OPINION
delivered the opinion of the court,
Pursuant to Rule 11 of the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure, we accepted this appeal to clarify the meaning of our holding in
Givens v. Mullikin,
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On August 27, 2000, Walter Alsip presented himself to the emergency room of Johnson City Medical Center after a four-day history of sore throat, ear ache, fever, and chills. Upon examination by a staff physician, Dr. Mark Wilkinson, Alsip was treated and releаsed.
Alsip returned to the emergency room the next day with worsening symptoms. Dr. Wilkinson ordered a CT scan, which revealed that Alsip had a peritonsillar abscess. Dr. Wilkinson then referred Alsip to a specialist, Dr. Louis Módica.
Dr. Módica performed an aspiration, whereby a needle was placed into the tissue of the abscess. Ten minutes after the aspiration, a nurse informed Dr. Módica that Alsip was bleeding heavily from the aspiration site. Upon examinatiоn, Dr. Módica determined that while performing the aspiration he had inadvertently punctured an artery. Dr. Módica immediately consulted an anesthesiologist and ordered an operating room, but one was not available. In the interim, Dr. Módica applied pressure in an attempt to control the bleeding. Although Dr. Módica characterized Alsip’s condition as an emergency, the wait for an operating room lasted more than two hours. During this time, Alsip suffered significant blood lost and went into hypovolemic shock. Surgery eventually was performed to repair Alsip’s lacerated artery.
The critical care team of Johnson City Medical Center was charged with caring for Alsip after his surgery. Despite the best efforts of these doctors — defendant Módica numbers them at nine — Alsip’s condition, deteriorated. It was learned that Alsip suffered from numerous preexisting health problems, including sepsis and disseminated intravаscular coagulation; after surgery, Alsip developed adult respiratory distress syndrome, renal failure, and pneumonia. He died at Johnson City Medical Center in November 2000.
Alsip’s surviving children and mother filed this medical malpractice action in August 2001 against Dr. Módica and other defendants. One month later, Dr. Módica filed an answer denying allegations of medical malpractice, and in December 2001, an agreed order was issued to allow Dr. Módica access to “any and all medical records and radiographic films of [the decedent].” After the plaintiffs’ deposition of Dr. Módica and the defendants’ deposition of the plaintiffs’ expert, Dr. Randall Dalton, the plaintiffs submitted written interrogatories to Dr. Módica, asking for, among other things, identification of the defendants’ expert witnesses. After receiving these interrogatories, Dr. Módica filed the matter that concerns us here: a motion to allow ex parte interviеws with the decedent’s post-surgery, non-party physicians.
Although expressly holding that the decedent enjoyed a right to privacy and that a covenant of confidentiality existed between Alsip and his doctor (and that neither was waived by filing this lawsuit), the trial judge granted Dr. Modica’s motion allowing ex parte communications with Al-sip’s other physicians, but only on the following terms:
*725 The defense motion will be granted to the extent that the requested doctors were in active communication with the defendant during Mr. Alsip’s care and treatment, in accord with the criteria established and discussed in the Kilian case.
The sole legal authority for this order appears to have been Kilian v. Med. Educ. Assistance Corp., No. 22477 (Washington County Law Court May 19, 2003), a decision of the same trial court less than five months before the issuance of the order allowing ex parte communications in this case. In Kilian, the trial court authorized but also established the following restrictions on such communications:
1. Defendant’s counsel in a medical malpractice case may have ex parte conversations with plaintiffs treating physician without express authorization by the plaintiff ONLY under the following conditions:
a) The court in which the action is pending must authorize the contact pursuant to a motion filed by defendant with notice to plaintiff;
b) The information sought must relate only to A) the diagnosis and treatment of the condition for which the plaintiff originаlly sought treatment and B) any time-relevant treatment for any injury claimed to have arisen from the alleged malpractice where the defendant physician was still involved in treatment of the plaintiff;
c) No defendant physician shall be present during the contact; and
d) Counsel shall not engage in inappropriate discussion of matters such as malpractice cases in general, their impact on professional insurance, jury awards, prоfessional reputations or the like. The discussion shall be limited as specified in paragraph no. 2 1 above and the physician’s opinion in connection therewith. 2
The trial court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for interlocutory appeal and stayed the order pending appellate review. The Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and struck down the trial court’s order.
The sole issue in this case is whether the trial court erred by granting the defendant’s motion and issuing an order authorizing ex pаrte communications between defense counsel and the decedent’s non-party physicians. On this issue, we agree with the predominant trend among the states, and with our own appeals court, that it did.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because this case concerns a question of law, “we review [it] under a pure
de novo
standard ..., according no deference to the conclusions of law made by the lower courts.”
S. Constructors, Inc. v. Loudon County Bd. of Educ.,
LEGAL ANALYSIS
Although no
testimonial privilege
protecting doctor-patient communications has ever been recognized by this Court or declared by Tennessee statute, in
Givens v. Mullikin,
Like all contract terms, however, the implied covenant of confidentiality becomes unenforceable when it offends public policy.
Planters Gin Co. v. Federal Compress & Warehouse Co.,
Most important to this case, public policy considerations reflected in the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure require that the covenant of physician-patient confidentiality be voidеd for the purpose of discovery.
See
Tenn. R. Civ. P. 26;
Gall ex rel. Gall v. Jamison,
The present case confronts us with the following question: does public policy dictate that the covenant of confidentiality contained in the contract between patient and physician be voided by the filing of a medical malpractice lawsuit with the сonsequence that a trial court may authorize defense counsel to communicate ex parte with non-party physicians who treated the plaintiff for injuries allegedly arising from the malpractice? The issue presented requires us to balance society’s legitimate desire for medical confidentiality against medical malpractice defendants’ need for full disclosure of plaintiffs’ relevant health information.
We simply are nоt persuaded that the defendants here would be impeded from learning all the decedent’s relevant medical information by being prohibited from communicating ex parte with non-party physicians. “ ‘[A] prohibition against ... ex parte contacts regulates only how defense counsel may obtain information from a plaintiffs treating physician, i.e., it affects defense counsel’s methods, not the substance of what is discoverable.’ ”
Crist v. Moffatt,
It is important to nоte that “the confidential nature of the physician-patient relationship remains even though medical information is ... subject to discovery”
*728
because the plaintiffs contractual right to medical confidentiality remains in all his health information
not relevant
to the malpractice lawsuit.
Crist,
both the patient and his physician are protected from the danger that adverse counsel may abuse his opportunity to interrogate the physician by privately inquiring into facts or opinions about the patient’s mental and physical health or history which may neither be relevant to the patient’s lawsuit nor lead to discovery of admissible evidence. In a formal deposition ... the presence of a patient’s counsel ... assure[s] that clearly irrelevant medical testimony will not be elicited.
*729
Wenninger v. Muesing,
We are not impressed with the chief public policy concern that the defendants and their amici argue require defense counsel to be allowed to communicate ex parte with the plaintiffs’ non-party physicians. Defense counsel points to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 1, which states that “[t]hese rules shall bе construed to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action,” and argues that ex parte communications should be allowed because they promote efficient discovery. We think it clear that prohibition of informal interviews with non-party treating physicians will do little to increase the burden on defense attorneys because efficient alternative methods are available, including deposition by written quеstions. Tenn. R. Civ. P. 26.02;
Petrillo,
We also believe that prohibiting ex parte communications between defense counsel and plaintiffs’ non-party doctors will conserve judicial resources for a reason not mentioned by the defendants here: the potential tort or contract liability of non-party doctors for disclosure of confidential information during informal interviews.
5
Although the order issued by the trial court here does much to properly fоcus the scope of any ex parte communication toward relevant medical information, the order does not require defense counsel to inform the non-party physician either that he has a right to refuse to be interviewed informally or that he may be held personally liable for disclosures outside the relevance of the present litigation.
Crist,
CONCLUSION
Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 26 allows for discovery of any unprivileged
*730
information that is also
relevant
to the lawsuit. Because ex parte communications unnecessarily endanger the integrity of the covenant of confidentiality between patient and physician by risking disclosure of the decedent’s medical information not relevant to the lawsuit, and because the formal methods of discovery provided for in Rule 26.01 suffice to provide the defendants with all the decedent’s relevant medical information, we hold that the trial court erred by issuing the order in controversy here.
See also Kitzmiller v. Henning,
The costs of this appeal are taxed to defendants, Johnson City Medical Center; Mountain State Health Alliance; Louis Módica, M.D.; ETSU Physicians and Associates; Dr. Mark Wilkinson; and Johnson City Emergency Physicians; and their sureties, for which execution may issue if necessary.
Notes
. No such numbered paragraph appears in the order above the paragraph quoted here. Presumably this reference was intended to be to part (b) in this quotation.
. We choose to quоte here from the trial court’s written and signed order rather than the trial court’s oral opinion, which differed somewhat from its written order and appears to be a less precise rendition of the trial court's intended meaning.
. Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 26.02 states
[p]arties may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, which is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action.... It is not ground for objection that the information sought will be inadmissible at the trial if the information sought aрpears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.
Thus, the Rule requires that all information elicited during discovery be relevant to the action but not necessarily admissible.
. Such a requirement would also violate the
understanding of the patient and physician
when they formed a contract that included an implied covenant of confidentiality. As we stated in
Givens,
"[w]hile the understanding of the parties giving rise to the implied covenant of confidentiality permits a physician to disclose information рursuant to subpoena or court order,
this understanding does not include permission to divulge this information informally without the patient’s consent." Givens,
. Furthermore, while we do not in any way impugn the integrity of defense counsel in this case, we recognize that defense lawyers could abuse the opportunity, which ex parte communications provide, to inquire into the plaintiff's confidential medical matters. Given the adversarial nature of our court system, this, we think, is no small concern. Moreover, disclosure of confidential health information is entirely possible even when defense counsel acts in good faith: “The questioning attorney simply cannot reasonably anticipate the physician’s response and, therefore, cannot protect against the disclosure of confidential information.”
Steinberg v. Jensen,
