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News
Miami Herald
January 13, 2012
Miramar teen who lost limbs wins millions in malpractice suit
After her spleen was removed when she was a newborn, Shaniah
Rolle received an expired vaccine that jurors decided contributed
to complications that led to the amputation of her arms and legs.
A Miramar High School student who lost all four limbs
as a result of medication errors ago has won a $12.6 million medical
malpractice award against the University of Miami’s Miller
School of Medicine.
The amount the teen will receive, however, will cut almost in half
because jurors deemed her mother was 40 percent at fault.
The verdict was rendered Friday after a five-week trial and three
days of deliberations in Miami-Dade Circuit Court before Judge William
Thomas. The award is expected to be appealed.
Attorneys said Shaniah Rolle suffered intestinal problems that caused
her spleen, along with other organs, to be removed when she was
a newborn. Because the spleen acts as a filter against bacteria
and viruses, she had to be given medicine that would prevent infections.
In October 1998, her mother, Queen Seriah Azulla Dabrio, took the
child to the medical school’s pediatric unit for a checkup.
A medical assistant injected Shaniah with a special vaccination
designed to protect against infection for people without spleens.
The vaccine, however, had expired five months earlier. “It
was a medication error,” said Fort Lauderdale attorney Crane
Johnstone, who represented Shaniah.
Eight months later, Shaniah became seriously ill and was rushed
to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. She had a bacterial infection
throughout her body that caused blood clots to form in her arms
and legs. The infection led to gangrene in her limbs, and doctors
amputated her arms and legs above the joints.
“She developed the very disease they were supposed to inoculate
her against,” Johnstone said. Her suit was filed 10 years
ago.
Shaniah, outfitted with prosthetics, has pursued a normal existence
since her amputations, Johnstone said. She is on the cheerleading
squad at Miramar High School.
“She’s a miraculous kid,” he said. “She’s
probably going to live another 50 or 60 years.”
UM’s attorneys, Christopher Knight of Miami and John Hall
of Atlanta, argued that Shaniah would have contracted her illness
despite being given the expired vaccine. Her mother, an expert testified,
failed to give Shaniah enough medication to help stave off the infection.
That was the basis for jurors assigning 40 percent negligence to
Dabrio. The judge, according to the verdict form, “will make
an appropriate reduction in the damages awarded.”
Dr. Jeffrey Bosco, who treated Shaniah, was found by jurors to be
5 percent at fault. Several other doctors named in the suit were
found not liable.
UM’s medical school declined to comment. Fort Lauderdale attorney
Charles Patrick, who also represented Shaniah, said he expects the
medical school to appeal the verdict.
The lawyers would not make Shaniah or her mother available for comment
pending that appeal, Patrick said. Dabrio could not be reached for
comment.

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Sheldon J. Schlesinger, P.A. represents clients throughout
the state of Florida including the cities of Boca Raton, Boynton
Beach, Carol City, Cooper City, Coral Gables, Coral Springs, Davie,
Deerfield Beach, Delray Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Hialeah, Hollywood,
Jupiter, Lake Worth, Miramar, Miami, Oakland Park, Palm Beach, Palm
Beach Gardens, Palm Springs, Pompano Beach, and Rivera Beach
Broward County • Miami-Dade County • Palm Beach
County
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