SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-1146-98T3
A-1194-98T3
JOHN COUCH,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
VISITING HOME CARE SERVICE
OF OCEAN COUNTY and OCEAN COUNTY
HEALTH DEPARTMENT,
Defendants-Appellants.
___________________________________
Argued February 15, 2000 - Decided March 2,
2000
Before Judges Pressler, Arnold, and Bilder.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Chancery Division, Ocean County.
Seymour J. Kagan argued the cause for
appellant Ocean County Health Department in
A-1146-98T3 (Berry, Kagan, Sahradnik, Kotzas
& Riordan, attorneys; Mr. Kagan, of counsel;
Dina R. Khajezadeh, on the brief).
Philip G. Mylod argued the cause for
appellant Visiting Home Care Service of Ocean
County in A-1194-98T3 (William H. McKinnon,
on the brief).
No brief was filed on behalf of respondent
(Russell G. Cheek, attorney, was permitted to
argue on respondent's behalf).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
BILDER, J.A.D. (retired and temporarily assigned on recall).
These are appeals, consolidated for purpose of this opinion,
by care givers, defendants Visiting Home Care Service of Ocean
County and Ocean County Health Department, from an order of the
Chancery Division requiring them to continue, for an indefinite
period, home nursing care which, in their professional opinion,
is beyond their capacity to provide and which, in their
professional opinion, places their care givers, registered
nurses, licensed practical nurses, and certified home health
aides, in a dangerous situation viz-a-viz their professional
licenses and their professional integrity.
where help would be available all the time, plaintiff testified:
Well, believe me, I've thought about it for a long
time. This is 1998, not 1698, and I have the ability to run
my household and keep my affairs in order. And with the
assistance I do get, everything is fine. I feel more
comfortable there. I am able to eat what I want and when I
want, almost, within their time frame. I'm able to pursue
the interests that I have. And it's my form of being
independent.
In his oral decision of August 27, 1998, the trial judge
capsulized plaintiff's hunger for independence thus:
And John Couch has no backup from relatives. He is
totally handicapped physically, but competent mentally. He
wants to remain where he has [been] since 1990. He created
an environment which has been safe and secure for nearly a
decade. He is happy in his home. Everything that he owns
is there, and he wants to spend all of his remaining days in
his apartment.
Although the ulcer was being medically controlled by the
surgeon, Dr. Matez, the Visiting Home Care Service considered the
care required by the condition to be beyond its capabilities and
accordingly on March 9, 1998 advised plaintiff,
The Visiting Home Care Service of Ocean County has provided
home health aide service to assist you in your activities of
daily living since 1990. Unfortunately, we will no longer
be able to provide this service to you after March 24, 1998
due to the unsafe home care situation and your increasing
need for more assistance than our home health aides can
legally provide.
You do have the right to choose to remain in your home. It
is our recommendation, however, based upon our professional
nursing assessment, that you obtain the more skilled
services of an RN or LPN for your decubitus care and
repositioning as well as 24 hour assistance with your
activities of daily living at home or in a long term care
facility.
And on March 12, 1998 the Ocean County Health Department advised
plaintiff:
The Ocean County Health Department has been providing
skilled intermittent nursing services to you since 1990.
Over the course of these past eight years, your nursing care
needs were met by the agency nurses and your activities of
daily living were met by home health aides from Visiting
Home Care Services. As your Multiple Sclerosis progressed,
your care needs intensified and in January of 1998 when the
agency nurse discovered the presence of a decubitus
(pressure sore) on your right buttock, orders for additional
care were received from your physician and the nurse visited
daily to provide care.
Several attempts to have your decubitus evaluated by
your physician were unsuccessful, and finally an office
visit was made by you on January 15, 1998. At that time
your physician recommended surgery to debride the wound.
Again, two appointments were made for surgery and not kept.
Finally, the wound was debrided on February 17, 1998. Post
surgery your physician increased wound care orders to twice
daily.
Home health aid services were being paid for by
Medicare and Home Care Expansion Program (HCEP) monies. On
February 7, 1998, the funding for the home health aide under
HCEP ended and I believe you made a private arrangement with
Visiting Home Care Services to continue with coverage for
evening hours.
This agency's Nursing Supervisor made a visit to your
home to evaluate your care needs. The physician had agreed
to twice a day visits for wound care, but would have liked
more visits per day if possible. Also, we have been
informed by Visiting Home Care Services that they are
terminating your home health aide services on March 24,
1998. Since your nursing care needs are increasing and you
will be without any assistance for your activities of daily living, your care needs exceed the scope of care that the
Ocean County Health Department is licensed to provide. For
this reason, we are giving you thirty (30) days notice that
the Ocean County Health Department will no longer provide
you with nursing services after April 14, 1998.
On March 20, 1998 plaintiff brought suit to enjoin Ocean
County Health Department and Visiting Home Care Service from
terminating in-home skilled nursing and home health aid services
to him. Ocean County Health Department and Visiting Home Care
Service appeal from an order of August 28, 1998 requiring them to
continue indefinitely to provide services at the same level as
was provided prior to the appearance of the decubitus ulcer in
January 1998.
who had been the direct supervising nurse for plaintiff's care
since 1995, testified:
There are several reasons, but I think the most relevant for
the client is that we really cannot provide safely the
amount of care that is needed since he has developed the
wound that is significant in size and requires much more
than the minimum care that we are able to put in at this
time. It requires good nursing skill, which is at least
repositioning, skin care, proper hydration, improved dietary
habits, all of this which would be at least a minimum of
every two hours. John can no longer reposition himself. He
has a significant wound which does require much more care
than can be rendered in the home. There is no significant
caregiver. He lives alone. A client when, and God forbid
they do reach this position, when it happens, they must
have somebody else to give them the needed care, whether it be a close relative, some significant caregiver. We don't
have that.
To paraphrase what we said in Matthies, when the plaintiff
selects a course which the professional nurses feel inappropriate
or unsafe, they are free to refuse to participate and to withdraw
from the case upon providing reasonable assurances that basic
treatment and care will continue. At oral argument on August 27,
1998, the Ocean County Health Department accepted the
responsibility for arranging for continued care, advising the
court that space was available for plaintiff at the Bayview
Nursing Home. As its counsel said, plaintiff should not be
compelled to go there, he is competent and capable of making his
own decisions. But the professional care givers, registered
nurses, licensed professional nurses, and certified aides, cannot
be forced to participate in conduct which counters their own
professional practices and ethics. The trial judge's requirement
that these professionals continue indefinitely to provide
services at the same level as was provided prior to the
appearance of the decubitus ulcer in January 1998 is an
unwarranted invasion of their professional responsibility.