36 Mass. App. Ct. 553 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1994
The plaintiff sued Cape Cod Hospital and its emergency room physician for their role in causing her involuntary commitment to a psychiatric facility. Her complaint is that the physician failed to examine her, as G. L. c. 123, § 12(o), requires, before he authorized her restraint and applied for her temporary hospitalization at the facility. Compare Leininger v. Franklin Med. Center, 404 Mass. 245, 248 (1989). Prior to trial, the judge allowed Cape Cod Hospital’s motion for summary judgment. On the single count against the physician that went to the jury, the judge instructed, in part, that § 12(d) “does not require hands-on physical or psychiatric assessment to satisfy that word examination. If he. looked at [the plaintiff] and together with the other information available, was satisfied that [the plaintiff] required] an assessment by a psychiatric facility, . . . you could consider that that satisfies the [requirement] of examination. But that’s your determination to make.” The jury determined by special verdict that the physician did not violate the duty imposed by the statute, and the plaintiff appealed from the ensuing judgment.
1. Summary judgment. There was no error in the allowance of summary judgment for Cape Cod Hospital. Affidavits established that the physician was not an employee or agent of the hospital or subject to its control or supervision in doing his work; rather, he was part of an incorporated emergency room physicians’ group which provided service to the hospital as an independent contractor. See Kapp v. Ballan-tine, 380 Mass. 186, 195 (1980); Harnish v. Children’s Hosp. Med. Center, 387 Mass. 152, 159 (1982); Kelley v.
2. Jury instructions. The quoted language set out above was not tantamount to instructing the jury that the physician, contrary to the statute, was not required to examine the plaintiff. In context, the judge was instructing that G. L. c. 123, § 12(a), does not require as matter of law that the physician conduct a physical examination involving either manual and laboratory testing or a psychiatric assessment; that his observation of the patient, taken in conjunction with medical records and other information supplied to him, could be found by the jury to have satisfied his statutory duty to examine under § 12(a). In this case, the physician reviewed Cape Cod Hospital records which showed that the plaintiff had been admitted two months earlier, having overdosed herself with medication and slashed her wrists in a suicide attempt; he was advised by the plaintiff’s primary at-home caretaker (the plaintiff’s legal guardian, her physician-son, had arranged for twenty-four hour supervision by nurse’s aides) that the plaintiff had deteriorated in recent days (that morning she had disobeyed the aide on duty, walking to a store alone, having on a previous occasion, when alone in a store, stolen razor blades); and that she (the primary caretaker) had arranged for a psychiatric placement and for transportation by the Yarmouth police. The physician testified that by observation he could and did conclude that the plaintiff was in pain, and suffering from major depression.
In these circumstances we think that the judge did not err in instructing the jury that observation alone, coupled with the background information, could be found by them to constitute the examination required by the statute. The examination required by § 12(a) may be performed by any licensed physician,
3. Other issues. There was no error in excluding the testimony of the plaintiffs expert, a psychiatrist, that, in his opinion, the plaintiff did not need to be hospitalized on the relevant date; that opinion, whatever relevance it might have to the diagnosis of the admitting physician, had no relevance to the limited function of the applying physician, which was only to authorize the determinative examination. Nor did the judge abuse his discretion in denying the plaintiffs motion to
Judgment affirmed.
Statute 1982, c. 614, broadened G. L. c. 123, § 12(a), so as to enable “a qualified psychologist licensed pursuant to [G. L. c. 112, §§ 118-129],” as well as a licensed physician, to authorize restraints and apply for involuntary psychiatric hospitalization. Since the events in this case, § 12(a) has been further broadened to permit the same function to be performed by a “qualified psychiatric nurse mental health clinical specialist author