Posted On: November 27, 2007

Medical Negligence Settlement by Chicago Medical Malpractice Lawyer Robert Kreisman for Death of Patient

A $2.1 Million settlement was reached against the hospital and doctors in a medical negligence lawsuit involving the death of a woman from brain herniation after being discharged from a hospital. She was discharged with complaints of headaches despite a diagnosis of a brain tumor.

Mary, a 50 year-old female, was diagnosed at South Suburban Hospital with a right frontal lobe meningioma in early September, 2003, at which time she was discharged from the hospital with a referral to a University of Chicago neurosurgeon. However, before seeing the neurosurgeon she presented back to South Suburban Hospital two days later complaining of headaches and vomiting. She is given some pain medication and sent home. Early the next morning she is found unresponsive by her husband. She was taken by ambulance back to South Suburban, but died later that day. An autopsy revealed that she died because there was excessive fluid building up around her tumor causing her brain to shift to the left and down through the brain stem, putting extreme pressure on her brain, resulting in brain herniation.

The defendants were the neurologist who first diagnosed our client, the emergency department physician who discharged the decedent knowing of her prior diagnosis and hospitalization and the hospital. At the top of the chain of events was the neurology diagnosis of meningionoma, a benign condition, where a mass forms on the lining of the brain. Significantly, the tumor was not in the brain, but on the brain's lining. The surgical procedure to remove the tumor is relatively safe. The neurosurgeon who testified as an expert for plaintiff at deposition, stated that the surgery would allow the patient to reach maximum recovery. The tumor is very slow growing, so it was probably present for years. Mary's early symptoms were dismissed as a sinus condition. Not until she reported nausea, severe headach and incontinence, did her family doctor admit her to the hospital for a thorough examination, which by MRI revealed the tumor. But the errors began from that point forward. The family wanted to have the surgery done at the University of Chicago Hospitals, rather than at South Suburban, where there was only one part-time neurosurgeon available. The defendant neurologist was vague on how quickly the tumor needed to be removed. But worse yet, when Mary returned to the hospital's ER only two days after her discharge with the worst headache of her life, reports of incontinence and left-side weakness, she was sent away with pain medicine, no follow up tests, even though the hospital knew of her tumor. The defendant ER doctor called Dr. Bhasin the neurologist, who ordered Mary discharged and was instructed or reminded to keep her upcoming appointment at the University of Chicago Hospital. By then her tumor had caused such swelling in her brain, that it began to be displaced. This swelling caused her untimely death later that same night.

Our client is survived by her husband, four children, and grandchildren.

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Posted On: November 1, 2007

Truck Settlement by Chicago Injury Lawyer Robert Kreisman: Trucker Loses Leg in Freight Accident

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A trucker whose legs were crushed while freight was being shifted on his truck agreed to a $2.5 million settlement.

The accord came on the second day of jury deliberations following more than a week of trial in this case against Precoat Metals, a division of Sequa Corp. Tom, an over-the-road trucker who lived in Shullsburg, Wis., went to a Precoat facility on the Southwest Side to pick up a load of steel coils.

A forklift driver employed by Precoat had agreed to arrange other freight on the flat bed trailer that Tom was using to accommodate the steel. The freight, 20 foot long steel channels,slipped off the forklift and fell on Tom's legs, resulting in amputation of the left leg above the knee and surgical repair of his right leg. Tom has been unable to return to his work as a trucker driver.

The steel channels, 25 to a bundle, were secured together by four steel bands. There was a cdefense raised by the defendant that it was the bands that were defective that caused the channels to break apart when being lifted by Precoat's forklift driver. However, Precoat was unable to produce the broken bands that it claimed it had stored after this occurrence. Precoat's safety manager had testified at deposition that although the bands were stored away, they could not be found now. Before the start of the trial, Kreisman moved to bar Precoat from asserting this defense because it could not produce the item that was alleged to be the cause of the injuries to our client. The court agreed and barred any reference to the broken bands during the trial. At the end of the trial and before jury deliberation, also on motion of plaintiff, the court went to the length of instructing the jury about the law as to "missing" evidence, the bands and documents relating to the accident that were also lost. That jury instruction, Illinois Pattern Jury Instruction 5.0 was read to the jury at the conclusion of the case.

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