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Atkinson v. Parkway Health Center - Medical Malpractice Appeal

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Filed April 1st, 2026
Detected April 3rd, 2026
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Summary

The Arkansas Court of Appeals affirmed a Pulaski County Circuit Court directed verdict in favor of Parkway Health Center, Inc. in a medical malpractice wrongful death action. The court upheld the lower court's ruling that the estate of Virginia L. Atkinson failed to present required expert testimony to establish proximate causation or satisfy the medical malpractice locality rule under Arkansas law. The appeal was affirmed.

What changed

The Arkansas Court of Appeals, Division II, affirmed the circuit court's directed verdict in favor of defendants Parkway Health Center, Baptist Health Hospice, and Diamond Risk Insurance in case No. CV-24-729. The court upheld the requirement that medical malpractice plaintiffs present expert testimony to establish proximate causation and satisfy the locality rule under Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-114-206. The plaintiff also argued the court erred in applying the statute of limitations to bar injuries before June 1, 2016, two years before filing the original complaint in June 2018.

Healthcare facilities and medical malpractice practitioners should note that Arkansas courts will affirm directed verdicts when plaintiffs fail to present adequate expert testimony on causation and standard of care. Attorneys handling medical malpractice claims in Arkansas must ensure expert witnesses are prepared to address both proximate causation and the locality rule requirements under Arkansas law. This decision reinforces the procedural standards for expert testimony in nursing home negligence and wrongful death claims.

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April 1, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Mike Atkinson, Special Administrator of the Estate of Virginia L. Atkinson v. Parkway Health Center, Inc.

Court of Appeals of Arkansas

Combined Opinion

Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 208
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION II
No. CV-24-729

MIKE ATKINSON, SPECIAL
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF Opinion Delivered April 1, 2026
VIRGINIA L. ATKINSON, DECEASED,
AND ON BEHALF OF THE WRONGFUL
DEATH BENEFICIARIES OF VIRGINIA L.
APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
ATKINSON, DECEASED
COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
APPELLANT
SEVENTEENTH DIVISION
[NO. 60CV-18-3627]
V.
HONORABLE MACKIE M. PIERCE,
PARKWAY HEALTH CENTER, INC., JUDGE
D/B/A PARKWAY HEALTH CENTER;
BAPTIST HEALTH D/B/A BAPTIST
HEALTH HOSPICE; BAPTIST HEALTH;
PARKWAY VILLAGE, INC.; BAPTIST
HEALTH SENIOR CLINIC – PARKWAY
VILLAGE; DIAMOND RISK INSURANCE,
LLC; JOHN DOE INSURANCE
COMPANIES 2 THROUGH 10,
UNKNOWN DEFENDANTS; AND JOHN
DOES 1 THROUGH 10, UKNOWN
DEFENDANTS
APPELLEES AFFIRMED

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

Appellant Mike Atkinson1 appeals a Pulaski County Circuit Court order directing a

verdict in favor of separate appellees Parkway Health Center, Inc., d/b/a Parkway Health

1
Atkinson sued the appellees in his capacity as special administrator of the estate of
Virginia L. Atkinson, deceased, and on behalf of Virginia’s wrongful death beneficiaries.
Center; Baptist Health d/b/a Baptist Health Hospice; and their insurer, Diamond Risk

Insurance, LLC (collectively, “Appellees”). The circuit court directed the verdict because it

found that Atkinson failed to present expert testimony to either establish proximate

causation or to satisfy the locality rule as set forth in Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-

114-206 (Repl. 2016). On appeal, Michael challenges those findings and also contends the

circuit court erroneously found that the statute of limitations barred consideration of any

injuries sustained before June 1, 2016—two years before the filing of the original complaint

in this matter. Concluding that Michael failed to present the required expert testimony to

support his claims, we affirm.

This case originates from the death of Virginia Atkinson on August 9, 2016. In June

2018, Virginia’s son Michael filed a wrongful-death suit against multiple entities2 alleging

that his mother had died as a result of their negligence. Because we conclude that the circuit

court’s decision to direct a verdict in Appellees’ favor was properly based on Michael’s failure

2
The original complaint filed June 1, 2018, named the following defendants: Parkway
Health Center, Inc., d/b/a Parkway Health Center; Baptist Health d/b/a/ Baptist Health
Hospice; Baptist Health; Parkway Village, Inc.; Baptist Health Senior Clinic – Parkway
Village; John Doe Insurance Companies 1 through 10, Unknown Defendants; and John
Does 1 through 10, Unknown Defendants. In October 2018, Michael substituted Diamond
Risk Insurance, LLC, for John Doe Insurance Company 1. The court granted partial
summary judgment in January 2024 dismissing separate defendants Baptist Health; Parkway
Village, Inc.; and Baptist Health Senior Clinic – Parkway Village from the action. The
remaining unnamed John Doe defendants were never served and thus were dismissed by the
entry of the circuit court’s final judgment. Ark. R. Civ. P. 54(5).

2
to present the requisite expert testimony, only a brief recitation of the facts is necessary for

an understanding of the issues on appeal.3

Sometime before August 2012, Virginia Atkinson, a widow, remarried and moved

into Parkway Village, an independent living community, to live with her husband. In August

of that year, Virginia and her husband transitioned into Parkway Health Center, a nursing

home. He passed away in 2013.

In February 2016, Virginia developed a decubitus ulcer, or bedsore, on her coccyx.

At the time, Virginia was suffering from advanced dementia that caused her to have severe

contractures of her arms, hands, and legs and resulted in her eventual refusal to eat and

drink at times. By June 1, her bedsore had grown and was infected. She began losing a

significant amount weight and became malnourished and severely dehydrated. Her hands

were so severely deformed from the contractures that her fingernails were digging into her

hands. Her leg contractures made it impossible for her to lie flat in bed. By this time, she

had been placed on hospice, and her son Michael, who was her power of attorney, had

informed Parkway Health Center that she should not receive aggressive care, i.e., no CPR,

no hospital trips, and no feeding tubes. Instead, Parkway Health Center and Baptist Health

Hospice were to provide Virginia with only pain management and end-of-life comfort care.

3
Appellant’s counsel is advised that Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 4–2(a)(6) states
that “[t]he appellant's brief shall contain a concise statement of the case without argument.”
While appellant's statement of the case violates this rule in that it is clearly argumentative, it
is not so flagrant that we must order rebriefing.

3
While under hospice care, Virginia was treated by three different physicians, was

cared for by nursing home and hospice nurses, was visited by a social worker, and received

pastoral care. The nurses were ordered to clean, medicate, and dress Virginia’s wounds. They

were also ordered to provide her with hand care, including soaking her hands in Dakin’s

solution, trimming her nails if needed, and stretching her fingers. Staff was to administer

morphine sulfate for pain thirty minutes before hand care and every two hours as needed.

On June 30, Virginia’s daughter, Annette Haynes, was visiting Virginia and

discovered the advanced nature of Virginia’s ulcer. She photographed the wound and sent

the picture to Michael. Michael had her immediately transferred to the hospital for

treatment. Unfortunately, Virginia passed away on August 9 after being transferred from the

hospital to another nursing facility.

On June 1, 2018, Michael filed suit. Because of the two-year statute of limitations

applicable to medical-malpractice actions, the circuit court granted a motion in limine

barring evidence of any alleged acts of negligence occurring before June 1, 2016. Thus,

Michael was limited to proof of negligence during a thirty-day period from June 1 until to

June 30 before Virginia was admitted to the hospital for treatment.

The case eventually proceeded to a jury trial on May 7, 2024. At trial, Michael

presented the testimony of two expert witnesses—Nurse Maryann Hewston and Dr. Richard

Dupee. They opined that the appellees had deviated from the standard of care in their care

4
and treatment of Virginia and that the deviations caused Virginia pain and suffering and

hastened her death.4

Regarding the applicable standard of care, the following colloquy took place between

Nurse Hewston and Michael’s attorney:

Q: In the United States of America, is there a national standardized standard of
care for the operating of long-term care facilities?

A: Yes.

Q: And how did you become familiar with that?

A: Over my years of working in nursing, I’m familiar with the nursing standard
of care, because we perform it every day when we’re providing care. But I’m
also familiar with the nursing home regulations because I got involved in long-
term care in 1992 in opening up our hospital-based skilled nursing facility.

Q: Are the - -

A: And I use it every day, because I’m still working.

Q: Do the national standards apply to the states?

A: They mimic them, yes. They’re very similar. They have resident rights. They
have all the different things that the federal - - federal and state regulations
mimic each other.

Q: An if Arkansas has adopted the national standards - - first of all, are you aware
if Arkansas has adopted the national standards?

A: Yes.

4
Notably, their opinions were based solely on the nursing home’s medical records.
Nursing-home staff documented their care in a paper record. Care provided by hospice was
documented in an electronic medical-records system with some notes also being documented
in the nursing home’s paper record. Michael provided his experts only with the former.

5
....

Q: Now, you’re familiar with the Arkansas rules and regulations?

A: Yes, I am.

Q: And you have seen the regulations that establish certain licensing standards
that describe what must be done in order to have and maintain a license?

A: Yes.

On cross-examination, Nurse Hewston was asked whether she was testifying as to the

standard of care for both the nursing home and hospice, and she stated her opinions related

to both providers.

Dr. Dupee, an internist in geriatric nutrition at Tufts Medical Center in Boston, also

provided testimony against both appellees. Unlike Nurse Hewston, however, he was not

questioned about his familiarity with the local standards of care applicable to either appellee.

Nevertheless, he stated that, within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, the nursing

home and hospice were not providing appropriate medical treatment to Virginia.

Dr. Dupee also opined, to some extent, on proximate causation. On this point, the

following colloquy occurred:

Q: Within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, did the failure to provide
appropriate care and treatment to [Virginia] cause her mental, psychosocial
harm?

A: Oh, yeah, no question. I mean, it’s a painful pressure ulcer. It hurts. It wore
her down. It took away what limited reserve she had, and she died as a result.

Q: In the absence of the wound that was there in June, did she have any condition
that was leading - - that would have led to her imminent death?

6
A: No. She had dementia. And as an expert in dementia, which I kind of consider
I am, I think that it’s almost impossible to say when a patient is going to die
from their dementia. So, certainly, for sure she was not dying from dementia
in June. But we have this terrible pressure ulcer, which was a significant
contributing cause to her death.

Q: Within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, was the reason that you find
that the hospice order to re-certify her for June of 2018 [sic], was a result of
the pressure sore?

A: Yes. That’s - - in my opinion, that’s why she was appropriate for recertification.

....

Q: Failure to document the pressure ulcers, the assessments, shape, size, colors,
the odors, more than those eight pages of notes during which addressed the
wound, was that documentation something that caused, within a reasonable
degree of medical certainty, harm to this resident, physical harm?

A: Well, remember the documentation reflects assessments; right? So if you assess
something, you document it. You assess it, as I mentioned, minimally once a
week, three or four times a week, so the record reflects assessments.

If the record doesn’t say anything for days and days and days about the pressure
ulcer, which we just saw then it wasn’t assessed, in my opinion, and therefore
harm was done.

At the close of all the evidence, appellees moved for a directed verdict, asserting that

Michael had failed to offer an expert opinion on the standard of care in the requisite locality,

Little Rock, Arkansas; instead, Michael offered testimony regarding only the national and/or

statewide standard of care, which is insufficient under the statute. They also asserted that

Michael failed to present sufficient evidence of proximate causation. More specifically, they

argued that Michael failed to present evidence regarding both what happened to Virginia

once she left Parkway Health Center and what caused her death other than his claim that

7
Virginia died from her wound, which was present before June 2016. As a result, Michael

failed to adequately present evidence that, but for some action or inaction on the part of the

appellees in June 2016, Virginia would have lived. The court granted the appellees’ motion.

Michael timely filed a motion to reconsider. The court did not rule on his motion,

and it was deemed denied. A timely notice of appeal followed.

On appeal, Michael challenges the circuit court’s grant of a directed verdict as it

relates to the absence of expert testimony regarding standard of care in a particular locality

and on proximate causation. He further argues that the circuit court erred in concluding

that the statute of limitations barred consideration of injuries before June 1, 2016, because

Virginia was under a continuing course of treatment within the facility. Because Michael

failed to satisfy the requirement of the medical-malpractice statute that an expert attest to

the standard of care in the relevant or similar locality, we affirm.

A motion for directed verdict should be granted only if there is no substantial

evidence to support a jury verdict. Wynne-Ark., Inc. v. Asphalt Producers, LLC, 2025 Ark. App.

540, 726 S.W.3d 620 (citing Smith v. Heather Manor Care Ctr., Inc., 2012 Ark. App. 584, 424

S.W.3d 368). Stated another way, a motion for a directed verdict should be granted only

when the evidence viewed is so insubstantial as to require the jury’s verdict for the party to

be set aside. Id. Where the evidence is such that fair-minded persons might reach different

conclusions, then a jury question is presented, and the directed verdict should be reversed.

Id. Substantial evidence is evidence of sufficient force and character to induce the mind of

the fact-finder past speculation and conjecture. Id.

8
Here, the circuit court granted a directed verdict in favor of the appellees, finding

that Michael failed to present the expert testimony necessary to support his causes of action.

After reviewing the evidence presented at trial, we agree.

In medical-malpractice actions, unless the asserted negligence can be comprehended

by a jury as a matter of common knowledge, a plaintiff has the additional burden of proving

three propositions by expert testimony: (1) the applicable standard of care; (2) the medical

provider’s failure to act in accordance with that standard; and (3) that the failure was the

proximate cause of the plaintiff's injuries. Ark. Code Ann. § 16-114-206 (a) (Repl. 2016).

When the defendant demonstrates the plaintiff’s failure to produce the requisite expert

testimony, the defendant has demonstrated that no genuine issues of material fact exist and

is therefore entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. See Johnson v. Schafer, 2018 Ark. App.

630, 565 S.W.3d 144.

Here, Michael’s expert witnesses, Nurse Hewston and Dr. Dupee, failed to satisfy the

requirement that an expert witness attest to the standard of care in the same or similar

locality. Our supreme court has endorsed the locality rule as to the standard of care in

Arkansas. Plymate v. Martinelli, 2013 Ark. 194. In order to meet the locality requirement, an

expert must demonstrate familiarity with the standard of practice in that or a similar locality.

Bailey-Gray v. Martinson, 2013 Ark. App. 80. Although we consider the geographical location,

size, and character of the community, similarity of localities is based not on population or

area but on the similarity of the local medical facilities, practices, and advantages. Id.

9
Turning to the facts at hand, it should be noted that Nurse Hewston’s testimony

regarding only the national standard of care, which she claimed applied to Arkansas as a

whole—is insufficient. Dr. Dupee did not provide any testimony as to locality at all. Arkansas

strictly adheres to the locality rule. Harvey v. Johnson, 2025 Ark. App. 393, 715 S.W.3d 930.

Our courts have consistently held that testimony regarding a national or general statewide

standard of care is insufficient. Plymate, 2013 Ark. 194 (expert equated state and national

standard of care; court held statewide standard of care insufficient); Wolford v. St. Paul Fire &

Marine Ins. Co., 331 Ark. 426, 961 S.W.2d 743 (1998) (testimony regarding a national

standard of care is insufficient when expert did not demonstrate familiarity with locality

where alleged malpractice occurred); Harvey, supra (expert did not properly establish

similarities between the out-of-state and Arkansas locality; court held national standard of

care insufficient); Gilbow v. Richards, 2010 Ark. App. 780 (expert did not testify to any

knowledge regarding the locality or its standard of care; court held national standard of care

insufficient). Here, Michael simply failed in his burden of proof on the requisite standard of

care in Little Rock or Pulaski County, Arkansas.

Michael contends, however, that appellees waived any challenge to the locality rule

when they conceded that Nurse Hewston was an expert during trial. Michael misapprehends

the locality rule.

At trial, the appellees objected to the court informing the jury that Nurse Hewston

had been qualified as an expert witness. They argued that it was enough for the witness to

be considered an expert and be allowed to express her opinions without the court identifying

10
the witness as an expert to the jury. In essence, they argued that to inform the jury that the

witness was an expert was tantamount to a comment on the witness’s credibility. In any

event, Michael’s argument misses the point. Even if appellees stipulated that Nurse Hewston

was qualified to give an opinion as to the requisite standard of care, she did not do so.

Because Michael failed in his burden of proof on this point, we need not address any

of his other arguments on appeal.

Affirmed.

GLADWIN, J., agrees.

VIRDEN, J., concurs without opinion.

Wilkes & Associates, P.A., a/k/a Wilkes & McHugh, P.A., by: James L. Wilkes II; and The

Edwards Law Firm, PLLC, by: Robert H. Edwards, for appellant.

Mitchell, Williams, Selig, Gates & Woodyard, PLLC, by: Ben Jackson, Graham Talley, and

Adam D. Franks, for separate appellees Parkway Health Center, Baptist Hospice, and

Diamond Risk Insurance, LLC.

11

Named provisions

Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-114-206 (Locality Rule)

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Ark. Ct. App.
Filed
April 1st, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
2026 Ark. App. 208
Docket
CV-24-729

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Patients
Industry sector
6221 Hospitals & Health Systems
Activity scope
Medical Malpractice Litigation Wrongful Death Claims Expert Testimony Requirements
Geographic scope
US-AR US-AR

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Civil Rights Consumer Protection

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