Posted on 07/07/2005 1:20:28 PM PDT by Pharmboy
Los Angeles (Reuters) A California woman is suing a hospital for wrongful death because her husband fainted and suffered a fatal injury after helping delivery room staff give her a pain-killing injection.
Jeanette Passalaqua, 32, filed the suit against Kaiser Foundation Hospitals and Southern California Permanente Medical Group Inc. in San Bernardino County state court last week.
In June 2004, Passalaqua's husband, Steven Passalaqua, was asked by Kaiser staff to hold and steady his wife while an employee inserted an epidural needle into her back, court papers said.
The sight of the needle caused Steven Passalaqua, 33, to faint and he fell backward, striking his head on an aluminum cap molding at the base of the wall.
Jeanette Passalaqua delivered the couple's second child, a boy, later that day. Steven Passalaqua, however, suffered a brain hemorrhage as a result of his fall and died two days later, the lawsuit said.
The suit seeks unspecified damages related to Steven Passalaqua's death and to Jeanette Passalaqua's emotional distress at being widowed with two young children.
Because Passalaqua was solicited by Kaiser to assist in the epidural, the lawsuit said, the hospital "owed him a duty to exercise reasonable care to prevent foreseeable injuries resulting from his participation."
A spokesman for Oakland, California-based Kaiser Permanente called the death "a tragic accident."
"Some of the allegations in the lawsuit are simply that -- allegations. The legal process is under way and we should respect that," said Kaiser spokesman Jim Anderson.
Because someone needs to be the informed grownup who says NO to these people.
Well, I am a lawyer, and quite frankly if the hospital actually requested that the husband help in the procedure, they will most likely be held liable. They have to assume that non-medical personnel might faint at the sight of a spinal needle being inserted. It is not unforseeable.
'kill ALL the lawyers'--W. Shakespeare
Doesn't suprise me. We've seen a lot of poorly written stories lately. I've never been in that situation so had no idea what they would be asking him to do.
It is a bit funny. My husband has watched the births of all our children, and helped with some, but I don't care to see a thing. The only good thing about being the one having the baby is I don't have to watch any of it!
I believe judges
have the power to throw out
cases if they choose . . .
Since it was an emergency procedure, I wasn't even allowed in the room until after the blessed event. They just took a while to stitch her up. Guess they figured that, since she was under anyway, may as well have a smoke break before finishing up.
It's tragedy, and I even sympathize with the man a bit, but if you can't stand the sight of blood and needles, you probably should not be in the delivery room in the first place.
So true. I remember taking an Army physical many years ago. A very petite black woman was one of the nurses and she was in charge of taking blood samples. All of a sudden she started saying, in an alarmed but controlled voice, "Will someone please help me. Will someone please help me." She'd just taken a sample from a guy who weighed about 170 lb. He'd gone stock stiff, passed out, and his eyes were the size of saucers. Fortunately, people arrived to help her before he hit the floor. Husbands passing out at the sight of blood are a definite risk in delivery rooms. "Birthin' babies" is a MESSY process that a lot of men, including the late General Patton can't stand to watch.
Interesting. That was my first thought. I guess that we shold be careful what we ask for...
It's the claim to this being "foreseeable" that stumps me.
Generally the obstetrician, a labor-and-delivery nurse, and the anesthetist will all be helping, but if a functional husband is around, an extra pair of hands doesn't hurt.
I helped hold my wife, but I looked away. Not because I knew I would faint, but because I did not know.
Death by Wimpiness. I did the same thing with my wife and had no problem at all. I even told the nurse how to sew my wife's tearing after our 2nd child because the first one screwed up so badly. To faint when your wife needs you to be strong is pathetic.
It didn't make me woozy but it bothered me like no other procedure has before. Looked like it would hurt like hell. My back hurts just thinking about it now (six years later).
His wife tolerated the procedure swimmingly.
I saw my wife go through two C-sections. The worse part of the procedure was the initial incision.
When I watch Nip/Tuck, I cover my eyes at the "squishy" parts.
Don't faint, though.
I'm sorry, ma'am, but bad things happen. Your husband is the closest thing to a responsible party--if he didn't know this would happen, well, that's too bad and shows bad things just happen, but if he DID know he was nervous around blood, he shouldn't have been present in this situation.
I guess knowing that this guy is squeemish is in the "foreseeable" realm. Truth be told, the sight of some types of blood does bother me - my own!, everyone elses can spill all over and it doesn't bother me.
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