A Washington hospital faces a lawsuit after a mix-up led to the wrong patient being taken off life support, resulting in his death. The incident, which occurred in August 2021 at PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center in Vancouver, Washington, has sparked allegations of negligence and severe emotional distress.
A tragic mistake
David Wells, 69, was rushed to the hospital after choking on a piece of steak. Unconscious and unable to breathe, he was mistakenly identified as his hospital roommate, Mike Beehler. The hospital staff, believing Wells was Beehler, contacted Beehler’s sister, Debbie Danielson, to make the heart-wrenching decision to end life support.
“They said, ‘He’s basically brain dead,’” Danielson told KGW. “Do you want us to keep him on life support, or do you want to pull the plug?”
Danielson reluctantly authorized the decision. A week later, she received a shocking phone call—from her supposedly deceased brother, Beehler.
“I said, ‘You can’t be alive. You’re dead!’” she recalled.
The fallout from the mix-up
The hospital’s error caused widespread confusion. Wells’ body was sent to a funeral home, and a death notice for Beehler was published in the local newspaper. It was only when Wells’ family was contacted by the Clark County Medical Examiner’s Office that the truth emerged.
“They basically told me there was a medical emergency regarding my father. He had been pronounced dead,” said Shawn Wells, David Wells’ son.
The revelation of the mix-up came two years later when reporters reached out to Shawn Wells. “I’ll never be able to get that decision back,” he said. “It’s disturbing. I don’t know if I’m going to get over it.”
Legal action against the hospital and others
The lawsuit, filed by Shawn Wells, Debbie Danielson, and Mike Beehler, accuses PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center of negligence and causing severe emotional distress through its “extreme and outrageous conduct.”
Additional lawsuits target the American Medical Response ambulance service, All County Cremation & Burial, and the Clark County Medical Examiner’s Office for their roles in the misidentification and subsequent errors.
The lawsuits seek unspecified damages for the profound emotional impact and mishandling of the situation.
The case has highlighted serious concerns about procedural failures in healthcare and emergency services, sparking calls for better safeguards to prevent such devastating errors in the future.
“This is an egregious mistake,” said Shawn Wells. “They dropped the ball so badly.”