Ficklin v. MacFarlane
This text of 550 P.2d 1295 (Ficklin v. MacFarlane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Appeal from the dismissal by the trial court of an action based on alleged malpractice for failure to establish a prima facie case. Affirmed with • costs to defendants.
Mr. Ficklin, in April 1971, experiencing chest pains, consulted his family physician, who referred him to Dr. Jahsman, an internal medicine specialist, who diagnosed his ailment as heart disease with angina pectoris symptoms. He prescribed nitroglycerin treatment. After the chest pain incident, plaintiff was unable to return to work, his condition became worse, followed by a cardio infarction, for which he was hospitalized for ten days. Dr. Jahsman continued the treatment, when in September 1971, plaintiff’s chest pain increased, with more fatigue. Dr. Jahsman suggested that plaintiff consider a rather new medical technique having to do with an artery bypass. Such an operation had not been conducted in plaintiff’s home town of Ogden, but had been at Salt Lake City, about 35 miles to the south. A coronary arteriogram revealed a complete blockage of a coronary artery.
Dr. Jahsman discussed the risks of such surgery with plaintiffs and the alternatives thereof, also advising them that the operation had not been conducted before in Ogden. He warned that Mr. Ficklin might not survive the operation. He did not tell plaintiff that there was a risk of damage to the central nervous system (which the doctor may have considered inconsequential and unnecessary). At the trial it developed that such damage did occur in this case, but that the risk thereof was an extremely remote one, and less than one per cent. The doctor testified that he advised plaintiff that there was a difference of opinion in the medical profession as to the advisability of this type of operation and that there was a lot of national publicity, about it, and brought the matter up to find out if plaintiff was interested in it. He said that it was a somewhat dangerous procedure, but did not list all the dangers.
The plaintiff was aware that there may be another heart attack and that it could be fatal, but without an operation there would be continued disability in any event. After the arteriogram and at the suggestion of Dr. Jahsman who had been treating him, Mr. Ficklin consented to the operation and consented to consult with a thoracic physician, who could perform the operation. Defendants were employed and it is conceded that the operation was performed by defendants, as a team, without negligence of any kind. It is also conceded that the only question is whether there was malpractice if these defendants had not informed plaintiffs as to all risks, including that of death, no matter how remote. Dr. Jahs-man had at considerable length warned Mr. Ficklin of the dangers and risks, and it is not unreasonable to conclude defendants knew the history of this case.
[1297]*1297Before the operation, but after Dr. Jahs-man had advised the Ficklins of the serious possibility of risk under the concededly dangerous operation, defendants told them what the surgical procedure would be, accompanied it by commenting and adding that there was a risk in any surgery. After the surgery, defendants learned that plaintiff had suffered a neurological defect reflected by seriously damaged vision amounting to almost blindness, an impaired speech and paralysis of Mr. Ficklin’s left side. The defendants, and a neurologist called in for consultation, could not determine the cause of the central nervous system damage, but concluded that any number of things could have caused it.
Counsel for defendants candidly admits that a physician should consult his patients and advise them of possible complications, but he does not concede that as a matter of necessity he must advise as to ones that, in a physician’s studied judgment very well might cause hesitation on the part of his patient and where, because of such hesitation, his illness most assuredly would be terminal, where an operation well might prevent such consequence, — which in a particular instance would be considered a good medical decision and practice in the community.
Counsel for plaintiffs admits that his thesis about the “informed consent doctrine” is, that a surgeon, to be free from malpractice liability, must advise his patient as to every material, conceivable risk. In so saying, he urges that no medical testimony therefore is admissible to establish malpractice under the so-called “informed consent doctrine,” — with which conclusion we disagree. That the doctrine is claimed to be some sort of modern trend, is simply a conclusion or departure not reflected generally in courts of last resort. This doctrine simply is the minority view. Almost all the authorities cited by plaintiffs are those of intermediate appellate courts,1 and even some of those do not support plaintiffs’ thesis but simply suggest the principle that a physician may be derelict if he does not advise his patient reasonably of possible risks, not all of them. On careful analysis, most of those cases, including his cases in courts of last resort, do not reject the principle that in medical malpractice cases, expert testimony is admissible to show or reject negligence based on accepted standards in the community. ZeBarth v. Swedish Hospital, 81 Wash.2d 12, 499 P.2d 1, 52 A.L.R.3d 1067, cited with approval by plaintiffs, actually espouses this estabished rule. Others cited either expressly or impliedly adhere to such principle, and the A.L.R. reference above concedes this to be the case.
The one case apparently supporting plaintiffs’ contention is Cooper v. Roberts (footnote 1), which also is only an intermediate appellate court. It concluded that expert testimony concerning malpractice under the “informed consent doctrine,” was not admissible and compensability was allowable even where the percentage of risk of injury was .0004 per cent, — so that in that case if the physician told his patient of 9,996 possible risks but neglected or forgot to tell him of four possible, and perhaps infinitesimally, minor ailments, he would be liable in damages. We think this is unrealistic, rather time consuming, and a case to which this court cannot subscribe.
This court is committed to the principle that expert testimony is admissible in malpractice cases based on alleged negligent treatment below standards extant in medical circles.2 This is the majority rule, [1298]*1298as reflected in other cases.3 We can see no logical reason why the same principle should not apply in malpractice cases based on a failure to inform a patient of the material, usual, but not highly speculative risks, — which procedure should be a part of a medical practitioner’s duty, — the negligent failure to perform in violation of the accepted practices in medical circles in the community being compensable, — such standard treatment being no more, no less, than any other negligence, such as substandard suturing, or the classic leaving of a sponge in the body as a replacement for an appendix.
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550 P.2d 1295, 1976 Utah LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ficklin-v-macfarlane-utah-1976.