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‘Bleed Out’—The Movie

Thomas A. Moore and Matthew Gaier

At the end of December 2018, HBO released a feature length documentary about a medical malpractice action. It was written, produced and directed by Steve Burrows, a comedy director, and it tells the story of what happened to his mother, Judie, as well as the lawsuit that followed. In addition to covering issues of medicine, law, and politics, the film poignantly portrays the extraordinary damage that flows from a brain injury that some may regard as less than catastrophic because the victim is able to walk and speak clearly. This film should be of particular interest to anyone who has had involvement with lawsuits stemming from medical negligence, including doctors, nurses, lawyers, judges, and perhaps even jurors who have sat on such a case in the past.

The Plot



The story started in June of 2009, when Judie, an active and independent 69 year-old retired special education teacher from Milwaukee, Wisc., fell and broke her hip. She was rushed to Aurora West Allis Medical Center in Milwaukee, and was operated on by her surgeon and family friend, Dr. Bauer. He had previously done two successful total knee replacement surgeries on her. After performing surgery on her hip, Judie underwent rehabilitation and was sent home. Her recovery from this surgery was difficult, and five months later she fell again.

Judie returned to the same hospital, where they determined that she had not broken her hip. They were prepared to discharge her, but she was in a great deal of pain, and at the family’s insistence, she was admitted. During the hospitalization they determined that she had, in fact, broken her hip, and on the eighth day of the hospitalization Dr. Bauer decided to operate—the family would later learn that by mid-summer he had concluded that the June surgery was failing.

Judie had been on Plavix, a blood thinner, which must generally be discontinued several days prior to surgery. However, Dr. Bauer wanted to operate and Judie was cleared for surgery by her primary care physician, Dr. Lillie. A nurse actually made Dr. Bauer write into the chart that he was aware of the Plavix. They showed his handwritten entry with the unusual notation, “I am aware of Plavix—may affect bleeding.” The surgery lasted six hours, during which it is reported that she lost approximately half of her body’s blood volume. Despite this extensive intra-operative blood loss, the anesthesiology record was described as “impeccable,” indicating no drop in blood pressure.

After the surgery, Judie was put in the ICU. This ICU, it is explained, was an electronic ICU or eICU, in which images captured on a camera in the patient’s room were monitored by a physician at a remote location not in the hospital but somewhere at or near the airport. There was an ICU nurse present on the floor, but apparently, at least on this night, there was no ICU physician on the floor. Within an hour of being in the ICU, Judie’s blood pressure plummeted, eventually going down to 50/30. Her family later learned that the ICU camera may not even have been on. On day one post-op, Judie was totally unresponsive. That continued on the second day, and when a neurologist evaluated her, it was determined that she was in a coma. She remained comatose for almost two weeks, and when she came out, she had sustained severe permanent brain damage. She had spastic paraplegia, had to relearn how to talk, eat and walk, and had severe cognitive disabilities.