After shaving, a guest at the Ramada in Beverly
Hills reached for a hairbrush and struck his nose on a clothes hook with enough
force to bring tears to his eyes and blood to his nose. He noticed that the
hook had been installed at nose level -- clearly a poor design decision and
dangerous. A hotel that tolerated such an unsafe condition was irresponsible
and perhaps legally liable. The guest was, of course, a lawyer.
As I entered the general manager’s office, the
guest interrupted a harangue as we exchanged introductions.
This was awkward. My sole obligation is to my
patient, but it was obvious the manager wanted help in fending off the furious
guest. When I suggested privacy for our consultation the guest told me to take
care of things on the spot.
Young doctors love to blurt out a diagnosis as
soon as the patient walks through the door (which is possible more often than
you think). Not only do patients find this offensive, they don’t believe it, so
doctors learn to give the impression they are thinking deeply before announcing
an opinion.
I examined the nose from several angles. I
carefully palpated it. I pulled out my otoscope and peered up his nostrils.
Finally I announced that he had suffered a nasal contusion that, fortunately,
had done no harm. He needed no X-ray, no treatment. He could go about his
business.
According to the law, a person has no grounds to
sue unless he has suffered damage, but a competent lawyer can discover damage
in any situation. I doubt visions of profit had brought the guest to the
manager’s office. He was upset at his pain and wanted sympathy. The manager had
offered to comp the guest’s bill but had maintained his dignity when a humble
apology would have worked better.
Still fuming, the guest asked my opinion of the danger
in installing clothes hooks at precisely nose level. I agreed the matter
deserved attention but added that noses come at many levels.