_____________
No. 95-1468EA
_____________
Harold Summers, *
*
Appellant, *
* On Appeal from the United
v. * States District Court for
* the Eastern District
* of Arkansas.
Baptist Medical Center *
Arkadelphia, *
*
Appellee. *
___________
Submitted: April 9, 1996
Filed: August 5, 1996
___________
Before RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge, HEANEY, McMILLIAN, FAGG, BOWMAN,
WOLLMAN, MAGILL, BEAM, LOKEN, HANSEN, MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, and
MURPHY, Circuit Judges, en banc.
___________
RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Chief Judge.
Harold Summers brought this case against Baptist Medical Center
Arkadelphia (Baptist), a hospital in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. The case
arises under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act of 1986
(EMTALA), 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd. Summers claims that he was not appropriately
screened for treatment when he was brought in to Baptist's emergency room
after a deer-hunting accident. The District Court1 granted Baptist's
motion for summary
1
The Hon. William R. Wilson, Jr., United States District Judge
for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
judgment and dismissed the complaint. Summers appealed, and a panel of
this Court reversed and remanded for trial, one judge dissenting. Summers
v. Baptist Medical Center Arkadelphia, 69 F.3d 902 (8th Cir. 1995). We
granted Baptist's suggestion for rehearing en banc, thus vacating the
opinion and judgment of the panel. Having heard oral argument before the
Court en banc, we now affirm the judgment of the District Court. We hold
that something more than, or different from, ordinary negligence in the
emergency-room screening process must be shown to make out a federal claim
under EMTALA.
I.
We state the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the
party opposing summary judgment. On October 25, 1992, Summers fell out of
a tree stand while deer hunting near Arkadelphia. An ambulance brought him
to Baptist's emergency room. A nurse took the medical history, and a
physician saw Summers immediately. Summers testified that the doctor
pressed "on my stomach and stuff." Deposition of Harold Summers, Record
on Appeal (R.) 43. Summers said he "was hurting in my chest real bad and
I was hearing this popping noise every time I breathed . . .. I [told the
doctor] I was hurting [in my chest] . . .. I heard this snapping, and he
told me I was having muscle spasms." Ibid. Summers also complained of
pain in his back.
The emergency-room physician ordered four x-rays of the patient's
spine. (Other routine tests were done, but they are not material for
present purposes.) Both the thoracic and the lumbar spine were covered.
The physician recalls the patient's complaining of pain in his back, and
Baptist conceded in the District Court that Summers complained of chest
pain, but the doctor testified that Summers did not complain of pain in the
front part of his chest. The doctor pressed on the front and back of the
chest, noticed no difficulty in breathing, and heard no popping or
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crackling-type sounds on listening to the chest, Deposition of G.H.
Ferrell, Jr., M.D., R. 137-38. The doctor did not remember the patient's
saying he could hear popping-type sounds, R. 138, and felt or heard nothing
to indicate a broken sternum, R. 139. "If he had complained of pain in the
sternum or pain in the ribs, we would have x-rayed those." R. 144.
No x-rays of the chest were taken. The spinal x-rays showed, in the
opinion of the physician at Baptist, only an old break at the eighth
thoracic vertebra. Summers was told that he was suffering from muscle
spasms. He said he was in pain and asked to be admitted to the hospital.
He was told no. Summers then said he had insurance and $1,200 in cash, in
case the hospital felt his admission would cause some sort of financial
problems, but he was still refused admission. The doctor thought he did
not need to be admitted to the hospital. Summers was given pain injections
and discharged with instructions to see a doctor at home (Jonesboro,
Arkansas) the next day. He was loaded into a pick-up truck and had to
endure the five-hour drive home in pain.
The next day Summers felt too sore to get out of bed, and did not go
to his family doctor. The day after that, though, October 27, he was in
such pain that he went by ambulance to St. Bernard's Regional Medical
Center. He was given, among other tests, a chest x-ray. This x-ray was
difficult to read, so a CT (computerized tomography) scan was done. The
scan revealed a fresh break of the seventh thoracic vertebra. In addition,
the x-ray showed a broken sternum and a broken seventh rib. According to
Rebecca Barrett-Tuck, M.D., a Jonesboro neurosurgeon, the chest injury
"certainly does constitute a life threatening injury," Affidavit of Dr.
Barrett-Tuck, R. 115. Summers was kept in the hospital at Jonesboro for
14 days, some of that time in intensive care. It is fair to conclude that
if a chest x-ray had been taken at Arkadelphia, the broken breast-bone and
rib would have been discovered, Summers would have been hospitalized at
once, and the
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patient would have been spared at least two unnecessary days of anxiety and
pain.
II.
The plaintiff's main claim is that, on the basis of this record, a
jury could properly find Baptist had failed to "provide for an appropriate
medical screening examination within the capability of [its] . . .
emergency department . . .." 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(a). Baptist agrees that
patients complaining of pain in the front of their chest, or of snapping
or popping noises when breathing, would normally be given a chest x-ray.
The jury could find that Summers did so complain, but he was not given a
chest x-ray. His screening examination was therefore not "appropriate."
In order to consider this argument, we first set out the relevant
part of the statute and then describe how courts have interpreted it. It
is always important to pay close attention to the words of a statute, or
any other document that one must construe, so we begin by setting out those
words:
§ 1395dd. Examination and treatment for emergency
medical conditions and women in labor
(a) Medical screening requirement
In the case of a hospital that has a hospital
emergency department, if any individual (whether or
not eligible for benefits under this subchapter)
comes to the emergency department and a request is
made on the individual's behalf for examination or
treatment for a medical condition, the hospital
must provide for an appropriate medical screening
examination within the capability of the hospital's
emergency department, including ancillary services
routinely available to the emergency department, to
determine whether or not an emergency medical
condition (within the
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meaning of subsection (e)(1) of this section)
exists.
The statute applies to hospitals which have executed provider
agreements under the Medicare Program, and there is no dispute that Baptist
is such a hospital. The operative language of the statute for present
purposes is that such a hospital "must provide for an appropriate medical
screening examination within the capability of the hospital's emergency
department . . . to determine whether or not an emergency medical condition
. . . exists." What is meant by the word "appropriate"? One possible
meaning, perhaps the most natural one, would be that medical screening
examinations must be correct, properly done, if not perfect, at least not
negligent. It would be easy to say, for example, simply as a matter of the
English language, that a negligently performed screening examination is not
an appropriate one. So far as we can determine, however, no court has
interpreted the statute in such an expansive fashion, and it is easy to
understand why.
First of all, the purpose of the statute was to address a distinct
and rather narrow problem -- the "dumping" of uninsured, underinsured, or
indigent patients by hospitals who did not want to treat them. A patient
is "dumped" when he or she is shunted off by one hospital to another, the
second one being, for example, a so-called "charity institution." The
legislative history underlying the enactment of EMTALA, which we think
proper to consult in order to interpret the ambiguous term "appropriate,"
makes this limited purpose clear. See, e.g., H.R. Rep. No. 241, 99th
Cong., 1st Sess., Part I, at 27 (1985), reprinted in 1986 U.S. Code Cong.
& Admin. News 579, 605, where the following passage appears:
Explanation of provision.--The Committee is greatly
concerned about the increasing number of reports
that hospital emergency rooms are refusing to
accept or treat patients with
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emergency conditions if the patient does not have
medical insurance. The Committee is most concerned
that medically unstable patients are not being
treated appropriately. There have been reports of
situations where treatment was simply not provided.
In numerous other instances, patients in an
unstable condition have been transferred
improperly, sometimes without the consent of the
receiving hospital.
We must be mindful, on the other hand, that it is the statute, and
not a committee report, that is signed by the President and has therefore
become law. We do not cite the committee report or the evident purpose
behind the statute in support of a theory that a person must show that he
has been "dumped" in order to bring an action under EMTALA. The statute
clearly applies to "any individual," 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(a) whether insured
or not, and, therefore, the fact that Baptist's motivation in this
particular case was obviously not to dump an uninsured or indigent patient
does not defeat the plaintiff's action. We have no doubt that "dumping"
is covered by the statute, and that a refusal to screen a patient because
he or she had no insurance would violate the statute, but other practices
can violate it as well. The question is not whether a plaintiff has
insurance, or whether he was refused screening because of lack of
insurance, but, rather, whether he was afforded an "appropriate" medical
screening examination.
So far as we can tell, every court that has considered EMTALA has
disclaimed any notion that it creates a general federal cause of action for
medical malpractice in emergency rooms. The opinion of our panel in this
very case, for example, affirms the general rule that
EMTALA is not a federal malpractice statute and it
does not set a national emergency health care
standard; claims of misdiagnosis or inadequate
treatment are left to the state malpractice arena.
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69 F.3d at 904. The courts have construed the statute in this rather
conservative fashion, we suppose, out of sensitivity to policies of
federalism. Congress can of course, within constitutional limits,
federalize anything it wants to. Whether it chooses to do so is a matter
of policy for it to decide, not us. But in construing statutes that are
less than explicit, the courts will not assume a purpose to create a vast
new realm of federal law, creating a federal remedy for injuries that state
tort law already addresses. If Congress wishes to take such a far-reaching
step, we expect it to say so clearly. This is the rule, generally
speaking, in interpreting federal criminal statutes, see, e.g., United
States v. Bass, 404 U.S. 336, 349-50 (1971), and we have applied it in the
civil context as well, H.J. Inc. v. Northwestern Bell Tel. Co., 954 F.2d
485, 495-96 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 504 U.S. 957 (1992).
Decided cases uniformly support this approach to the interpretation
of EMTALA. A good example is Chief Judge Wilkinson's excellent opinion in
Vickers v. Nash General Hospital, Inc., 78 F.3d 139 (4th Cir. 1996). In
Vickers, the Fourth Circuit carefully explains that EMTALA imposes only a
limited duty on hospitals with emergency rooms. It is not a substitute for
state-law malpractice actions. It does not guarantee proper diagnosis or
provide a federal remedy for medical negligence.2 "EMTALA `is not intended
to duplicate preexisting legal protections, but rather to create a new
cause of action, generally unavailable under state tort law, for what
amounts to failure to treat.'" Id. at 142, quoting Gatewood v. Washington
Healthcare Corp., 933 F.2d 1037, 1041 (D.C. Cir. 1991). The law of this
Circuit is to the same effect. Williams v. Birkeness, 34 F.3d 695, 697
(8th Cir. 1994) (appropriate medical screening does not mean correct
diagnosis).
2
Summers did not join a pendent state-law claim for medical
negligence in his complaint.
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One way of limiting the potentially sweeping scope of the statute's
language is to require that a plaintiff prove some sort of improper motive
in order to recover under EMTALA. As we have previously indicated, we do
not agree that evidence of a purpose to "dump" a patient is required. Nor
does the statute require any other particular motivation. In this sense,
the statute is, as plaintiff argues, a strict-liability provision. If a
hospital fails to provide an appropriate medical screening examination, it
is liable, no matter what the motivation was for this failure. In this
respect, we depart from the reasoning of Cleland v. Bronson Health Care
Group, Inc., 917 F.2d 266, 272 (6th Cir. 1990), which would require some
showing of improper motivation, not necessarily involving indigency or lack
of insurance, but including other improper reasons, for example, race, sex,
drunkenness, or personal prejudice. We believe that any of these showings
would suffice to make out a case of inappropriate screening, but we cannot
agree that such evidence of improper motivation is essential. Again, the
statute contains no such requirement, and every court of appeals, with the
exception of the Cleland court, which has addressed the issue, has rejected
the proposition that improper motive must be shown. E.g., Gatewood v.
Washington Healthcare Corp., supra, 933 F.2d at 1041 n.3.
So, if improper motive is not required, and if the statute does not
create a federal remedy for medical malpractice in emergency rooms, what
does the statute do? Something more than or different from negligence must
be shown, but what is that "something"? We have previously taken the
position that the "something" required is lack of uniform treatment.
Williams v. Birkeness, supra, 34 F.3d at 697. An inappropriate screening
examination is one that has a disparate impact on the plaintiff. Patients
are entitled under EMTALA, not to correct or non-negligent treatment in all
circumstances, but to be treated as other similarly situated patients are
treated, within the hospital's capabilities. It is up to the hospital
itself to determine what
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its screening procedures will be. Having done so, it must apply them alike
to all patients. Several other circuits have also so held, Vickers v. Nash
General Hospital, Inc., supra, 78 F.3d at 143; Correa v. Hospital San
Francisco, 69 F.3d 1184, 1192-93 (1st Cir. 1995) cert. denied, 116 S. Ct.
1423 (1996); Repp v. Anadarko Municipal Hospital, 43 F.3d 519, 522 (10th
Cir. 1994); Holcomb v. Monahan, 30 F.3d 116, 117 (11th Cir. 1994), and we
now reaffirm this holding.
III.
As we understand the positions taken by both parties to this case3
they would accept, at least in general, all of the principles so far laid
out in this opinion. Plaintiff, for example, concedes that he has to show
non-uniform or disparate treatment in order to succeed. He takes the
position, however, that he has met this requirement. According to the
hospital's own admission, a patient complaining of snapping and popping
noises in his chest would have been given a chest x-ray. Plaintiff, as we
must assume for purposes of this motion for summary judgment, did make just
such a complaint, but was not given the chest x-ray. He was therefore
treated differently from other patients, and differently from the treatment
prescribed by the hospital's normal screening process. Therefore he is
entitled to recover under EMTALA.
The argument has a surface appeal, and, indeed, the panel that
initially heard this case adopted this very approach. On reflection, we
are not convinced.
The important point for us is that the very respect in which the
plaintiff's screening is said to be non-uniform -- failure to
3
We also have before us a brief amicus curiae filed by the
Arkansas Hospital Association. This brief has greatly aided our
consideration of this appeal.
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order a chest x-ray for a patient complaining of popping noises in his
chest -- is nothing more than an accusation of negligence. We accept for
purposes of this appeal from a summary judgment the proposition that
Summers in fact made this complaint, and that the doctor did not hear him,
or forgot what had been said. (There is no contention that the doctor
deliberately failed to order a chest x-ray.) This may have been medical
malpractice, but if it is also an EMTALA violation, that statute has been
converted into a federal cause of action for a vast range of claims of
medical negligence. It would almost always be possible to characterize
negligence in the screening process as non-uniform treatment, because any
hospital's screening process will presumably include a non-negligent
response to symptoms or complaints presented by a patient. To construe
EMTALA this expansively would be inconsistent with the principles and cases
set out earlier in this opinion.
We find two recent cases helpful at this point. One is Vickers v.
Nash General Hospital, Inc., supra. There, the patient, Vickers, had
fallen on his head. He went to the defendant hospital's emergency room.
The physician there examined him and diagnosed him as suffering from
lacerations of the scalp. These were repaired by stitches. X-rays of the
cervical spine were taken and revealed no damage. Vickers was then
discharged. Four days later, he died. He was found to have a broken
skull, a tear in his cerebrum, and an epidural hematoma. On these facts,
the Fourth Circuit held that no EMTALA claim was stated. The allegation,
the Court thought, "ultimately present[s] [a] conventional charge[ ] of
misdiagnosis, and . . . [its] reasoning would obliterate any distinction
between claims of malpractice under state law and actions under EMTALA."
78 F.3d at 143.
The Court went on to explain:
The flaw in this reasoning is its failure to
take the actual diagnosis as a given.
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EMTALA is implicated only when individuals who are
perceived to have the same medical condition
receive disparate treatment; it is not implicated
whenever individuals who turn out in fact to have
had the same condition receive disparate treatment.
The Act would otherwise become indistinguishable
from state malpractice law. As a result, when an
exercise in medical judgment produces a given
diagnosis, the decision to prescribe a treatment
responding to the diagnosis cannot form the basis
of an EMTALA claim of inappropriate screening.
Id. at 144 (citation omitted).
The key phrase in this holding is "perceived to have." The
emergency-room physician is required by EMTALA to screen and treat the
patient for those conditions the physician perceives the patient to have.
So here, the physician, we must assume through inadvertence or inattention,
did not perceive Summers to have cracking or popping noises in his chest,
or pain in the front of his chest. This is why no chest x-rays were taken.
In the medical judgment of the physician, Summers did not need a chest x-
ray. Summers did receive substantial medical treatment. It was not
perfect, perhaps negligent, but he was treated no differently from any
other patient perceived to have the same condition.
Correa v. Hospital San Francisco, supra, is also persuasive. The
case is essentially one of failure to screen a patient at all, and the
Court upheld a jury verdict for the patient's survivors. In the course of
its opinion, though, the Court carefully explains the limited scope of
EMTALA:
. . . EMTALA does not create a cause of action for
medical malpractice . . .. Therefore, a refusal to
follow regular screening procedures in a particular
instance contravenes the statute, . . . but faulty
screening, in a particular case, as opposed to
disparate screening or refusing to screen at all,
does
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not contravene the statute.
69 F.3d at 1192-93. The case now before is, at most, one of "faulty
screening." We agree with the First Circuit that such a claim does not
come within EMTALA.
In sum, we hold that instances of "dumping," or improper screening
of patients for a discriminatory reason, or failure to screen at all, or
screening a patient differently from other patients perceived to have the
same condition, all are actionable under EMTALA. But instances of
negligence in the screening or diagnostic process, or of mere faulty
screening, are not. The District Court was therefore correct to dismiss
Summers's claim that the failure to give him a chest x-ray violated
EMTALA.4
IV.
Plaintiff also advances, though with less emphasis, three other
theories of EMTALA violation. We shall now discuss each of them in turn.
1. It is claimed that the hospital had no written screening
procedures, and that this omission, in and of itself, is a violation of the
screening provision of EMTALA, 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(a). The accusation may
be unfair as a matter of fact. Apparently there was no single piece of
paper or manual captioned "Emergency Room Screening Procedures," but there
were a number of forms routinely used by emergency-room personnel, and the
practice
4
In fairness to the plaintiff, we observe that Power v.
Arlington Hospital Ass'n, 42 F.3d 851 (4th Cir. 1994), comes close,
on its facts, to supporting his position. We find the reasoning of
the Fourth Circuit's later opinion in Vickers, which analyzes
explicitly the problems of interpreting EMTALA that we have
discussed in this opinion, more persuasive.
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of the hospital clearly required that these forms be followed and filled
out. In any event, the hospital did have a screening procedure, even if
unwritten in part, and the statute makes no additional requirement. It
says nothing about written procedures.
2. A violation of the same provision is claimed with respect to the
taking of Summers's medical history. Part of the hospital's regular
screening procedure, it is argued, is to take a complete and accurate
medical history. This was not done in Mr. Summers's case, it is said.
Plaintiff argues that "an adequate medical history would have consisted of
knowing whether or not the patient was unconscious, how far he had fallen,
what he had fallen on, the time he had fallen with reference to when he was
being treated, and whether he had taken any pain medication from the time
of the injury until time seen in the emergency room . . .. Appellee's
personnel made none of these inquiries or findings during the emergency
room examination." Brief for Appellant 9. A partial answer to this
contention is that a good deal of the information mentioned had already
been obtained by the emergency medical technicians who transported Summers
to the hospital in an ambulance. In addition, we cannot see that any of
these alleged omissions has any particular connection to the failure to
discover the broken rib and sternum. And most basically, this sort of
omission is the same kind of faulty-screening or negligent-screening theory
that we have previously rejected.
3. Finally, Summers makes a claim under another provision of EMTALA,
42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(b)(1). This portion of the statute provides, in
pertinent part, as follows:
If any individual . . . comes to a hospital
and the hospital determines that the individual has
an emergency medical condition, the hospital must
provide . . . (A) . . . for such further medical
examination and such treatment as may be required
to stabilize the medical condition . . ..
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The claim is that the hospital, before discharging Summers, did not
take proper steps to stabilize his condition. This claim must fail
because, under the express wording of the statute, this portion of EMTALA
applies only if "the hospital determines that the individual has an
emergency medical condition . . ." (emphasis supplied). Here, the hospital
believed Summers was suffering from muscle spasms, not an emergency medical
condition. The duty to stabilize therefore never arose. A hospital must
have had actual knowledge of the individual's unstabilized emergency
medical condition if a claim under § 1395dd(c) is to succeed. Vickers v.
Nash General Hospital, Inc., supra, 78 F.3d at 145; Urban v. King, 43 F.3d
523, 525-26 (10th Cir. 1994); Baber v. Hospital Corp. of America, 977 F.2d
872, 883 (4th Cir. 1992); Cleland v. Bronson Health Care Group, Inc.,
supra, 917 F.2d at 268-69 (6th Cir. 1990).
V.
For the reasons given in this opinion, we believe the District Court
acted correctly in granting the defendant's motion for summary judgment on
Mr. Summers's claims under EMTALA. The judgment of the District Court is
therefore
Affirmed.
HEANEY, Circuit Judge, with whom McMILLIAN, Circuit Judge, joins,
dissenting.
In affirming the dismissal of Summers' claim, the majority assumes
facts against Summers' position and significantly limits the scope of the
statute. Under EMTALA, as plainly written, an individual who suffers harm
as a direct result of a hospital emergency room's failure to follow
appropriate medical screening procedures has a cause of action against the
hospital. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395dd(a), (d)(2)(A). For the reasons stated in
my original majority opinion, Summers v. Baptist Medical Center
Arkadelphia, 69
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F.3d 902 (8th Cir. 1995), I believe that Summers' claim presents a genuine
issue of material fact that the district court should have permitted to go
to the jury. Thus, I respectfully dissent.
I.
It has never been my position that EMTALA establishes a vast range
of claims for medical negligence. EMTALA has a much more limited
application than state malpractice law: it applies only to emergency rooms
of hospitals that have provider agreements under the Medicare program.
EMTALA also does not establish a national standard of care. Rather, it
requires hospitals to develop screening procedures to detect emergency
medical conditions. As the majority recognizes, the statute does not
mandate that the procedures be written and a hospital may make its
procedures as detailed or as general as it sees fit. It is the hospital's
obligation, however, to follow its established screening procedures for all
patients who present with complaints to the emergency room. Failure to do
so constitutes a prima facie violation of the federal statute. The more
a hospital's established procedures are unwritten and loosely-defined--or
essentially equivalent to "due care"--the more an EMTALA cause of action
may overlap with a state medical malpractice claim.
The only evidence in this record of a hospital standard applicable
to Summers' complaint is Dr. Ferrell's deposition testimony that had
Summers complained of pain in the sternum or pain in the ribs, he would
have x-rayed those regions. (R. 149.) As the majority notes, Baptist
agrees that patients complaining of pain in the front of their chest, or
of snapping or popping noises when breathing, would normally be given a
chest x-ray. Maj. Op., supra at 4. The majority, considering the facts
in a light most favorable to the non-moving party, accepts as true that
Summers complained to the doctor about his chest pains and throbbing chest.
Baptist even concedes this point. The majority assumes, however,
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that the physician:
through inadvertence or inattention, did not perceive Summers
to have cracking or popping noises in his chest, or pain in the
front of his chest. This is why no chest x-rays were taken.
In the medical judgment of the physician, Summers did not need
a chest x-ray. Summers did receive substantial medical
treatment.
Maj. Op., supra at 11.
With these few assumptions, the majority effectively usurps the role
of the jury and makes the factual findings necessary to dismiss Summers'
claim as one of mere negligence. It was for the jury, not the district
court or this court, to determine the relative credibility of the parties
and what occurred in the emergency room that day. We should not assume
that the doctor did not hear Summers or forgot about his complaints. Nor
should we assume that it was the physician's medical judgment that prompted
his failure to give Summers a chest x-ray. It is possible that the doctor
heard Summers' complaints and, for no legitimate reason, failed to do
anything about them. That alternative would establish the essentials of
an EMTALA cause of action.
As the majority recognizes, Summers' claim is factually similar to
the plaintiff's claim in Power v. Arlington Hosp. Ass'n, 42 F.3d 851 (4th
Cir. 1994),1 in which the Fourth Circuit affirmed a jury's award of damages
under EMTALA.2 In Power, the plaintiff
1
The only notable factual difference is that Power involved a
patient who most likely was unable to pay for her care. She was
unemployed and had no health insurance. 42 F.3d at 854. Like most
circuits, however, the Power court explicitly held that an EMTALA
plaintiff need not offer proof of an improper motive on the part of
the hospital. Id. at 859.
2
The majority "observes" that Power supports Summers'
position, Maj. Op., supra at 12 n.4, but not surprisingly finds the
Fourth Circuit's later opinion more persuasive. See Vickers v.
Nash General Hospital, Inc., 78 F.3d 139 (4th Cir. 1996). In
Vickers,
the Fourth Circuit does not discuss Power and relies heavily on the
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was examined in the emergency room by two nurses and a doctor and was given
various tests. Id. at 854. At trial, the doctor testified unequivocally
that he treated Power as he would have treated any other patient with the
same complaints and vital signs. Id. at 855. There was also testimony,
however, that the doctor did not follow the usual hospital procedures in
attending to Power. Id. Specifically, there was testimony that a blood
test was a necessary component of an appropriate medical screening
examination for a patient who presented at the emergency room with Power's
symptoms. Id. The Fourth Circuit determined that Power presented evidence
from which a jury could conclude she was treated differently from other
patients and that the hospital did not apply its standard screening
procedures uniformly. Id. at 856. Similarly, Summers presented sufficient
evidence of an EMTALA violation for the district court to permit his claim
to go to the jury.
II.
The majority's inappropriate resolution of this appeal from a grant
of summary judgment is driven by its fear of giving EMTALA too "expansive"
an interpretation such that it would apply in situations traditionally
covered only by state malpractice law. Not only is this fear unwarranted,
it cannot justify significantly altering the plain language of the statute.
The statute clearly states that an individual has a cause of action
against a hospital whenever the hospital's emergency room personnel fails
to provide an appropriate medical screening examination and the individual
is harmed as a direct result of that failure. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1395dd(a),
(d)(2)(A). The personal harm
dissenting opinion from our original panel decision. Id. at 143-
144.
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provision of the statute does not require a plaintiff to prove the
hospital's intent in violating a statutory requirement, but rather permits
recovery for all violations, regardless of the hospital's motivation. In
contrast, the statute provides for a civil money penalty against a hospital
for a negligent violation of a statutory requirement. § 1395dd(d)(1)(A).
This distinction--the explicit negligence requirement for a civil penalty--
reinforces the plain statutory language of the personal harm provision.
An EMTALA plaintiff need not demonstrate any level of intent on the part
of the hospital, but only that the hospital failed to give him an
appropriate screening examination.3
The majority gives lip service to following the literal language of
the statute by not requiring proof of bias on the part of the hospital.
Yet its strained definition of "appropriate," (i.e., "uniform" or that
which would be given to a similarly situated patient) effectively limits
the statute's application to only those cases that involve bias or
discrimination. I see no way for a plaintiff to prove non-uniform or
disparate treatment without evidence of the hospital's bias against a
particular group to which he belongs. In this respect, our court is
following the lead of almost every circuit that has examined this issue.
While the Sixth Circuit is the only circuit that admits to requiring bias
evidence
3
The statute is not to be read so strictly as to preclude a
medical judgment defense on the part of the hospital, however. The
Fourth Circuit in Power, 42 F.3d at 858, recognized that the
application of a screening procedure necessarily requires the
exercise of medical training and judgment. The court set out a
framework for EMTALA litigation to address those considerations.
Id. at 858. Once a plaintiff makes a threshold showing of
differential treatment, the hospital may offer rebuttal evidence by
demonstrating either that the patient was accorded the same level
of treatment that all other patients receive, or that a test or
procedure was not given because the physician did not believe that
the test was reasonable or necessary under the particular
circumstances. Id. The plaintiff then has the opportunity to
challenge the physicians' medical judgment through her own expert
testimony. Id.
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for an EMTALA violation, see Cleland v. Bronson Health Care Group, Inc.,
917 F.2d 266, 272 (6th Cir. 1990), the only circuit court decisions that
permit an EMTALA claim to go forward involve evidence of bias. See Correa
v. Hosp. San Francisco, 69 F.3d 1184, 1189 (1st Cir. 1995) (affirming jury
verdict for plaintiff where "datum suggesting [hospital] tried to shunt
[patient] as soon as it scrutinized her insurance card"), cert. denied sub
nom. Hosp. San Francisco, Inc. v. Gonzalez, 116 S. Ct. 1423 (1996); Power,
42 F.3d at 854 (affirming jury verdict for unemployed and uninsured
plaintiff).
In light of Congress' intent to address patient "dumping" in enacting
EMTALA, the majority is understandably frustrated by the plain language of
the statute. Its limitation of the statute's application perhaps even
meets Congress' objective better than the law enacted by Congress. It is
not our role, however, to re-draft the statute and to alter its plain
language. See Vickers v. Nash General Hosp., Inc., 78 F.3d 139, 146 (4th
Cir. 1996) (Ervin, J., dissenting) ("Regardless of what we divine the
congressional intent to have been, the statute is perfectly clear about
what a plaintiff must allege in order to state a claim.").
Under the statute as written, credible allegations that a hospital
has failed to follow its own established screening procedures in the
treatment of a particular patient constitute a threshold showing of an
EMTALA violation. Summers has made adequate allegations to survive summary
judgment. Whether the doctor acted within the parameters of a hospital's
loose, unwritten screening procedures is a factual question to be
determined by the jury. I refuse to assume facts against Summers' position
in an effort to limit EMTALA claims generally. Thus, I adhere to my
original position and would reverse the district court's grant of summary
judgment in this case.
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A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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