as license to ignore traditional responsibilities and loosen historic standards.
H.R.Rep. No. 241(1), 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 27, reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N., 42, 605. Similarly, the House Judiciary Committee noted:
In recent years there has been a growing concern about the provision of adequate emergency room services to individuals who seek care, particularly as to the indigent and uninsured. Although at least 22 states have enacted statutes or issued regulations requiring the provision of limited medical services whenever an emergency situation exists, and despite the fact that many state court rulings impose a common law duty on doctors and hospitals to provide necessary emergency care, some are convinced that the problem needs to be addressed by federal sanctions.... The Judiciary Committee shares the concern of The Ways and Means Committee that appropriate emergency room care be provided to patients faced with medical emergencies and active labor.
H.R.Rep. No. 241(111), 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 5, 6, reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N., 42, 726-727.
. Under the common law, hospitals were under no legal duty to provide treat patients.
Brooks,
. "The term 'participating hospital' means [a] hospital that has entered into a provider agreement under section 1395cc.” 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(e)(2). The Hospital does not contest that it is a participating hospital within the meaning of the Act.
. Paragraphs nine and ten of Bonnie Weise’s affidavit are identical to those found in Dr. Gary's affidavit. Weise avers that:
9. To the best of my knowledge, the medical screening procedure at the time of the 3:50 a.m. 1-27-91 admission was performed in accordance with standard operating policy at the hospital for treatment of patients with the same or similar symptoms. Furthermore, to the best of this Affiant’s knowledge, all hospital protocols and procedures applicable to screening examinations of patients in the same or similar circumstances as Mr. Brodersen's presentation at the emergency room were, in fact, followed.
10. To the best of this Affiant’s knowledge and belief, Mr. Brodersen received the same standard medical screening examination as other patients presenting with similar complaints and symptoms under the same or similar circumstances.
Weise Aff. at ¶¶9-10.
. Jahde was discharged from the Hospital in 1992.
. The Hospital and Defendant Gary have objected to the 48 medical record extracts relied on by Brodersen on the ground that the sample is not random and as such does not constitute a repre
. Under EMTALA, the term "transfer” includes the discharge of the patient. 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(e)(4).
. Permitting this issue to go the jury is in keeping with the spirit of the Uhlenhopp rule,
see generally Reed v. Chrysler Corp.,
. In
Nichols,
In
Evitt,
. In
Deberry,
[W]hile the legislative history of § 1395dd indicates that perhaps the principle reason for its enactment was the refusal to treat indigents by certain hospitals ... the language of the statute quite plainly goes further ... Obviously we will not allow a few references to the statute's purpose in the legislative history to override the plain meaning of its terms as enacted.
Id.
at 1306. As such, the court would not limit an EMTALA cause of action to claims of refusal of medical care based on an economic motive.
Id.
Rather, the court ruled that a cause of action
. In the alternative, even if the Eighth Circuit were to follow the Sixth Circuit's decision in Cleland, the court concludes that Brodersen has generated a material fact question on the issue of whether an economic motive played a role in the treatment that Kendall received at the Hospital. Jahde states in ¶ 8 of her affidavit that
8. I asked, "Why isn't [this patient] in the [cardiac] unit?” I was told that the sick patient Kendall Brodersen, was a Title XIX patient — a person who does not have his own medical insurance but for whom the state paysmedical and hospital expenses — with a history of drug abuse.
Jahde aff. at ¶ 8. In her supplemental affidavit, Jahde states that it was Barrie Black, Kendall’s primary nurse, who informed her that Kendall was a Title XIX patient with a history of drug use. Jahde supplemental aff. at ¶¶ 18-19. Jah-de's affidavits raise the specter that economics played a role in the disparate treatment Kendall received while at the Hospital.
. It is beyond dispute that the standard of care itself is substantive. "What is such a standard of care, whether it has been violated, and whether such violation is the proximate cause of plaintiff's injury — in short, the substantive elements of a medical malpractice suit — are all questions to be determined by state law in a diversity action.”
Fitzgerald v. Manning,
. The court does not read the Iowa Supreme Court's decision in
Wick v. Henderson,
. Brodersen's reliance on the cases cited in her brief, for the proposition that a medical doctor may testify regarding the standard of care required of a chiropractor, is misplaced. In
Tremmel
v.
Wallman,
. Federal Rule of Evidence 803(7) states:
Evidence that a matter is not included in the memoranda reports, records, or data compilations, in any form, kept in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (6), to prove the nonoccurrence or nonexistence of the matter, if the matter was of a kind of which a memorandum, report, record, or data compilation was regularly made and preserved, unless the sources of information or other circumstances indicate lack of trustworthiness.
Federal Rule of Evidence 803(6), which in turn sets forth an exception to the hearsay rule, states in relevant part:
A memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, in any form, of acts, events, conditions, opinions, or diagnoses, made at or near the time by, or from information transmitted by, a person with knowledge, if kept in the course of a regularly conducted business activity, and if it was the regular practice of that business activity to make the memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, all as shown by the testimony of the custodian or other qualified witness, unless the source of information or the method or circumstances of preparation indicate lack of trustworthiness ....
. There has been no suggestion, nor any eviden-tiary showing, by Brodersen that her testimony regarding what Kendall would have done rises to the level of habit, and therefore would be admissible under Federal Rule of Evidence 406.
