Wrongful Death: December 2009 Archives

December 28, 2009

Smithson, Missouri Crash Yields Four Deaths and Four Injuries

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A Saturday evening auto crash near Sedalia, Missouri has left four dead and four injured.

According to the Highway Patrol, the three-car accident occurred at about 5:30 p.m., on Highway 50. The crash began when a 2002 Ford ZX2, driven by Shenika Flemons of Kansas City, was traveling eastbound and crossed the center line. Flemons' vehicle then rotated counter-clockwise, and struck the rear of a westbound 1999 GMC Sierra. After the impact, Flemons' vehicle skidded back into the eastbound lane and into the path of a 2009 Chevrolet. Flemons vehicle came to rest facing westbound on the eastbound shoulder of Highway 50.

The four fatalities all occurred in Flemons' vehicle. Those killed were Flemons, Kawanna Jackson, 32, Lakeidra Kemp, 32, and Kamyra Payne, 2. They were all pronounced dead at the scene of the accident by the Pettis County Coroner according to the highway patrol report. Also in that same vehicle were Tyllyiss Jackson, 8, and Tonica Watts, 11, who were in serious condition at the time of the accident and transported by life-flight to University Hospital in Columbia, Missouri. Elliott Hull, 6, and Jennifer Hull, 33, both passengers in the Chevrolet, were injured and transported by ambulance to Bothwell hospital in Sedalia, Missouri.

The reason for the crash was not immediately evident, and investigation into the crash is ongoing.

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December 15, 2009

Missouri Medical Malpractice Attorney A.W. Smith Secures $2,000,000 Verdict

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Missouri Medical Malpractice Attorney Aaron W. Smith, based out of Columbia, Missouri, secured a $2,000,000 award for a case involving an unnecessary and unsafe medical procedure in southern Missouri.

Plaintiff "McGinnis", a 38-year-old man, was admitted to Wesley Medical Center, with severe right-sided abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. McGinnis, who weighed 420 pounds, had been suffering from these symptoms for the past two months. He believed that the symptoms were similar to a gallstone attack he had suffered eight year earlier, which ultimately required his bladder be removed.

A gastroenterologist (the defendant) at the Medical Center ordered a full lab work up with both upper and lower endoscopies. None of the tests were conclusive, and McGinnis continued to have pain, so the gastroenterologist suggested an endoscopic procedure called an ERCP. This, the doctor claimed, would allow them to see if McGinnis was suffering from a gallstone that obstructing the common bile duct.

The defendant advised McGinnis that if he did have an obstruction of the duct that it could be life threatening. However, the defendant did not explain to McGinnis that the ERCP is one of the most technically difficult endoscopic procedures to perform, and that it also carries the highest likelihood of both complications and death from the procedure. McGinnis was also not advised that the endoscopy should be avoided if the likelihood of a gallstone was low, or if there is a high risk of complications from the surgery.

During the procedure, the defendant encountered complications due to the plaintiff's size and weight, and was unable to locate the common bile duct on fluoroscopy. Immediately following the procedure, the plaintiff began to experience extreme abdominal pain and acute pancreatitis. Five days after the procedure, McGinnnis died of cardiomyopathy, pulmonary embolus and acute necrotizing pancreatitis.

During the trial, the plaintiff's injury attorney, Aaron W. Smith, alleged that the ERCP was not necessary, that the defendant didn't uphold the expected standard of care when he convinced the plaintiff to have the endoscopy, or when he was performing the procedure, and that alternative procedures should have been discussed and offered to the patient.

The trial resulted in a $2,000,000 verdict in favor of the plaintiff.

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December 14, 2009

Missouri Family Settles Wrongful Death Case

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The A.W. Smith Law Firm secured a $280,000 settlement in a Missouri medical malpractice case in which a doctor misdiagnosed a patient's heart attack as heartburn.

On February 2, 2002, at 11:45 pm a 55-year-old patient went to a rural hospital complaining of mid-upper epigastric pain with a history of hiatal hernia. After waiting for 20 minutes, the patient went back to the nurses' station and told the triage nurse that she was now experiencing chest pain radiating into both of her arms. The hospital put their chest pain protocol into action, and the patient was taken for an emergency assessment.

The hospital's protocol included two diagnostic examinations, both key in diagnosing a heart attack: an EKG and a blood test for the cardiac enzyme Troponin I. The EKG demonstrated a past heart attack, which plaintiff's experts described as "age indeterminate." The troponin I test showed elevated levels of enzymes in the blood stream. Plaintiff's experts testified any elevation of enzymes required serial Troponin tests prior to discharge from the hospital.

After reviewing the test results, the doctor examined the patient and ordered a GI cocktail - a mixture of antiacid and lidocaine used to relieve heartburn, which the doctor claimed was to determine if the pain was coming from chest problems or heartburn. The patient reported that the pain in her chest was gone, and the doctor discharged her with a prescription for Prevacid - a medication commonly used to treat heartburn.

Five days later, the patient was found dead. The plaintiff's Missouri injury attorney, Aaron W. Smith, alleged the doctor missed the correct diagnosis of a heart attack. Plaintiff's experts opined that due to the initial test results, and the patient's health history, she should have been admitted into the hospital for further cardiac assessment. Furthermore, they believed the decedent likely died of another heart attack, five days after her original doctor's visit. The medical malpractice attorney also argued that the doctor missed the correct diagnosis of heart attack, and that the ER nurse was at fault for allowing the patient to be discharged, given her EKG and Troponin I results.

The case was settled for $280,000 about a week before trial.

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December 10, 2009

Northwest Missouri Freight Train and Auto Crash Kills Three

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On December 9, three Trenton, Missouri residents were killed by an oncoming train while trying to cross "uncontrolled" railroad tracks. The driver, Nancy Groves, was driving a 2001 Plymouth Neon carrying passengers Adam Romesburg and Nina Spencer.

According to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, the vehicle was traveling eastbound on First Street in Trenton, and drove into the path of the approaching freight train. While it had snowed heavily in the area, state Troopers said that it didn't play a role in the crash. The train dragged the car 300 feet from the point of impact. The train, which tried to stop after the crash, was 2700 feet north from the crash location, showing how long it takes for trains to stop once alerted of a dangerous condition on the tracks. While the car was totaled and removed from the scene, the train continued on to its intended destination.

Trenton is located about three and a half hours northwest of Columbia, Missouri. Missouri is notorious for "uncontrolled" railroad tracks; uncontrolled meaning without the bar or arms that lower to prevent vehicles from entering the tracks when a train is approaching. Unfortunately, many Missourians have lost their lives to these unsafe conditions.

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