Trial on the Merits October 5, 2011

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Trial on the Merits October 5, 2011 7 1 witness. 2 MR. BALDASSANO: State calls Kim Atkisson. 3 May I proceed, Your Honor? 4 THE COURT: You may proceed, Counsel. 5 KIMBERLY ATKISSON, 6 having been first duly sworn, testified as follows: 7 DIRECT EXAMINATION 8 BY MR. BALDASSANO: 9 Q. Please introduce yourself to the jurors. 10 A. My name is Kimberly Atkisson. 11 Q. What type of work do you do? 12 A. I'm a registered nurse. 13 Q. How long have you been a register nurse? 14 A. About six-and-a-half years. 15 Q. Tell us a little bit about your background, 16 your education and your training to enable you to be a 17 registered nurse. 18 A. I have a four-year degree, and I'm also 19 currently enrolled in a graduate program for nurse 20 education. My background is mainly in trauma, ER. 21 Right now I'm working with first-time pregnancy mothers. 22 Q. What hospital do you work at? 23 A. Currently? 24 Q. Yeah. 25 A. I work for Baylor College of Medicine now.

8 1 Q. Going back to October of 2007, where were you 2 working? 3 A. Memorial Hermann, Texas Medical Center. 4 Q. And what type of work were you doing back in 5 October of 2007? 6 A. I was a trauma emergency room nurse. 7 Q. And what does that involve? What's a typical 8 day for a trauma nurse, without getting really gory? 9 A. Hectic. It's fast-paced. You have to think, 10 you know, quickly think and quickly assess. 11 Q. What is your job? What's your responsibility? 12 A. My responsibility is to be a patient advocate, 13 also to assess the patient, you know, provide 14 medications and follow orders. 15 Q. And is there a doctor or doctors working in the 16 ER with you? 17 A. Yes. 18 Q. And are there other nurses? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. And so when somebody comes in, say, in a car 21 accident, does all the nurses and all the doctors go to 22 that one person; or are there some people just doing 23 other things? 24 A. Well, at Memorial Hermann, because it's a 25 trauma -- at Memorial Hermann, it's a Trauma 1. So a

9 1 Code 3 means that everybody in the trauma basically 2 stops what they're doing. So that would be the only 3 situation where you would have everybody come to you, to 4 that client. 5 Q. Well, I'm going to call your attention back to 6 October the 19th of 2007. 7 MR. BALDASSANO: May I approach the 8 witness, Judge? 9 THE COURT: You may. 10 Q. (By Mr. Baldassano) I'm going -- have you seen 11 any medical records recently on the case we're here 12 about? 13 A. In February. 14 Q. Well, let me show you State's Exhibit No. 10 15 and ask you if you could take a look at those. 16 And do they look like, in State's Exhibit 17 10 -- are you familiar with those as being Memorial 18 Hermann Trauma Center records, at least in part? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. Okay. And did you have an occasion to work on 21 the patient that came into the hospital -- be 22 involved -- on October 19th, 2007, somebody that 23 presented as a fire -- being involved or in a fire? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. All right. And do you remember roughly about

10 1 what time that was or what your shift was back then? 2 A. Oh, I worked 7:00 a to 7:00 p. 3 Q. And in a case like this that relates to these 4 records in State's Exhibit No. 10, what specifically is 5 your job, or what was your responsibility in this case? 6 A. In this case, I was kind of the nurse in 7 charge, well, you know, of him. I took over. So what I 8 did is I stood back while everybody did everything, and 9 I recorded. I recorded everything. And I also, after 10 it was -- everything was done, he was stabilized, I went 11 back into my nurse assessment. 12 Q. Okay. And when you say you recorded 13 everything, does that mean write it down? 14 A. Yes. 15 MR. BALDASSANO: May I approach the 16 witness, Judge? 17 THE COURT: You may. 18 Q. (By Mr. Baldassano) Ms. Atkisson, let me show 19 you what's labeled State's Exhibit No. 19. Is this the 20 same patient that you were working on? 21 A. Yes, sir. 22 Q. Okay. And is that the person in court today? 23 A. Yes, sir. 24 Q. Okay. When you say you were recording 25 information, what type of -- well, first of all, who is

11 1 it -- are people speaking or yelling out information? 2 A. Only one person is to speak. 3 Q. Okay. And who is that? 4 A. The resident. 5 Q. Is that a doctor? 6 A. Yes, sir. 7 Q. And what does the resident, the doctor, yell 8 out? What type of stuff? And what do you record or 9 write down? 10 A. Right when he gets in there -- it depends. 11 With this, he was going right through the -- we knew it 12 was fire, you know, from the report. So it was getting 13 him stable, you know. So we just start from the head to 14 toe assessment. So you want to do your ABCs; airway, 15 breathing and circulation. So he started on that. 16 Q. Is he yelling things out like, he's breathing, 17 not breathing, that kind of stuff? 18 A. Exactly. And everybody is doing their part. 19 They're putting the monitor leads on him. They're 20 starting an I.V. if one hasn't already been done. You 21 have respiratory there for the intubation, if needed. 22 Q. Okay. And does the doctor say or yell out 23 anything about singed hair? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. What does he say, and what do you write down?

12 1 A. Singed hair and chest hair noted. 2 Q. And what does that mean to you, as a nurse? 3 A. Relevant. I don't think I've written that 4 before in a nurse assessment, so -- 5 Q. Okay. So have you seen other people that were 6 taken out of fires? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. Okay. And is that essentially burned hair? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. And do you, in fact, write that down? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. And where was it noted, or what did the doctor 13 say, that the singed hair was? 14 A. In the chest area. 15 Q. All right. And at that point, are you looking 16 at the patient, or are you somewhere else writing things 17 down on a desk somewhere? 18 A. The patient is probably no more further to me 19 than that chair, than this chair right here. So I'm 20 looking. And it's a touch screen, so I'm typing and 21 touching. 22 Q. All right. And what does that, as a nurse, 23 indicate to you, burned hair? 24 A. Close proximity to fire. 25 Q. Did he say anything else of note about the

13 1 patient that you wrote down? 2 A. Not that I recall. 3 Q. Okay. After that period of time, do you then 4 do anything else related to the patient as far as 5 assessing him? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. What do you do? 8 A. I do a full head to toe assessment. 9 Q. What does that involve? 10 A. That involves -- I start from their head, and I 11 work all the way down to their toes. I'm going to check 12 the airway, breathing, circulation, the skin and make 13 sure it's intact. 14 Q. You might have noticed her hands smoking. 15 A. I know. I'm just talking. Sorry. 16 Skin intact. If there is any burns and 17 other injuries noted. 18 Q. And why do you do that if a doctor's already, 19 say, given the person the once over? 20 A. It's required by the State, and it's sound 21 nursing practice. 22 Q. Do you do that as a procedure in every case? 23 A. I do that with every patient. 24 Q. When you started at the head, what, if 25 anything, do you note about the defendant's, you know, I

14 1 guess head and face area. Is there anything noteworthy 2 there? 3 A. Do we happen to know where my documentation is 4 in this? 5 Q. I don't offhand. I'm hoping that you can -- 6 A. Okay. Let me look for it. 7 Q. Okay. Sorry. 8 MR. BALDASSANO: May I approach the 9 witness, Judge? 10 THE COURT: You may. 11 THE WITNESS: Okay. I found it. 12 Q. (By Mr. Baldassano) All right. 13 A. So you're asking what my assessment was? 14 Q. Yeah. I think you said -- you kind of stated, 15 I went from head to toe. And I'm just going to go 16 through what you observed. 17 A. Okay. So my assessment was done at 5:00 a.m. 18 when I documented it. And so, his airway was maintained 19 with a vent. He was vented. He had a breathing tube. 20 His respiration were equal. His circulation, all the 21 pulses were present. Do you want me to go through all 22 of this? 23 Q. Yes. 24 A. Okay. His cardiac rhythm and sinus tach, which 25 means that his heart rate was elevated. His capillary

15 1 focus, less than three seconds, so he was having good 2 circulation. There is edema in the throat interior, so 3 in this region here. 4 Q. What does that mean? 5 A. Swelling. 6 Q. Okay. Inside or outside? 7 A. Well, it would be inside. 8 Q. Okay. 9 A. The patient's unresponsive. He's in a -- 10 COURT REPORTER: Judge, I'm sorry. 11 THE COURT: Ms. Atkisson. 12 THE WITNESS: I talk really fast. 13 THE COURT: If you could, just try to slow 14 it down a little bit. 15 THE WITNESS: Can I have some of my water? 16 THE COURT: Sure. 17 MR. BALDASSANO: You drink while she 18 catches up. 19 Q. (By Mr. Baldassano) Okay. We just talked 20 about the -- I guess the neck area or the throat. Did 21 you notice anything on the outside of the neck? 22 A. That it was swollen. 23 Q. Okay. Outside, as well? 24 A. Well, interior. So, you know, it's just edema 25 in the inside of his throat.

16 1 Q. Okay. Anything else about the head or the neck 2 of note? 3 A. He was placed in, like, a collar, a neck 4 collar. 5 Q. Do you know why that happened? 6 A. That's precaution. That's just part of the 7 protocol. 8 Q. Okay. Going down the body from the neck, 9 anything else? 10 A. He was also placed on a cervical board, which 11 is the board that they -- the red board here, so his -- 12 the neck down. I listened to his breath sounds, and 13 they showed that it was clear and normal. I listened to 14 his heart sounds, and they were normal. I palpated his 15 chest, which was normal. I looked at his chest. And I 16 noticed that, you know, it's rising and falling like it 17 normally should on each side. I also checked for his 18 skin color. 19 Q. Anything about that of note? 20 A. Just regular and general. I wrote that it's 21 pink, so it was normal. I went down to his abdomen 22 there. 23 Q. All right. And I think you had noted earlier 24 the doctor said singed hair. Did you look for that, and 25 did you see that?

17 1 A. Yes. And then I wrote on here injury 2 description; because they have different templets, so 3 you have to go on the computer. So injury description, 4 I wrote smoke inhalation and singed chest hair noted. 5 Q. Describe for us what you could -- what you saw 6 regarding the singed chest hair. Where was it? 7 A. I remember that it was up here, below the 8 clavicle. 9 Q. And how big an area was it? 10 A. They had shaved him, so it was just some 11 patches. 12 Q. Okay. 13 A. And they shaved him because of -- to put the 14 EKG leads on him. 15 Q. And where were these patches of singed chest 16 hair? 17 A. In this area, and then where -- like the area 18 where they shaved him, you know, near the nipple. I'm 19 trying to not use medical terms. 20 Q. Is that a medical term? 21 A. No, not a nipple. But I was, like, doing it in 22 my head. 23 Q. And was he relatively -- you know, had a lot of 24 hair on his chest? 25 A. Yes.

18 1 Q. All right. 2 A. That's, hence, the shaving. 3 Q. Was the singed chest hair something that was -- 4 what you saw consistent with what the doctor had said? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. And anything further -- anything of note, going 7 beyond that, after you saw the singed chest hair? 8 A. As far as my assessment? 9 Q. Yes, as far as your assessment related to his 10 condition. 11 A. Yeah. I checked his abdomen, which is not 12 distended, so no trauma to there. And his pulses. 13 Q. Is that it? 14 A. And his pain, but he was intubated so -- 15 Q. Okay. And was there any report, or did you 16 see -- or, I guess, since he's intubated, he's not able 17 to cough, right, no coughing? Or could a person cough? 18 A. I don't think so, no, not coughing. He might 19 have a gag reflex if the medication wears off. 20 Q. Did you or did anybody note anything about him 21 coughing or anything like that, if you know? 22 A. Not to my recollection, no. 23 Q. And did you look at him carefully? 24 A. I'm sorry? 25 Q. Did you look at him carefully?

19 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. Any -- had you noted any redness on his skin 3 anywhere? 4 A. Not that I documented here -- 5 Q. Okay. 6 A. -- in my nurse's notes. 7 Q. And the singed chest hair, I mean, if using my 8 body, where would it be as far as, you know, in the 9 general area? Am I just -- is it here? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. Okay. Just here? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Okay. 14 MR. BALDASSANO: That's all I have, Judge. 15 I'll pass the witness. 16 THE COURT: Okay. Your cross. 17 MR. BARROW: I have no questions, Your 18 Honor. 19 THE COURT: All right. May this witness 20 be excused? 21 State, would you please call your next 22 witness. 23 MR. BALDASSANO: Ruben Hernandez. 24 THE COURT: Please have a seat in the 25 witness stand.