Starcher, Justice, dissenting:
I dissent from the majority opinion, because I believe inferences can be drawn
from the record that are favorable to the plaintiff/appellant. I therefore believe summary
judgment was improper.
The appellants do not dispute that the defendant/appellee, West Virginia
University Hospital, reacted quickly to transfuse Rebekah with platelets when it was
discovered that her platelet count was 13,000. Their argument is over who discontinued the
40,000 platelet count order on November 30, 1995.
Rebekah Withrow suffered a stroke when her platelet count fell to 13,000 on
December 2, 1995. The day before, her platelet count had been 32,000.
The record indicates that Rebekah's doctor, Dr. Marie Steiner, entered a
protocol order that required Rebekah to be transfused with platelets if her platelet count
reached or fell below 20,000. On November 25, 1995, Dr. Steiner entered an order requiring
Rebekah's platelet count to be kept above 40,000. The circuit court specifically found that
this order temporarily superseded the protocol order.
The record also indicates that the order regarding a platelet count of 40,000 was
discontinued on November 30, 1995, so any person reading Rebekah's medical chart would
believe that the protocol order specifying a platelet count of 20,000 was in place.
The appellants assert that a nurse working for the appellee hospital entered the
discontinue order, without any authorization from Dr. Steiner to do so. Thus, the hospital's
alleged failure to abide by Dr. Steiner's order to keep Rebekah's platelet count above 40,000,
and the alleged inappropriate and unauthorized discontinuance of Dr. Steiner's order by a
nurse form the factual basis of the appellant's negligence claim against the appellee.
Thus, the order allegedly in effect on December 1, 1995, when Rebekah's
platelet count was 32,000, still required that Rebekah's platelet count be kept above 40,000.
The appellant's expert did opine that Rebekah should have been transfused with platelets on
December 1 until her count was again above 40,000, and explained that the transfusion
would have prevented the stroke.
Despite this evidentiary dispute, the circuit court and the majority opinion
concluded that there were no questions of fact, and no inferences favorable to the appellant
that could be drawn from the record. I believe these conclusions were wrong, and believe
a jury should have been allowed to decide if the hospital's actions were negligent.
I therefore respectfully dissent.