Friday, July 08, 2005

 

Hospital sued over man's deadly faint


LOS ANGELES - 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.





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