4 - Flores Vs Pineda
4 - Flores Vs Pineda
*
SPOUSES FREDELICTO FLORES (deceased) and FELICISIMA FLORES, petitioners, vs.
SPOUSES DOMINADOR PINEDA and VIRGINIA SACLOLO, and FLORENCIO,
CANDIDA, MARTA, GODOFREDO, BALTAZAR and LUCENA, all surnamed PINEDA, as
heirs of the deceased TERESITA S. PINEDA, and UNITED DOCTORS MEDICAL CENTER,
INC., respondents.
Civil Law; Negligence; Medical Negligence; A medical negligence is a type of claim to redress a
wrong committed by a medical professional, that has caused bodily harm to or the death of a patient;
Elements Involved in a Medical Negligence Case; A physician is expected to use at least the same level of
care that any other reasonably competent doctor would use under the same circumstances; Breach of
duty occurs when the physician fails to comply with these professional standards.—A medical negligence
case is a type of claim to redress a wrong committed by a medical professional, that has caused bodily
harm to or the death of a patient. There are four elements involved in a medical negligence case,
namely: duty, breach, injury, and proximate causation. Duty refers to the standard of behavior which
imposes restrictions on one’s conduct. The standard in turn refers to the amount of competence associated
with the proper discharge of the profession. A physician is expected to use at least the same level of care
that any other reasonably competent doctor would use under the same circumstances. Breach of duty
occurs when the physician fails to comply with these professional standards. If injury results to the patient
as a result of this breach, the physician is answerable for negligence.
Same; Same; Same; To successfully pursue a claim, the plaintiff must prove by preponderance of
evidence that, one, the physician either failed to do something which a reasonable prudent health care
provider would have done, or that he did something that a reasonably prudent provider would not have
done and two, the failure or action caused injury to the patient; Expert testimony is therefore essential .—
As in any civil action, the burden to prove the existence of the neces-
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* SECOND DIVISION.
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sary elements rests with the plaintiff. To successfully pursue a claim, the plaintiff must prove by
preponderance of evidence that, one, the physician either failed to do something which a reasonably
prudent health care provider would have done, or that he did something that a reasonably prudent
provider would not have done; and two, the failure or action caused injury to the patient. Expert
testimony is therefore essential since the factual issue of whether a physician or surgeon has exercised the
requisite degree of skill and care in the treatment of his patient is generally a matter of expert opinion.
Same; Same; Same; If a patient suffers from some disability that increases the magnitude of risk to
him, that disability must be taken into account so long as it is or should have been known to the
physician.—Taken together, we find that reasonable prudence would have shown that diabetes and its
complications were foreseeable harm that should have been taken into consideration by the petitioner
spouses. If a patient suffers from some disability that increases the magnitude of risk to him, that
disability must be taken into account so long as it is or should have been known to the physician. And
when the patient is exposed to an increased risk, it is incumbent upon the physician to take commensurate
and adequate precautions.
Same; Same; Same; The critical and clinching factor in a medical negligence case is proof of the
causal connection between the negligence which the evidence established and the plaintiff’s injuries;
Causation must be proven within a reasonable medical probability based upon competent expert
testimony.—The critical and clinching factor in a medical negligence case is proof of the causal
connection between the negligence which the evidence established and the plaintiff’s injuries; the plaintiff
must plead and prove not only that he had been injured and defendant has been at fault, but also that the
defendant’s fault caused the injury. A verdict in a malpractice action cannot be based on speculation or
conjecture. Causation must be proven within a reasonable medical probability based upon competent
expert testimony.
Same; Same; Damages; The settled rule is that a plaintiff is entitled to be compensated for proven
pecuniary loss.—Both the trial and the appellate court awarded actual damages as compensation for the
pecuniary loss the respondents suffered. The loss was presented 85
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in terms of the hospital bills and expenses the respondents incurred on account of Teresita’s
confinement and death. The settled rule is that a plaintiff is entitled to be compensated for proven
pecuniary loss. This proof the respondents successfully presented. Thus, we affirm the award of actual
damages of P36,000.00 representing the hospital expenses the patient incurred.
Same; Same; Same; Article 2206 of the Civil Code allows the recovery of moral damages in case of
death caused by a quasi-delict and enumerates the spouse, legitimate or illegitimate ascendants or
descendants as the persons entitled thereto.—The same article allows the recovery of moral damages in
case of death caused by a quasi-delict and enumerates the spouse, legitimate or illegitimate ascendants or
descendants as the persons entitled thereto. Moral damages are designed to compensate the claimant for
the injury suffered, that is, for the mental anguish, serious anxiety, wounded feelings which the
respondents herein must have surely felt with the unexpected loss of their daughter. We affirm the
appellate court’s award of P400,000.00 by way of moral damages to the respondents.
Same; Same; Same; Damages; Exemplary Damages.—The Supreme Court similarly affirms the
grant of exemplary damages. Exemplary damages are imposed by way of example or correction for the
public good. Because of the petitioner spouses’ negligence in subjecting Teresita to an operation without
first recognizing and addressing her diabetic condition, the appellate court awarded exemplary
damages to the respondents in the amount of P100,000.00. Public policy requires such imposition to
suppress the wanton acts of an offender. We therefore affirm the CA’s award as an example to the
medical profession and to stress that the public good requires stricter measures to avoid the repetition of
the type of medical malpractice that happened in this case.
PETITION for review on certiorari of a decision of the Court of Appeals.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Felipe M. Alpajora for petitioners.
Reynaldo P. Melendres for respondents.
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BRION, J.:
This petition involves a medical negligence case that was elevated to this Court through an
appeal by certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. The petition assails the Decision 1 of the
Court of Appeals (CA) in CA G.R. CV No. 63234, which affirmed with modification the
Decision2 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Nueva Ecija, Branch 37 in Civil Case No. SD-
1233. The dispositive portion of the assailed CA decision states:
“WHEREFORE, premises considered, the assailed Decision of the Regional Trial Court of Baloc, Sto.
Domingo, Nueva Ecija, Branch 37 is hereby AFFIRMED but with modifications as follows:
1) Ordering defendant-appellants Dr. and Dra. Fredelicto A. Flores and the United Doctors
Medical Center, Inc. to jointly and severally pay the plaintiff-appellees—heirs of Teresita Pineda,
namely, Spouses Dominador Pineda and Virginia Saclolo and Florencio, Candida, Marta,
Godofredo, Baltazar and Lucena, all surnamed Pineda, the sum of P400,000.00 by way of moral
damages;
2) Ordering the above-named defendant-appellants to jointly and severally pay the above-
named plaintiff-appellees the sum of P100,000.00 by way of exemplary damages;
3) Ordering the above-named defendant-appellants to jointly and severally pay the above-
named plaintiff-appellees the sum of P36,000.00 by way of actual and compensatory damages; and
4) Deleting the award of attorney’s fees and costs of suit.
SO ORDERED.”
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1 Dated June 30, 2003 and penned by Justice Bienvenido Reyes, Jr., with Associate Justice Salvador Valdez and
Associate Justice Danilo Pine, concurring; Rollo, pp. 43-65.
2 Dated September 21, 1998, and penned by Judge Lauro Sandoval; Rollo., pp. 66-97.
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While this case essentially involves questions of facts, we opted for the requested review in light
of questions we have on the findings of negligence below, on the awarded damages and costs,
and on the importance of this type of ruling on medical practice.3
Background Facts
Teresita Pineda (Teresita) was a 51-year old unmarried woman living in Sto. Domingo,
Nueva Ecija. She consulted on April 17, 1987 her townmate, Dr. Fredelicto Flores, regarding her
medical condition. She complained of general body weakness, loss of appetite, frequent urination
and thirst, and on-and-off vaginal bleeding. Dr. Fredelicto initially interviewed the patient and
asked for the history of her monthly period to analyze the probable cause of the vaginal bleeding.
He advised her to return the following week or to go to the United Doctors Medical Center
(UDMC) in Quezon City for a general check-up. As for her other symptoms, he suspected that
Teresita might be suffering from diabetes and told her to continue her medications.4
Teresita did not return the next week as advised. However, when her condition persisted, she
went to further consult Dr. Flores at his UDMC clinic on April 28, 1987, travelling for at least
two hours from Nueva Ecija to Quezon City with her sister, Lucena Pineda. They arrived at
UDMC at around 11:15 a.m. Lucena later testified that her sister was then so weak that she had
to lie down on the couch of the clinic while they waited for the doctor. When Dr. Fredelicto
arrived, he did a routine check-up and ordered Teresita’s admission to the hospital. In the
admission slip, he directed the hospital
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3 See: Dela Cruz v. Court of Appeals and People of the Philippines, G.R. No. 105213, December 4, 1996, 265 SCRA
299; Valenzuela v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 115024, February 7, 1996, 253 SCRA 303.
4 TSN, January 14, 1992, pp. 5-8.
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staff to prepare the patient for an “on call” D&C5 operation to be performed by his wife, Dr.
Felicisima Flores (Dr. Felicisima). Teresita was brought to her hospital room at around 12 noon;
the hospital staff forthwith took her blood and urine samples for the laboratory tests 6 which Dr.
Fredelicto ordered.
At 2:40 p.m. of that same day, Teresita was taken to the operating room. It was only then that
she met Dr. Felicisima, an obstetrician and gynecologist. The two doctors—Dr. Felicisima and
Dr. Fredelicto, conferred on the patient’s medical condition, while the resident physician and the
medical intern gave Dr. Felicisima their own briefings. She also interviewed and conducted an
internal vaginal examination of the patient which lasted for about 15 minutes. Dr. Felicisima
thereafter called up the laboratory for the results of the tests. At that time, only the results for the
blood sugar (BS), uric acid determination, cholesterol determination, and complete blood count
(CBC) were available. Teresita’s BS count was 10.67mmol/l7 and her CBC was 109g/l.8
Based on these preparations, Dr. Felicisima proceeded with the D&C operation with Dr.
Fredelicto administering the general anesthesia. The D&C operation lasted for about 10 to 15
minutes. By 3:40 p.m., Teresita was wheeled back to her room.
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5 “D&C” refers to dilatation and curettage, an operation in which the cervix of the uterus is expanded, using an
instrument called dilator, and the lining (endometrium) of the uterus is lightly scraped with a curet (The Bantam Medical
Dictionary, 5th ed., p. 192).
6 The laboratory tests conducted were for complete blood count, urinalysis, stool examination, blood sugar
examination, BUN determination, uric acid determination, and cholesterol determination; Rollo, p. 12.
7 “mmol/l” refers to millimoles per liter of blood; the normal fasting blood sugar is between 3.9 to
6.05mmol/l; infra note 19.
8 “g/l” refers to grams per liter of blood; the normal CBC count is 120 to 170 g/l.
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A day after the operation (or on April 29, 1987), Teresita was subjected to an ultrasound
examination as a confirmatory procedure. The results showed that she had an enlarged uterus
and myoma uteri.9 Dr. Felicisima, however, advised Teresita that she could spend her recovery
period at home. Still feeling weak, Teresita opted for hospital confinement.
Teresita’s complete laboratory examination results came only on that day (April 29, 1987).
Teresita’s urinalysis showed a three plus sign (+++) indicating that the sugar in her urine was
very high. She was then placed under the care of Dr. Amado Jorge, an internist.
By April 30, 1987, Teresita’s condition had worsened. She experienced difficulty in breathing
and was rushed to the intensive care unit. Further tests confirmed that she was suffering
from Diabetes Mellitus Type II.10 Insulin was administered on the patient, but the medication
might have arrived too late. Due to complications induced by diabetes, Teresita died in the
morning of May 6, 1987.11
Believing that Teresita’s death resulted from the negligent handling of her medical needs, her
family (respondents) instituted an action for damages against Dr. Fredelicto Flores and Dr.
Felicisima Flores (collectively referred to as the petitioner spouses) before the RTC of Nueva
Ecija.
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9 Myoma of the uterus; myoma is a benign tumor of muscle (The Bantam Medical Dictionary, 5th ed., p. 437).
10 Diabetes is a condition where the cells of the body cannot metabolize sugar properly due to a total or relative lack
of insulin. The body then breaks down its own fat, proteins, and glycogen to produce sugar, resulting in high sugar levels
in the blood (otherwise known as hyperglycemia, infra note 26), with excess by-products called ketones being produced
by the liver. (Dr. Gordon French, Clinical Management of Diabetes Mellitus During Anesthesia and Surgery,
http://www.nda.ox.ac.uk/wfsa/html/u11/u1113_01.htm, last visited September 21, 2008).
11 Records, Volume II, Exhibit “B” (Death Certificate); TSN, July 12, 1988, pp. 5-8.
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The RTC ruled in favor of Teresita’s family and awarded actual, moral, and exemplary
damages, plus attorney’s fees and costs.12 The CA affirmed the judgment, but modified the
amount of damages awarded and deleted the award for attorney’s fees and costs of suit.13
Through this petition for review on certiorari, the petitioner spouses—Dr. Fredelicto (now
deceased) and Dr. Felicisima Flores—allege that the RTC and CA committed a reversible error
in finding them liable through negligence for the death of Teresita Pineda.
Assignment of Errors
The petitioner spouses contend that they exercised due care and prudence in the performance
of their duties as medical professionals. They had attended to the patient to the best of their
abilities and undertook the management of her case based on her complaint of an on-and-off
vaginal bleeding. In addition, they claim that nothing on record shows that the death of Teresita
could have been averted had they employed means other than what they had adopted in the
ministration of the patient.
12 The amount of P36,000.00 by way of actual and compensatory damages; P1,000,000.00 by way of moral damages;
P500,000.00 by way of exemplary damages; P30,000.00 by way of attorney’s fees, plus P1,000.00 fee per
appearance; Rollo, p. 97.
13 Supra note 1.
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a D&C operation is the proper and accepted procedure to address vaginal bleeding—the medical
problem presented to them. Given that the patient died after the D&C, the core issue is whether
the decision to proceed with the D&C operation was an honest mistake of judgment or one
amounting to negligence.
Elements of a Medical Negligence Case
A medical negligence case is a type of claim to redress a wrong committed by a medical
professional, that has caused bodily harm to or the death of a patient. There are four elements
involved in a medical negligence case, namely: duty, breach, injury, and proximate causation.14
Duty refers to the standard of behavior which imposes restrictions on one’s conduct. 15 The
standard in turn refers to the amount of competence associated with the proper discharge of the
profession. A physician is expected to use at least the same level of care that any other
reasonably competent doctor would use under the same circumstances. Breach of duty occurs
when the physician fails to comply with these professional standards. If injury results to the
patient as a result of this breach, the physician is answerable for negligence.16
As in any civil action, the burden to prove the existence of the necessary elements rests with the
plaintiff.17 To successfully pursue a claim, the plaintiff must prove by preponderance of evidence
that, one, the physician either failed to do something which a reasonably prudent health care
provider would have done, or that he did something that a reasonably
_______________
14 Reyes v. Sisters of Mercy Hospital, G.R. No. 130547, October 3, 2000, 341 SCRA 760.
15 Martin, C.R.A., Law Relating to Medical Malpractice (2nd ed.), p. 361.
16 61 Am. Jur. 2d §200.
17 Revised Rules of Court, Rule 133, Section 1.
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prudent provider would not have done; and two, the failure or action caused injury to the
patient.18 Expert testimony is therefore essential since the factual issue of whether a physician or
surgeon has exercised the requisite degree of skill and care in the treatment of his patient is
generally a matter of expert opinion.19
Standard of Care and Breach of Duty
D&C is the classic gynecologic procedure for the evaluation and possible therapeutic
treatment for abnormal vaginal bleeding.20 That this is the recognized procedure is confirmed by
Drs. Salvador Nieto (Dr. Nieto) and Joselito Mercado (Dr. Mercado), the expert witnesses
presented by the respondents:
DR. NIETO: [W]hat I know among obstetricians, if there is bleeding, they perform what we call D&C for diagnostic
purposes.
x x x x x x x x x
Q: So are you trying to tell the Court that D&C can be a diagnostic treatment?
A: Yes, sir. Any doctor knows this.21
Dr. Mercado, however, objected with respect to the time the D&C operation should have been
conducted in Teresita’s case. He opined that given the blood sugar level of Teresita, her diabetic
condition should have been addressed first:
Q: Why do you consider the time of performance of the D&C not appropriate?
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18 Professional Services, Inc. v. Agana, G.R. No. 126297, January 31, 2007, 513 SCRA 478.
19 Reyes v. Sisters of Mercy Hospital, G.R. No. 130547, October 3, 2000, 341 SCRA 760.
20 Sabiston Textbook of Surgery (17th ed.), pp. 2255-2256.
21 TSN, June 23, 1989, p. 31.
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A: Because I have read the record and I have seen the urinalysis, [there is] spillage in the urine, and blood sugar was
10.67
Q: What is the significance of the spillage in the urine?
A: It is a sign that the blood sugar is very high.
Q: Does it indicate sickness?
A: 80 to 95% it means diabetes mellitus. The blood sugar was 10.67.
x x x x x x x x x
COURT: In other words, the operation conducted on the patient, your opinion, that it is inappropriate?
A: The timing of [when] the D&C [was] done, based on the record, in my personal opinion, that D&C should be
postponed a day or two.22
The petitioner spouses countered that, at the time of the operation, there was nothing to indicate
that Teresita was afflicted with diabetes: a blood sugar level of 10.67mmol/l did not necessarily
mean that she was a diabetic considering that this was random blood sugar;23 there were other
factors that might have caused Teresita’s blood sugar to rise such as the taking of blood samples
during lunchtime and while patient was being given intra-venous dextrose. 24 Furthermore, they
claim that their principal concern was to determine the cause of and to stop the vaginal bleeding.
The petitioner spouses’ contentions, in our view, miss several points. First, as early as April
17, 1987, Teresita was
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already suspected to be suffering from diabetes. 25 This suspicion again arose right before the
D&C operation on April 28, 1987 when the laboratory result revealed Teresita’s increased blood
sugar level.26 Unfortunately, the petitioner spouses did not wait for the full medical laboratory
results before proceeding with the D&C, a fact that was never considered in the courts
below. Second, the petitioner spouses were duly advised that the patient was experiencing
general body weakness, loss of appetite, frequent urination, and thirst—all of which are classic
symptoms of diabetes.27 When a patient exhibits symptoms typical of a particular disease, these
symptoms should, at the very least, alert the physician of the possibility that the patient may be
afflicted with the suspected disease:
[Expert testimony for the plaintiff showed that] tests should have been ordered immediately on
admission to the hospital in view of the symptoms presented, and that failure to recognize the existence of
diabetes constitutes negligence. 28
Third, the petitioner spouses cannot claim that their principal concern was the vaginal
bleeding and should not therefore be held accountable for complications coming from other
sources. This is a very narrow and self-serving view that even reflects on their competence.
Taken together, we find that reasonable prudence would have shown that diabetes and its
complications were foreseeable harm that should have been taken into consideration by the
petitioner spouses. If a patient suffers from some dis-
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25 TSN, February 28, 1989, p. 20; TSN, March 5, 1992, pp. 17, 20.
26 TSN, September 27, 1994, p. 26; TSN, December 10, 1992, p. 8; TSN, February 28, 1989, p. 36.
27 TSN, September 18, 1990, p. 6; Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine (17th ed.), p. 2277.
28 Solis, P., Medical Jurisprudence (1980 ed.), p. 141, citing Hill v. Stewart, 209 So 2d 809 Miss 1968.
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ability that increases the magnitude of risk to him, that disability must be taken into
account so long as it is or should have been known to the physician.29 And when the patient is
exposed to an increased risk, it is incumbent upon the physician to take commensurate and
adequate precautions.
Taking into account Teresita’s high blood sugar, 30 Dr. Mendoza opined that the attending
physician should have postponed the D&C operation in order to conduct a confirmatory test to
make a conclusive diagnosis of diabetes and to refer the case to an internist or diabetologist. This
was corroborated by Dr. Delfin Tan (Dr. Tan), an obstetrician and gynecologist, who stated that
the patient’s diabetes should have been managed by an internist prior to, during, and after the
operation.31
Apart from bleeding as a complication of pregnancy, vaginal bleeding is only rarely so heavy
and life-threatening that urgent first-aid measures are required. 32 Indeed, the expert witnesses
declared that a D&C operation on a hyperglycemic patient may be justified only when it is an
emergency case—when there is profuse vaginal bleeding. In this case, we choose not to rely on
the assertions of the petitioner spouses that there was profuse bleeding, not only because the
statements were self-serving, but also because the petitioner spouses were inconsistent in their
testimonies. Dr. Fredelicto testified earlier that on April 28, he personally saw the bleed-
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ing,33 but later on said that he did not see it and relied only on Teresita’s statement that she was
bleeding.34 He went on to state that he scheduled the D&C operation without conducting any
physical examination on the patient.
The likely story is that although Teresita experienced vaginal bleeding on April 28, it was not
sufficiently profuse to necessitate an immediate emergency D&C operation. Dr. Tan 35 and Dr.
Mendoza36 both testified that the medical records of Teresita failed to indicate that there was
profuse vaginal bleeding. The claim that there was profuse vaginal bleeding although this was
not reflected in the medical records strikes us as odd since the main complaint is vaginal
bleeding. A medical record is the only document that maintains a long-term transcription of
patient care and as such, its maintenance is considered a priority in hospital practice. Optimal
record-keeping includes all patient inter-actions. The records should always be clear, objective,
and up-to-date.37 Thus, a medical record that does not indicate profuse medical bleeding speaks
loudly and clearly of what it does not contain.
That the D&C operation was conducted principally to diagnose the cause of the vaginal
bleeding further leads us to conclude that it was merely an elective procedure, not an emergency
case. In an elective procedure, the physician must conduct a thorough pre-operative evaluation of
the patient in order to adequately prepare her for the operation and minimize possible risks and
complications. The internist is responsible for generating a comprehensive evaluation of all
medical problems during the pre-operative evaluation.38
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“The aim of pre-operative evaluation is not to screen broadly for undiagnosed disease, but rather to
identify and quantify comorbidity that may impact on the operative outcome. This evaluation is driven by
findings on history and physical examination suggestive of organ system dysfunction . . . The goal is to
uncover problem areas that may require further investigation or be amenable to preoperative
optimization.
If the preoperative evaluation uncovers significant comorbidity or evidence of poor control of an
underlying disease process, consultation with an internist or medical specialist may be required to
facilitate the work-up and direct management. In this process, communication between the surgeons and
the consultants is essential to define realistic goals for this optimization process and to expedite surgical
management.” [Emphasis supplied.]
39
Significantly, the evidence strongly suggests that the pre-operative evaluation was less than
complete as the laboratory results were fully reported only on the day following the D&C
operation. Dr. Felicisima only secured a telephone report of the preliminary laboratory result
prior to the D&C. This preliminary report did not include the 3+ status of sugar in the patient’s
urine40—a result highly confirmatory of diabetes.
Because the D&C was merely an elective procedure, the patient’s uncontrolled
hyperglycemia presented a far greater risk than her on-and-off vaginal bleeding. The presence of
hyperglycemia in a surgical patient is associated with poor clinical outcomes, and aggressive
glycemic control positively impacts on morbidity and mortality. 41 Elective surgery in people with
uncontrolled diabetes should preferably be scheduled after acceptable glycemic control has been
achieved.42
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According to Dr. Mercado, this is done by administering insulin on the patient.43
“The management approach in this kind of patients always includes insulin therapy in combination
with dextrose and potassium infusion. Insulin xxx promotes glucose uptake by the muscle and fat cells
while decreasing glucose production by the liver x x x. The net effect is to lower blood glucose levels.”
44
The prudent move is to address the patient’s hyperglycemic state immediately and promptly
before any other procedure is undertaken. In this case, there was no evidence that insulin was
administered on Teresita prior to or during the D&C operation. Insulin was only administered
two days after the operation.
As Dr. Tan testified, the patient’s hyperglycemic condition should have been managed not
only before and during the operation, but also immediately after. Despite the possibility that
Teresita was afflicted with diabetes, the possibility was casually ignored even in the post-
operative evaluation of the patient; the concern, as the petitioner spouses expressly admitted, was
limited to the complaint of vaginal bleeding. Interestingly, while the ultrasound test confirmed
that Teresita had a myoma in her uterus, she was advised that she could be discharged a day after
the operation and that her recovery could take place at home. This advice implied that a day after
the operation and even after the complete laboratory results were submitted, the petitioner
spouses still did not recognize any post-operative concern that would require the monitoring of
Teresita’s condition in the hospital.
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The above facts, point only to one conclusion—that the petitioner spouses failed, as medical
professionals, to comply with their duty to observe the standard of care to be given to
hyperglycemic/diabetic patients undergoing surgery. Whether this breach of duty was the
proximate cause of Teresita’s death is a matter we shall next determine.
Injury and Causation
As previously mentioned, the critical and clinching factor in a medical negligence case is
proof of the causal connection between the negligence which the evidence established and the
plaintiff’s injuries;45 the plaintiff must plead and prove not only that he had been injured and
defendant has been at fault, but also that the defendant’s fault caused the injury. A verdict in a
malpractice action cannot be based on speculation or conjecture. Causation must be proven
within a reasonable medical probability based upon competent expert testimony.46
The respondents contend that unnecessarily subjecting Teresita to a D&C operation without
adequately preparing her, aggravated her hyperglycemic state and caused her untimely demise.
The death certificate of Teresita lists down the following causes of death:
Immediate cause: Cardiorespiratory arrest
Antecedent cause: Septicemic shock, ketoacidocis
Underlying cause: Diabetes Mellitus II
Other significant conditions
contributing to death: Renal Failure—Acute47
Stress, whether physical or emotional, is a factor that can aggravate diabetes; a D&C
operation is a form of physical
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stress. Dr. Mendoza explained how surgical stress can aggravate the patient’s hyperglycemia:
when stress occurs, the diabetic’s body, especially the autonomic system, reacts by secreting
hormones which are counter-regulatory; she can have prolonged hyperglycemia which, if
unchecked, could lead to death.48 Medical literature further explains that if the blood sugar has
become very high, the patient becomes comatose (diabetic coma). When this happens over
several days, the body uses its own fat to produce energy, and the result is high levels of waste
products (called ketones) in the blood and urine (called diabetic ketoacidiosis, a medical
emergency with a significant mortality).49 This was apparently what happened in Teresita’s case;
in fact, after she had been referred to the internist Dr. Jorge, laboratory test showed that her
blood sugar level shot up to 14.0mmol/l, way above the normal blood sugar range. Thus,
between the D&C and death was the diabetic complication that could have been prevented with
the observance of standard medical precautions. The D&C operation and Teresita’s death due to
aggravated diabetic condition is therefore sufficiently established.
The trial court and the appellate court pinned the liability for Teresita’s death on both the
petitioner spouses and this Court finds no reason to rule otherwise. However, we clarify that Dr.
Fredelicto’s negligence is not solely the act of ordering an “on call” D&C operation when he was
mainly an anaesthesiologist who had made a very cursory examination of the patient’s vaginal
bleeding complaint. Rather, it was his failure from the very start to identify and confirm, despite
the
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patient’s complaints and his own suspicions, that diabetes was a risk factor that should be
guarded against, and his participation in the imprudent decision to proceed with the D&C
operation despite his early suspicion and the confirmatory early laboratory results. The latter
point comes out clearly from the following exchange during the trial:
Q: On what aspect did you and your wife consult [with] each other?
A: We discussed on the finding of the laboratory [results] because the hemoglobin was below normal, the blood sugar
was elevated, so that we have to evaluate these laboratory results—what it means.
Q: So it was you and your wife who made the evaluation when it was phoned in?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Did your wife, before performing D&C ask your opinion whether or not she can proceed?
A: Yes, anyway, she asked me whether we can do D&C based on my experience.
Q: And your answer was in the positive notwithstanding the elevation of blood sugar?
A: Yes, sir, it was both our disposition to do the D&C. [Emphasis supplied.]50
If Dr. Fredelicto believed himself to be incompetent to treat the diabetes, not being an internist or
a diabetologist (for which reason he referred Teresita to Dr. Jorge), 51 he should have likewise
refrained from making a decision to proceed with the D&C operation since he was niether an
obstetrician nor a gynecologist.
These findings lead us to the conclusion that the decision to proceed with the D&C operation,
notwithstanding Teresita’s hyperglycemia and without adequately preparing her for the
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procedure, was contrary to the standards observed by the medical profession. Deviation from this
standard amounted to a breach of duty which resulted in the patient’s death. Due to this negligent
conduct, liability must attach to the petitioner spouses.
Liability of the Hospital
In the proceedings below, UDMC was the spouses Flores’ co-defendant. The RTC found the
hospital jointly and severally liable with the petitioner spouses, which decision the CA affirmed.
In a Resolution dated August 28, 2006, this Court however denied UDMC’s petition for review
on certiorari. Since UDMC’s appeal has been denied and they are not parties to this case, we
find it unnecessary to delve on the matter. Consequently, the RTC’s decision, as affirmed by the
CA, stands.
Award of Damages
Both the trial and the appellate court awarded actual damages as compensation for the
pecuniary loss the respondents suffered. The loss was presented in terms of the hospital bills and
expenses the respondents incurred on account of Teresita’s confinement and death. The settled
rule is that a plaintiff is entitled to be compensated for proven pecuniary loss. 52 This proof the
respondents successfully presented. Thus, we affirm the award of actual damages of P36,000.00
representing the hospital expenses the patient incurred.
In addition to the award for actual damages, the respondent heirs of Teresita are likewise
entitled to P50,000.00 as death indemnity pursuant to Article 2206 of the Civil Code, which
states that “the amount of damages for death caused by
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a x x x quasi-delict shall be at least three thousand pesos,53 even though there may have been
mitigating circumstances x x x.” This is a question of law that the CA missed in its decision and
which we now decide in the respondents’ favor.
The same article allows the recovery of moral damages in case of death caused by a quasi-
delict and enumerates the spouse, legitimate or illegitimate ascendants or descendants as the
persons entitled thereto. Moral damages are designed to compensate the claimant for the injury
suffered, that is, for the mental anguish, serious anxiety, wounded feelings which the respondents
herein must have surely felt with the unexpected loss of their daughter. We affirm the appellate
court’s award of P400,000.00 by way of moral damages to the respondents.
We similarly affirm the grant of exemplary damages. Exemplary damages are imposed by
way of example or correction for the public good. 54 Because of the petitioner spouses’ negligence
in subjecting Teresita to an operation without first recognizing and addressing her diabetic
condition, the appellate court awarded exemplary damages to the respondents in the amount of
P100,000.00. Public policy requires such imposition to suppress the wanton acts of an
offender.55 We therefore affirm the CA’s award as an example to the medical profession and to
stress that the public good requires stricter measures to avoid the repetition of the type of medical
malpractice that happened in this case.
With the award of exemplary damages, the grant of attorney’s fees is legally in order. 56 We
therefore reverse the CA decision deleting these awards, and grant the respondents the
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amount of P100,000.00 as attorney’s fees taking into consideration the legal route this case has
taken.
WHEREFORE, we AFFIRM the Decision of the CA dated June 20, 2003 in CA-G.R. CV
No. 63234 finding petitioner spouses liable for negligent medical practice. We likewise AFFIRM
the awards of actual and compensatory damages of P36,000.00; moral damages of P400,000.00;
and exemplary damages of P100,000.00.
We MODIFY the CA Decision by additionally granting an award of P50,000.00 as death
indemnity and by reversing the deletion of the award of attorney’s fees and costs and restoring
the award of P100,000.00 as attorney’s fees. Costs of litigation are adjudged against petitioner
spouses.
To summarize, the following awards shall be paid to the family of the late Teresita Pineda:
1. The sum of P36,000.00 by way of actual and compensatory damages;
2. The sum of P50,000.00 by way of death indemnity;
3. The sum of P400,000.00 by way of moral damages;
4. The sum of P100,000.00 by way of exemplary damages;
5. The sum of P100,000.00 by way of attorney’s fees; and
6. Costs.
SO ORDERED.
Quisumbing (Acting C.J., Chairperson), Carpio-Morales, Tinga and Velasco, Jr.,
JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed with modification.
Note.—Negligence is not presumed but proven by whoever alleges it. (Bank of the Philippine
Islands vs. Casa Montessori Internationale, 430 SCRA 261 [2004])
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