- Nov 22 2011
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Former Champaign woman awarded more than $2.9 million
November 22, 2011 Newspaper Stories 0
URBANA — A jury has awarded a former Champaign woman more than $2.9 million from Carle Clinic Association and a former orthopedic surgeon at Carle following a knee replacement surgery that went bad.
Following three and a half hours of deliberation, a Champaign County jury ruled on Tuesday afternoon that Carla Barnwell, who now lives in Chicago, should receive $2,926,747.75, including $176,747.75 for medical bills, $1.25 million for past and future pain and suffering, and $1.5 million for past and future loss of normal life experience.
“When a patient has concerns about care received, those concerns are carefully evaluated,” Carle spokeswoman Jennifer Hendricks Kaufmann said on Tuesday. “In this instance, we believed the medical care was appropriate, and our belief was supported by a board certified orthopedic surgeon. Our legal system allows for differences of opinion and in this case the jury disagreed with our determination.”
Barnwell’s attorney, Ryan Yagoda of Chicago, said that former Carle orthopedic surgeon Dr. Chris Dangles performed a partial knee replacement surgery on Barnwell on May 8, 2007.
Carle spokesman Sean Williams said on Tuesday afternoon that Dangles no longer works for Carle.
Yagoda said the partial knee replacement surgery was designed to repair one compartment of Barnwell’s knee.
He said that Dangles put a piece of metal on the femur into Barnwell’s knee joint at a bad angle, cutting off 30 to 40 percent of the woman’s kneecap.
When Barnwell still couldn’t straighten her leg six weeks following her surgery, she got a second opinion at Northwestern Orthopaedic Institute in Chicago.
Two doctors from the institute, Dr. Raju S. Ghate and Dr. Victoria Brander, testified by videotape that “they had never seen a femoral component angled this badly,” Yagoda said.
As a result, Barnwell had to have her partial knee replacement taken out and converted to a total knee replacement, Yagoda said.
He added that Barnwell also developed a condition called arthrofibrosis, which involves excessive scar tissue building up in the joint, as a result of the partial knee replacement surgery.
“She needed two surgeries to get her knee back to normal function,” Yagoda said. “The two doctors testified she is permanently disabled and will have pain for the rest of her life.”
Judge Jeff Ford presided at the trial.
This article was originally published 11/22/2011 on The News-Gazette.