Experiencing pain in her “lower back, around beside [her] kidney” and in her side, appellee Mrs. Beaver telephoned her physician. She was instructed to go to appellant R. T. Jones Memorial Hospital (Hospital). Upon her arrival, Mrs. Beaver received an injection of pain medicine that had been prescribed by her physician. A nurse employed by the Hospital administered the injection in Mrs. Beaver’s right buttock. Immediately upon receiving the injection, Mrs. Beaver experienced intense pain radiating down her right leg. The pain was followed by limpness.
In Case No. 71618, Mrs. Beaver sued the Hospital for unspecified personal injuries allegedly resulting from the negligent administration of the injection. In Case No. 71619, Mr. Beaver sued the Hospital for loss of consortium due to his wife’s unspecified injury. In each lawsuit it was alleged that “in the administration of said injection . . . the [Hospital], its employees and agents failed to exercise the proper and required standard of care and said failure constitutes negligence.” Neither complaint contained specific averments as to
how
the injection had been negligently administered. After discovery, the Hospital moved for summary judgment in both cases. The trial court denied the motion, relying in part on
Killingsworth v. Poon,
1. In a medical malpractice action, “there are three essential elements imposing liability upon which recovery is bottomed: (1) the duty inherent in the [medical professional]-patient relationship; (2) the breach of that duty by failing to exercise the requisite degree of
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skill and care; and (3) that this failure to be the proximate cause of the injury sustained.”
Hawkins v. Greenberg,
Application of the “pronounced results” exception must be based upon evidence of “such ‘pronounced results’ [as are] indicative of possibly negligent medical treatments examples of which] include those evinced when a doctor, while stitching a wound on his patient’s cheek, by an awkward move, thrusts his needle into the patient’s left eye, or where a leg or limb which has been broken is shorter than the other after treatment. [Cits.]”
Killingsworth v: Poon,
supra at 655. In addition to evidence of such “pronounced results” of medical treatment as a pierced eye or a shortened limb, “ [i]t is widely known and generally understood by laymen that
subcutaneous injections
ostensibly given only for the relief of muscular pain should not, if administered correctly, result in the
puncture of internal organs.
[Cit.]” (Emphasis supplied.)
Killingsworth v. Poon,
supra at 657. In the instant case, however, there is no probative evidence whatsoever which would authorize a finding that Mrs. Beaver suffered any “result,” pronounced or otherwise, attributable to her injection. The evidence is only that the injection was closely followed in time by the occurrence of pain and weakness in Mrs. Beaver’s leg, which weakness continues. This evidence, standing alone, would not only be insufficient to authorize a finding that the injection was negligently administered, it would not even be sufficient to authorize an inference that the injection is a
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proximate cause of the weakness in Mrs. Beaver’s leg. See generally
Akins v. Fed. Mut. &c. Ins. Co.,
“Generally, . . . the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not apply to medical professional cases. [Cits.]”
Hill v. Hosp. Auth. of Clarke County,
2. Our holding in Division 1 does not necessarily mandate reversal of the trial court’s order. The inapplicability of the “pronounced results” exception means only that the instant case is governed by the rules that are otherwise generally applicable in the context of a malpractice case on summary judgment. See generally
Nelson v. Parrott,
The Hospital submitted the affidavits of two experts, both of whom based their statements on personal knowledge. One affiant was the nurse who had actually administered the injection. The other affi *203 ant was the emergency room physician who had examined Mrs. Beaver at the Hospital after the injection. Both affiants expressed the opinion that the injection had been administered in compliance with the applicable standard of care. Neither affiant limited his or her averments merely to that conclusory expert opinion. Each affiant also stated the factual basis upon which the opinion of non-negligence was based: Both opinions were premised upon additional factual averments that the injection had been administered at a “proper” location on Mrs. Beaver’s body. One affiant stated that “proper” location to be the “upper outer quadrant” of the right buttock. The other affiant also stated that the “proper” location of the injection had been the “upper . . . quadrant” of the right buttock.
In opposition, Mr. and Mrs. Beaver submitted the affidavit of a registered nurse who was qualified as an expert in the “giving [of] intramuscular injections in the buttock.” This expert specifically stated what had been implicitly recognized in the affidavits of the Hospital’s affiants, to wit: That “a failure to so place an intramuscular injection [in the upper outer quadrant of one of the buttocks] is a deviation from the proper standards of nursing care.” The Beavers’ affiant did not, however, express a further expert opinion that it would be a deviation from this standard to give an injection at the location on the buttock indicated by Mrs. Beaver as the specific site where she had been injected. With regard to this question of the actual site of the injection, Mrs. Beaver submitted her own affidavit. In that affidavit, she stated: “That the intramuscular injection was administered to me in the lower portion of my right buttock. Said injection was not administered in the upper outer quadrant of either my left or right buttock. ... I saw the circle [that a physician who had examined the injection site] drew and it was in the lower portion of my right buttock.” In addition, during the deposition of Ms. Beaver taken by the Hospital, she was asked to indicate where on her body the injection had been given. When she complied with this request, the Hospital’s attorney described that location for the record as “the right outer lower quadrant.”
Thus, implicit in the evidence of the Hospital’s
own
experts is the proposition that the giving of an injection other than in the upper quadrants of the buttocks would be a deviation from the applicable standard of care. See generally
Lawrence v. Gardner,
There is a difference between expert testimony on the one hand and testimony that happens to be given by an expert on the other. See
Clanton v. Von Haam,
Accordingly, the location of the external site of the injection is merely a question of fact in this malpractice case, not a “medical question” such as requires expert medical testimony. As to this question of fact, there is a conflict between the Hospital’s witnesses, who happen to be experts, and Mrs. Beaver. Mrs. Beaver was certainly in a position to have personal knowledge of whether it was in the upper or lower portion of her own buttock that she was injected. The Hospital offered nothing in rebuttal of Mrs. Beaver’s assertion that the site she identified as the location of her injection was in her lower and not her upper buttock. Resolution of this disputed factual issue is depen
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dent upon the credibility of the witnesses. On the record before us, it is for the jury to determine whether more credit is to be given to the Hospital’s witnesses than to Mrs. Beaver. “ ‘Where a question of credibility arises as to a material issue, summary judgment should not be granted. [Cits.]’ [Cits.]”
Ash v. Spear,
3. The Hospital further asserts that, even if a genuine issue of material fact remains regarding the commission of an act of malpractice, its motion for summary judgment should still have been granted. This contention is based upon the Beavers’ failure to produce any expert testimony which shows that the injection is the proximate cause of the weakness in Mrs. Beaver’s leg.
Uncontradicted expert opinion testimony will authorize the grant of summary judgment for the defendant in those cases “wherein [the] plaintiff is required to establish an essential element of his case by expert opinion testimony. . . .”
Savannah Valley &c. Assn. v. Cheek,
supra at 747. Thus, even in non-malpractice cases it has been held that, “[ijnasmuch as expert opinion testimony was essential to a determination of the causal factors in the . . . condition of plaintiff’s leg, the expert testimony [produced by the defendant] was sufficient to support the grant of defendant’s motion for summary judgment. [Cit.]”
Jordan v. United Ins. Co. of America,
However, the non-moving party on summary judgment is required to produce contrary evidence only if the movant has satisfied his initial burden of proof. As noted previously, one of the Hospital’s affiants was the physician who examined Mrs. Beaver after the injection. His affidavit was based, in part, on his own personal knowledge derived from his examination of Mrs. Beaver. Thus, the affiant was qualified to give a probative expert medical opinion as to the cause of the weakness in Mrs. Beaver’s leg. See
Jernigan v. Carmichael,
4. On the record before us, the Hospital was not entitled to summary judgment in its favor based upon the elimination of either medical negligence vel non or proximate cause as jury issues.
Judgments affirmed.
