The plaintiff brought an action against the defendant doctor, alleging that he negligently injured her during surgery. Her husband also sought damages for loss of consortium. The jury found for the defendant, and the plaintiffs appeal, claiming error in the trial judge’s instructions to the jury. We affirm.
The following facts were put to the jury. During a medical examination of the plaintiff, the defendant discovered that she had a condition which could lead to cancer, and he recommended that she undergo a vaginal hysterectomy. He discussed the medical procedure with her and advised her that over the weekend immediately following her operation she would be attended to by his medical associate.
In the course of the operation, the plaintiff’s ureter was damaged, and over the weekend, while being tended to by the defendant’s associate, her abdomen became distended, and she experienced lower back and rectal pain. The defendant saw the plaintiff on the third day after the operation, and he soon thereafter transferred her to the New England Medical Center Hospital for treatment of her injury.
The plaintiff testified that in explaining her postsurgical condition to her, the defendant said: “T’m going to transfer you to a hospital in Boston ... I made a mistake during the hysterectomy. I severed your ureter. Its all my fault. I’m very sorry this happened. I’m going to send you to a fine hospital for corrective surgery. ’ ” The plaintiff’s husband testified that he was present during this conversation, and he supported the plaintiff’s testimony.
The plaintiff’s medical expert testified that, in his opinion, the plaintiff’s ureter was cut during the operation, that the defendant’s use of a clamp was not good medical practice, and that had the defendant rendered proper postoperative care and had an intravenous pyelogram been done sooner than it was, the defendant would have known that something was wrong.
The defendant related that the plaintiff’s ureter “was damaged in association with a vaginal hysterectomy. I can’t tell you just when and how it happened.” He denied the plaintiff’s version of his postsurgical conversation with her and testified that he advised her that her ureter had been injured, that the injury had occurred during the hysterectomy, that he “regretted that she sustained this complication of surgery,” and that she was to be transferred to another hospital for “definitive treatment of this injury.”
The defendant’s medical expert, who had been performing hysterectomies for over twenty-five years and who had examined the plaintiff
1. The plaintiffs argue that the trial judge erred in refusing to instruct the jury that “[a] statement by the defendant to the plaintiff and her husband that he had cut her ureter, that it was his fault, that he had made a mistake, and that he was sending her to a fine hospital in order that the damage be remedied, if believed by the jury . . . is an admission, which is to be considered by the jury in arriving at its verdict.” See Woronka v. Sewall,
2. We see no abuse of discretion in the trial judge’s refusal to instruct the jury to the effect that they could draw an inference adverse to the defendant from his failure to call his medical associate to testify. See Commonwealth v. O’Rourke,
3. The plaintiffs make various allegations of error throughout their brief concerning the trial judge’s rulings on the admissibility of certain testimony given by the defendant’s medical expert. These claims are not accompanied by argument within the meaning of Mass.R.A.P. 16(a) (4), as amended,
Judgment affirmed.
