1 | A bill to be entitled |
2 | An act for the relief of Cindy Haider, wife of Jeffrey |
3 | Haider, deceased, Alan Haider, adult dependent child of |
4 | Jeffrey Haider, deceased, Max Haider, adult child of |
5 | Jeffrey Haider, deceased, Jonathan Haider, adult child of |
6 | Jeffrey Haider, deceased, and Jessica Haider, adult child |
7 | of Jeffrey Haider, deceased, by the South Broward Hospital |
8 | District; providing for an appropriation to compensate |
9 | them for injuries and damages sustained as a result of the |
10 | negligence of the South Broward Hospital District; |
11 | providing for the establishment of trusts and requirements |
12 | with respect thereto; providing for attorney's fees and |
13 | costs; providing an effective date. |
14 |
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15 | WHEREAS, in May 2000, Jeffrey Haider, a 45-year-old man, |
16 | began experiencing headaches, vomiting, fatigue, dizziness, and |
17 | behavioral changes such as difficulty concentrating and |
18 | confusion, and |
19 | WHEREAS, as a result of these symptoms, Jeffrey Haider saw |
20 | several health care providers over a period of several weeks, |
21 | and |
22 | WHEREAS, an MRI of Jeffrey Haider was taken on May 31, |
23 | 2000, and |
24 | WHEREAS, a radiologist and a neurologist determined that |
25 | Jeffrey Haider had a large mass within the right temporal lobe |
26 | which was 7 x 5 centimeters in size, and |
27 | WHEREAS, the mass was diagnosed as a brain tumor and |
28 | Jeffrey Haider was referred to a neurosurgeon, and |
29 | WHEREAS, the neurosurgeon who examined Jeffrey Haider |
30 | agreed that the patient had a right temporal lobe tumor and |
31 | recommended a craniotomy for resection of the tumor, and |
32 | WHEREAS, the procedure was performed on June 5, 2000, and |
33 | once the incisions in the area of the middle cerebral artery |
34 | were made, massive bleeding occurred, with blood gushing out of |
35 | Jeffrey Haider's incisions under pulsating pressure, and |
36 | WHEREAS, at this point the neurosurgeon realized that the |
37 | diagnosis of a tumor was incorrect and that Jeffrey Haider had |
38 | an aneurysm, and |
39 | WHEREAS, in fact, the neurosurgeon notes in his operative |
40 | report that "at this point, we felt that this probably was an |
41 | aneurysm. I brought in the radiologist who felt that, in |
42 | retrospect, this was a possibility," and |
43 | WHEREAS, an aneurysm is a permanent, abnormally blood- |
44 | filled dilation of a blood vessel, usually resulting from the |
45 | disease of a vessel wall, and it is common medical knowledge |
46 | that puncturing an aneurysm is the incorrect treatment for a |
47 | cerebral aneurysm, and |
48 | WHEREAS, the surgeon and the radiologist then summoned an |
49 | interventional radiologist who performed an angiogram, a |
50 | procedure that should have been ordered prior to the operation, |
51 | and |
52 | WHEREAS, the intraoperative angiogram revealed a giant |
53 | aneurysm filling from the right middle cerebral artery, and |
54 | WHEREAS, in an instance of further negligence on the part |
55 | of the South Broward Hospital District, the neurosurgeon did not |
56 | repair Jeffrey Haider's middle cerebral artery, but instead |
57 | controlled the bleeding from the aneurysm for about 45 minutes |
58 | and then closed the dura and the skull, and then sent Jeffrey |
59 | Haider to the intensive care unit "with the idea of reoperating |
60 | at a later time," and |
61 | WHEREAS, however, within hours, Jeffrey Haider was |
62 | exhibiting dangerous neurological symptoms and was in need of |
63 | immediate repair of the aneurysm, and |
64 | WHEREAS, on June 6, 2000, the repair surgery was commenced, |
65 | and |
66 | WHEREAS, when Jeffrey Haider's skull was reopened the brain |
67 | was noted to be "extremely swollen" and the "aneurysm was |
68 | causing tremendous pressure on the brain and herniating through |
69 | the craniotomy," and |
70 | WHEREAS, at that point the neurosurgeon compounded Jeffrey |
71 | Haider's condition by tearing off the M1 artery from the |
72 | junction of the aneurysm and the M2 artery so that he was unable |
73 | to perform an anastomosis to repair and join the arteries, and |
74 | WHEREAS, Dr. Rodriquez, the neurosurgeon, states in his |
75 | operative report that "the larger M2 (artery), and even the |
76 | other one, were essentially on the aneurysm bulbous dilation and |
77 | I could not bring them together to do an anastomosis," and |
78 | WHEREAS, Jeffrey Haider and his family suffered |
79 | astronomical economic and noneconomic damages as a result of the |
80 | treatment he received from the South Broward Hospital District, |
81 | and |
82 | WHEREAS, Jeffrey Haider was in a chronic vegetative state |
83 | and required 7-day-a-week, around-the-clock care until his death |
84 | on January 1, 2004, NOW, THEREFORE, |
85 |
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86 | Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: |
87 |
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88 | Section 1. The facts stated in the preamble to this act |
89 | are found and declared to be true. |
90 | Section 2. The South Broward Hospital District is |
91 | authorized and directed to appropriate from funds of the |
92 | district not otherwise appropriated and to draw a warrant in |
93 | favor of Cindy Haider, wife of Jeffrey Haider, deceased; Alan |
94 | Haider, adult dependent child of Jeffrey Haider, deceased; Max |
95 | Haider, adult child of Jeffrey Haider, deceased; Jonathan |
96 | Haider, adult child of Jeffrey Haider, deceased; and Jessica |
97 | Haider, adult child of Jeffrey Haider, deceased, in the sum of |
98 | $3,800,000 plus liquidated interest of $46,437 for a total of |
99 | $3,846,437, as agreed to by the claimants and the district, as |
100 | compensation for injuries and damages sustained as a result of |
101 | the negligence of employees of the South Broward Hospital |
102 | District. After payment of costs and attorney's fees as limited |
103 | by section 768.28(8), Florida Statutes, payments shall be |
104 | distributed as follows: |
105 | (1) Sixty percent to be paid to Cindy Haider. |
106 | (2) Ten percent to be paid to the trust account |
107 | established for Alan Haider pursuant to section 3. |
108 | (3) Ten percent to be paid to the trust account |
109 | established for Max Haider pursuant to section 3. |
110 | (4) Ten percent to be paid to the trust account |
111 | established for Jonathan Haider pursuant to section 3. |
112 | (5) Ten percent to be paid to the trust account |
113 | established for Jessica Haider pursuant to section 3. |
114 | Section 3. Alan Haider, Max Haider, Jonathan Haider, |
115 | Jessica Haider, and their respective attorneys shall be |
116 | required, as a condition of payment under section 2, to nominate |
117 | either a financial institution doing business in Florida or an |
118 | independent individual who is not related to the claimants by |
119 | either blood, marriage, or contract and who possesses financial |
120 | and trust management experience to act as a trustee for an |
121 | irrevocable inter vivos trust established for the benefit of |
122 | each respective claimant. The proceeds to be paid to Alan |
123 | Haider, Max Haider, Jonathan Haider, and Jessica Haider pursuant |
124 | to section 2 shall be placed in separate irrevocable inter vivos |
125 | trusts, to be used solely for the health care, support, |
126 | maintenance, and education of each respective claimant until the |
127 | claimant is 30 years of age. The trustee must take into |
128 | consideration any other resources and income of the beneficiary |
129 | of a trust before disbursing any funds from the trust to the |
130 | beneficiary. |
131 | Section 4. This act shall take effect upon becoming a law. |