Trial Continues In Case Involving Woman Whose Living Will Was Not Followed By Her Doctor And Nursing Home Staff
The granddaughter of Madeline Neumann, a 92-year-old woman who had specifically requested in her living will and advanced directive that she not be placed on life-prolonging devices at the end of her life, is suing one of her grandmother’s doctors and the nursing home where Neumann had been living. There has already been a mistrial in this case.
In her civil lawsuit, Linda Schieble is seeking unspecified damages from Dr. Jaimy Bensimon and the Morse Geriatric Center staff in a civil lawsuit in which she cites breach of contract, negligence, and battery.
In a Florida courtroom earlier this week, Dr. Bruce Berman, a witness, testified that what happened to Neumann was “assault, plain and simple” when she was kept on life support for six days despite her wishes after she was found unresponsive on October 17, 1995. (Bensimon told paramedics to take her to the hospital where she was intubated and hooked up to life support machinery until she died.)
Berman also said that when reviewing the deceased woman’s files, he discovered that many of Bensimon’s actions did not adhere to the “generally accepted standard of care.” Berman also said that Bensimon should have asked Neumann (she suffered from Alzheimer’s and had a seizure disorder) to file a DNR (Do Not Resuscitate) order and he should not have ordered nurses to call 911 because of what Neumann had stipulated in her living will about her end of life care.