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TEXAS VETERAN FILES $4 MILLION MALPRACTICE SUIT
AGAINST THE VA -- Suit also claims vet's wife
has been
converted from wife and helpmate to nurse and
caretaker.

Story here...
http://www.setexas
record.com/news/200480-lama
r-county-man-seeks-4-mill
ion-from-va
Story below:
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Lamar County man seeks $4 million from VA
By Marilyn Tennissen
A Lamar County man alleges he was treated negligently at a veterans'
hospital and is seeking $4 million in compensation from the U.S.
government.
Plaintiffs Robert A. Brown and his wife Mary Mary Ellen Brown filed a
medical malpractice suit against the U. S. Veterans Administration on
April 4 in the Texarkana Division of the Eastern District of Texas.
Michael D. Mosher of Paris is representing the
Browns.
The U.S. government, represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven
Mason, denies that it was negligent in Robert Brown's treatment.
On July 18, the parties conducted a Rule 26 conference relating to
discovery and submitted a joint report on Aug. 16. They agreed that
initial disclosures will be served by Oct. 1.
Brown is a veteran who served his country from 1957 to 1967. At the time
he was discharged he had two service-connected disabilities; one related
to hypertension and the other related to a permanent injury to his
wrist.
Sometime in 2002, his blood pressure medication had been changed at the
Salas Minor Emergency Clinic in Paris, Texas, and it appeared that the
new regimen of blood pressure mediation was not working as well as the
prior medication because his blood pressure was slightly elevated.
It was during this time period that Robert A.
Brown scheduled his first appointment with the Sam Rayburn Veterans
Service Center in Bonham in January 2003.
According to the plaintiffs' original petition, the physician's
assistant who noted his elevated blood pressure and prescribed the same
regimen of medicine that he had been on immediately preceding his visit,
even though that medication had not controlled his blood pressure.
Brown says he requested that the VA resume the original medication he
had been on for years "but the physician's assistant declined to do so."
She continued him on the same medication he had received at the Salas
Emergency Clinic and scheduled a next visit for Brown in July 2003,
seven months later.
For several months, Brown's blood pressure continued to be elevated and
he began experiencing dizziness and other symptoms that he assumed were
side-effects of his medication, including depression, anxiety and
irritability. Then in June 2003, Brown suffered a heart attack, which
was confirmed at his July appointment by the VA.
At this visit, he was seen again by the physician's assistant, Ms.
Parsons, who scheduled a stress test for September 2003. She also gave
him nitro-glycerine to take in case he experienced another heart attack.
"She did nothing else," the petition states.
The United States denies that Brown suffered a heart attack in June 2003
that was confirmed at the VA during his July appointment, and also
denies that the physician's assistant "did nothing else."
During a stress test in Dallas in September, Brown was forced to stop
after six minutes because of pain in his chest at or near his heart and
from a restricted tight feeling in his chest. He was sent home with no
further advice and no further medication although they did schedule a
compensation and pension ("C & P") examination.
Brown alleges that the C & P doctor wondered aloud to Brown why, if
Brown's elevated blood pressure had not been addressed and controlled,
that the doctors in Bonham had not scheduled him for hospitalization for
observation or changed his medication.
"This doctor suggested that Brown change his primary care from Bonham to
Dallas immediately," the petition states.
But Brown kept his next appointment at the Bonham Medical Center in
November 2003. Still reporting depression, dizziness and weakness, he
requested a change in his medications because he "felt worse each week.
"
The plaintiff says the Bonham VA made no changes to his medication, and
scheduled his next appointment for June 2004 "with no attempt to address
the fact that his blood pressure was not being controlled."
On Dec. 27, 2004, Brown fell in a neighbor's yard and was unable to
rise. He was taken home and, when he did not improve after several days,
he went to the Medical Center in Bonham. His blood pressure at that time
was 160/130.
Brown was seen by Dr. Edward Sims at the VA Hospital in Dallas on Feb.
1, 2005. His blood pressure was recorded at 140/90 and a short while
later at 163/99.
"At no time did any one at any of the hospitals involved ever attempt to
find out why Brown's blood pressure was continuing to be elevated and
why it could not be controlled," the suit alleges.
Brown was still experiencing pain in the shoulder from the fall in 200
and Dr. Sims scheduled an X-ray.
"By 2005, the VA Hospital had Robert A. Brown on seven medications a
day, including pain pills, sleeping pills, mood pills and anti-inflammatories,
in addition to the blood pressure and cholesterol medication," the suit
states.
Brown was seen again on June 13 and September 10, 2005, and claims that
"no one at the VA Hospital addressed his continued blood pressure
problems or shoulder injury."
The suit alleges that he was told that his shoulder injury was simply
arthritis and told to exercise the shoulder, even though Brown says he
reported to the doctors that he could not move the arm at all.
On January 26, 2006, Brown saw a mental health team and a new primary
care provider, Dr. David Reece. Despite the fact that his blood pressure
medication had been doubled, it still could not be lowered below 148/87.
In March 2006, Brown collapsed. He claims that the pain in his shoulder
from the December 2004 fall, that the VA doctors had been calling
arthritis, was now so bad that he could not move.
He scheduled a visit with an orthopedic doctor who, prior to any X-ray
or MRI, told Brown that he obviously had a torn rotator cuff. The doctor
scheduled an MRI to confirm his diagnosis.
"As a result of the delay in treatment for the torn rotator cuff; it was
impossible to fully repair the rotator cuff, so Brown's arm will never
work properly again and he will always have pain," the suit alleges.
"Moreover, because of the state of his heath by this time, they could
not even do the surgery that could have alleviated some of the pain."
On July 22, 2006, Brown's uncontrolled blood pressure climbed to 182/130
and he could not stand up. His wife took him to the Salas Minor
Emergency Clinic in Paris, Texas, and his blood pressure was 190/130.
Over the next two hours it could not be lowered and Brown was referred
immediately to the Paris Regional Medical Center were he saw a Dr.
Hashimi.
Dr. Hashimi concluded that there had to be a reason the blood pressure
would not remain normal with this much medication and it was "of the
utmost importance to find that reason."
Dr. Hashimi ordered an echo-cardiogram and esophageal echo and
determined that there was a blood clot in Brown's heart.
The suit claims that the clot "had been there so long it had become
calcified. "
Plaintiff argues that after Dr. Hashimi began working on his blood
pressure, altering the medications and monitoring the results, he
stabilized Brown's blood pressure at 120/80 in two days, where it has
remained.
Brown also says that Dr. Hashimi directed him to "throw out half the
medications that he had and informed him that one of those medications
had caused ulcers and that the bleeding ulcers had caused the anemia
that had so weakened him."
"Mr. Brown's shoulder can never be repaired. The blood clot in his heart
cannot be dissolved without the likelihood that it will break off and
block another blood vessel causing a life-threatening stroke or heart
attack," the suit alleges. "MRIs, EKGs, and other tests done on him now
show that, as a result of the untreated high blood pressure for three
years, Mr. Brown has damages to his heart, to his vascular system and to
his brain. Numerous minor blood vessels have broken in his brain and
atrophied significant portions of his brain."
Brown says that in 2002, he made more than $750,000, but "has not been
able to do meaningful work since."
"Because of his expertise in the automobile wholesale and retail market,
Mr. Brown had the opportunity in 2005 and 2006 to run the Florida
dealership that was to be the major importer of a new Mercedes Benz's
car model into the United States. This would have earned him over $1
million a year. Because of his health and the fact that he can no longer
travel, Mr. Brown could not take this opportunity and he will never work
again," the suit alleges.
The plaintiff says the VA's "utter failure" to properly treat his blood
pressure resulted in permanent injuries and disabilities, extreme mental
and emotional distress and physical pain and suffering.
On the part of Mary Ellen Brown, it has meant
she has been converted from wife and helpmate to nurse and caretaker.
"In 2002 and before, she and Mr. Brown had a normal healthy sex life. In
the following years, that sex life has utterly and completely
disappeared because of Mr. Brown's health," the suit states.
"As a result of the negligent treatment by the VA Medical Center, the VA
doctors and the VA physician's assistants, Robert A. Brown suffered
losses in income in excess of $2 million; he suffered mental and
emotional distress damages, physical pain and suffering, loss of bodily
functions in an amount to be determined but not less than $1 million,"
the petition argues. "Mary Ellen Brown, as a result of the negligence of
the VA, has lost the society and affection and sexual services of her
husband, Robert A. Brown. She has been damaged in an amount to be
determined but not less than $1 million."
In its original answer dated June 20, the United States denied the
allegations of negligence.
"Defendant United States did not violate any actionable duty owed to
Plaintiffs. No employee of the United States committed acts or omissions
of medical negligence, nor did any act or omission of an employee of the
United States proximately cause any damages or injuries to plaintiffs,"
Mason wrote. "Defendant United States, through its employees, acted at
all relevant times with due care and diligence to plaintiff Robert
Brown, and was not negligent."
If the court awards a recovery, the defendant "invokes the applicable
cap or limit on damages in medical malpractice cases under the Texas
Civil Practices and Remedies Code. (Subchapter G, Chapter 74, Title 4)."
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Larry Scott --