This is an appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Cobb County which declared a resolution of the Cobb County-Kennestone Hospital Authority void and continued in effect a temporary injunction.
Appellant, defendant below, is a hospital authority organized under the Hospital Authorities Law (Code Ann. § 88-1801 et seq.), and operates the Kennestone Hospital in Cobb County, Georgia. The appellees, plaintiffs below, are three neurologists and two neurosurgeons licensed by the State of Georgia to practice medicine pursuant to Code Ann. § 84-901 et seq., and are members of the medical staff of the Kennestone Hospital. As members of the hospital’s medical staff, each of the appellees agreed in writing "to abide by the by-laws of the medical staff and such rules and regulations as may be from time to time enacted.”
In October of 1975, the appellees began discussing among themselves the possibility of forming a group to purchase a computer assisted tomoscope (C. A. T.), hereinafter referred to as a brain scanner.
1
On October 14, 1975, representatives of this group met with
On October 28,1975, appellees met with members of the Kennestone Hospital Administration and members of the appellant Hospital Authority, at which time it was explained to appellees that the hospital was prohibited from leasing space to for-profit entities for the private practice of medicine.
3
At that meeting a counter-proposal was made that appellees purchase the brain scanner and lease it to the hospital, allowing the hospital to exercise full managerial control over the operation of the equipment.
4
Appellees elected to reject appellant’s
At the Hospital Authority’s executive session of November 20, 1975, the Authority elected to initiate administrative procedures necessary to gain approval from local and state planning agencies for the purchase of a brain and body scanner, and on December 12,1975, the Administration of the Kennestone Hospital issued a memorandum to all medical staff members announcing its intent to acquire a total body C. A. T. scanner. 5
Thereafter, the appellees finalized negotiations with the EMI Company for the purchase of a CT 1010 brain scanner and on February 4,1976, submitted their formal offer to EMI for its purchase. The scanner was delivered to appellees in December of 1976, but was not made operational until February of 1977. At the Hospital Authority’s executive session of March 18, 1976, the purchase of an EMI CT 5005 whole body scanner was approved. At that meeting the Authority further made clear that "upon such time as [their] scanner is made operational and consistent with existing policies established by the Authority, patients will not be allowed to go outside the hospital for treatment services offered in the hospital.”
On January 20,1977, the Hospital Authority passed the following resolution which is the subject of this lawsuit: "It is the general policy of Kennestone Hospital that if a treatment, procedure, diagnostic test or other service is ordered for a patient of Kennestone Hospital,
and that procedure, test or service is routinely offered by the Hospital,
then the patient will receive that service within
When appellees’ scanner became operational in February of 1977, the hospital, not routinely offering this same service within its own facility, allowed appellees to transport in-patients from the hospital to appellees’ facility for testing. See footnote 6. As was the custom for any in-patient temporarily leaving the hospital, the patient was requested to sign a form releasing the hospital from liability for any injury which occurred as a result of their leaving for such testing. This practice continued until May of 1977, when the hospital’s brain and body scanner became operational. Thereafter, patients transferred from the hospital to appellees’ facility for brain scans were informed of the hospital’s policy of January 20,1977, and requested to sign a special release form. 7
On June 17,1977, appellees were notified in writing by the Hospital Authority of their violation of hospital policy, 8 and informed appellees that continued violations would result in the reconsideration of their medical staff privileges at Kennestone Hospital which had previously been granted by the Authority.
Following hearing, the trial court continued in effect the temporary restraining order and decláred the Hospital Authority’s resolution void as discriminatory and unreasonable in that said resolution limited the medical discretion of the physician in the exercise of his medical skills. Appellant Hospital Authority appeals. We reverse.
1. This appeal represents a classic confrontation between two entities who play major roles in the health and welfare of the citizens of our state. The relationship which exists between hospital and physician is delicate, each one exercising exclusive as well as concentric areas of responsibility in the treatment and diagnosis of patients. In addition to the roles played by these two entities in providing this essential health service, the state has the duty of monitoring this function in order to protect the health and welfare of its citizens. "[T]he preservation of public health is one of the duties devolving on the state as the sovereign power, and the discharge of this duty is accomplished by means of the exercise of the inherent police power of the sovereign.”
Hughes v. State Bd. of Medical Examiners,
By statute, the physician is the only one empowered to practice medicine. Code Ann. § 84-901 et seq. Without his medical skills a hospital would cease to exist. On the other hand, the hospital provides the physician with a place to practice his art of healing and provides the equipment necessary to put his skills in motion. In providing for the health and welfare of the community, the legislature created hospital authorities in order to promulgate rules and regulations, "necessary and convenient to carry out and effectuate” their purposes. Code Ann. § 88-1801 et seq. This court has, in the past, noted that, "[T]he Hospital Authorities Law is replete with safeguards and controls on the operation of the hospital to insure that the public interest in the hospital... is protected.”
Bradfield v. Hospital Authority,
Part of the responsibilities of a hospital authority is to insure that an adequate, competent medical staff serves the patients within the hospital. "It is generally agreed that the managing authorities of a hospital, under the power to adopt reasonable rules and regulations for the government and operation thereof, may, in the absence of any statutory restriction, prescribe the qualifications of physicians or surgeons for admission to practice therein.”
Yeargin v. Hamilton Memorial Hospital,
Appellees contend that the decision as to what diagnostic techniques the patient requires is purely a medical function not to be controlled by the Hospital Authority. They argue that the resolution in issue restricts and controls their medical judgment and is, therefore, void. This argument fails for the reason that there is a distinction between the making of a diagnosis, which we recognize as a medical function, and the selection of equipment to be used in deriving information for submission to the physician in order that he be able to make his diagnosis, which is an administrative function.
The trial court made no ruling as to which machine,
In our opinion, the challenged resolution is an administrative policy adopted by the Hospital Authority pursuant to the power vested in them by the legislature under Code Ann. § 88-1801 et seq., in furtherance of the administration, operation, maintenance and control of the hospital and, accordingly, thé function of this court is limited to a determination of whether the Hospital Authority’s action in adopting the resolution was arbitrary and unreasonable. Sosa v. Board of Managers of Val Verde Memorial Hospital, 437 F2d 173 (5th Cir. 1971); Woodbury v. McKinnon, 447 F2d 839 (5th Cir. 1971); Jackson v. Fulton-DeKalb Hospital Authority, 423 FSupp. 1000, 1003 (1976). In deciding this question we may not substitute our judgment for that of the Hospital Authority on matters relative to policy or good practice, which are purely administrative rather than legal in nature.
Although this is an issue of first impression in this state, there have been several cases decided in other jurisdictions where physicians have attempted to overturn administrative decisions concerning the management and treatment of patients within a hospital. In each of these cases, a hospital has restricted the operation and use of certain hospital equipment to an individual physician or group of physicians to the exclusion of other physicians on the hospital’s medical staff. In each case, the hospital’s decision was upheld. In doing so, the courts have repeatedly rejected arguments that such arrangements were arbitrary or unreasonable, that they interfered with the rights of the physicians to practice medicine, that they denied the patient the right to select his own physician, that they constituted the unauthorized practice of medicine, or, that they otherwise intruded upon the doctor-patient relationship.
Recently, in one such case, the Colorado Supreme Court upheld the right of a hospital to limit the
"None of the above cited cases have held that a physician’s right to select professional consultants for his patients is unreasonably limited by exclusive service contracts. Practical considerations of hospital operation permit hospital administrators to conclude that specialty services can best be provided by entering into exclusive medical service contracts. The physician’s right relating to professional consultation is, in this context, subject to reasonable limitation or waiver.” (Emphasis supplied.) Radiology Professional Corp. v. Trinidad Area Health Assn., supra.
In Adler v. Montefiore Hospital Assn. of W. Pa., supra, a physician specializing in cardiology challenged a
The above cited cases and the instant case are strikingly similar and we find these cases to be persuasive authority to a decision in this case. In each of the above cited cases, the courts of our sister states have upheld a
The Hospital Authority’s resolution requiring use of in-house facilities and services for hospitalized patients rather than permitting them to be taken from the hospital to utilize like facilities or services elsewhere is reasonable and reflects a well intentioned effort by the Authority to deal with the intricate and complex task of providing comprehensive medical services, to the citizens of our state. The preeminent consideration in the adoption of such a resolution by the Authority was the health, welfare and safety of the patient. (See footnote 8). The Authority’s resolution is a reasonable and rational administrative decision enacted in order for the Authority to carry out the legislative mandate that it provide adequate medical care in the public interest. The resolution does not invade the physician’s province. Although he is required to use the facilities and equipment provided within the hospital complex for testing rather than similar facilities and equipment outside, he is nevertheless free to interpret the results of such tests and free to diagnose and prescribe treatment for all his patients.
2. In their complaint, appellees prayed that appellant Hospital Authority be ”. . . temporarily restrained and permanently enjoined from . . . enforcing said void resolution and ... in suspending, revoking, or reconsidering their rights and privileges to practice medicine at said [appellant’s] facility.” The trial court, after finding the resolution to be void, exercised its discretion and continued in effect the previously granted temporary injunction in order to maintain the status quo between the parties.
Having found the resolution in question to constitute a valid exercise of the Hospital Authority’s power, it follows that the trial court’s continuance of the temporary injunction, on grounds that the resolution was void, was error.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
A computer assisted brain tomoscope is a tool for the
By letter dated October 23,1975, the appellees made a formal request to the Kennestone Hospital Administration to lease space for the installation of a brain scanner.
Public Health Services Health Grants Manual § 24-2.300 and (Z).
Section 24-2.3(Z) of the Public Health Services Health Grants Manual authorizes such an arrangement,
A total body scanner takes x-ray scans of the whole body, including the brain.
That resolution further provides that "the hospital recognizes that occasionally a service will be ordered for a patient which, because of its specialized nature, limited application or current distribution is only offered by another facility. If it becomes necessary for a patient to receive such a service at another facility, the patient will be requested to sign a transportation release in accordance with existing hospital policies.”
This form differed from previous release forms in that it recited the hospital policy which was being violated and released the hospital from any liability resulting from such violation.
The June 17, 1977 letters outlined reasons for the adoption of the January 20,1977 resolution which were as follows: "(1) To eliminate inconvenience and confusion to the patients; (2) To avoid the potential of jeopardizing the seriously ill patients by transferring them outside the hospital; (3) To preclude undue expense accruing to the
As noted in the trial court’s order "Expert testimony
Others include Blank v. Palo Alto-Stanford Hospital Center,
