One of the largest medical malpractice verdicts in recent Minnesota history was awarded this month to a former auto mechanic who suffered spinal cord damage and paralysis in a 2012 surgery.
Joseph Lakoskey received $9.1 million in the Hennepin County jury award after his attorney argued that an anesthesiologist left him dangerously dehydrated before surgery to repair a perforated bowel at North Memorial Medical Center in Robbinsdale.
"Joe Lakoskey wants nothing more than to have his life and ability to walk back," Brandon Thompson, an attorney with the Robins Kaplan firm, said in a statement Friday. "This verdict will provide him with the resources he needs to live as independent a life as possible."
Lakoskey, 51, went to North Memorial with flu-like symptoms and received fluids for dehydration while doctors found his injury and recommended surgery. The problem, his attorneys argued, was halting treatment of dehydration while starting him on anesthesia an hour before surgery — a double whammy that caused his blood pressure to drop and his spinal cord to receive inadequate blood flow.
Attorneys for Anesthesiology P.A., the private practice that provides anesthesia services at the hospital, denied that was the cause of Lakoskey's injury. A call to the lead attorney on Friday was not returned, so it is unclear if the doctors' group will appeal.
The National Practitioner Data Bank lists only two larger awards since 1990 involving licensed Minnesota practitioners — a $22 million settlement for inadequate monitoring by a nurse in 2000, and an $11 million settlement involving a catastrophic birth injury to a baby. The federal database, however, misses some cases because of reporting loopholes.
The Lakoskey case was unique in that the award came from a jury verdict; the top 50 awards in the databank were all out-of-court settlements.
Hoping to resume therapy