OPINION
Thе plaintiffs, Thomas and Deborah Contois, have suffered a loss so profound that no mere judicial decision could ever provide a remedy. However, it falls upon this Court to address their appeal and their attempt to hold responsible those they claim contributed to the death of their eight-year-old son Zachary. The plaintiffs raise several issues in their appeal of a Superior Court judgment finding that the defendants, the Town of West Warwick and town rescue workers, were not grossly negligent in their delivery of emergency medical treatment to Zachary Contois. The plaintiffs urge this Court (1) to formally adopt the loss of chance doctrine, (2) that the trial justice’s failure to charge the jury on that doctrine confused the jury in light of the plaintiffs’ expert testimony, and (3) that the trial justice erred by including an intervening cause instruction in her charge to the jury. For the reasons stated herein, we hold that the loss of chance doctrine does not apply to the instant case. Additionally, we hold that although the trial justice erred by instructing the jury on intervening cause, as it was inappropriate to the facts of the case, the error was harmless. Thus, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
Facts and Procedural History
Zachary Contois passed away in the early morning of March 19, 1999, three days shy of his ninth birthday. During the night preceding his death, Zachary’s temperature increased to dangerous levels. Because Zachary was a child with a history of seizures often triggered by high fever, Deborah Contois faithfully monitored her son throughout the night. At the recommendation of an on-call physician, she gave him fever-reducing medications and kept close at hand the portable suction machine needed to help clear Zachary’s mouth of vomit during sеizures. 1
At approximately 5:00 a.m., after Zachary’s temperature reached nearly 104 degrees, Mrs. Contois again contacted the *1021 on-call physician, and then called 911. Minutes later, a West Warwick fire truck and a rescue vehicle arrived, each carrying defendant Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs). Mrs. Contois informed the rescue workers of Zachary’s medical history, current symptoms, and treatment needs. After assessing Zachary’s vital signs, the EMTs decided to walk Zachary to the rescue vehicle parked in front of the Con-tois’ home. Soon after being рlaced in the vehicle, Zachary began to seize and vomit. The EMTs immediately turned Zachary onto his left side, and, although the parties disagree about the timing of the events that followed, it is undisputed that he was suctioned.
The plaintiffs contend that a delay of approximately one minute in suctioning them son doomed any chance Zachary had to survive the seizure and resulting aspiration of food materials into his airways. 2 They argue that the EMTs’ failure to act promptly deprived their son of a substantial chance to survive the incident. The defendant EMTs respond that there was no delay in accessing and utilizing the suctioning device in their efforts to prevent aspiration and asphyxiation. The defendants maintain that they immediately retrieved and activated the necessary equipment, that Mrs. Contois took the device from them and attempted, with some difficulty, to suction Zachary herself, and that after she handed the device back to the EMTs, they suctioned Zachary for several seconds, stopping only to allow him to take a breath.
After clearing Zachary’s mouth of vomit, the EMTs noticed that Zachary was having difficulty breathing, and they began efforts to resuscitate him. The rescue vehicle then departed for Kent County Hospital, but, tragically, Zachary was pronounced dead within twenty minutes of arrival at that facility. Doctor Elizabeth Laposata, the chief medical examiner for the State of Rhode Island, performed an autopsy and determined Zachary’s cause of death to be asphyxia due to massive aspiration 3 of gastric contents associated with seizures. Nearly two years later, in March 2001, plaintiffs brought a negligence action against defendants, the Town of West Warwick and the individual EMTs involved in the events of March 19, 1999. They alleged gross negligence and negligent infliction of emotional distress, and requested both compensatory and punitive damages.
After a trial in the Superior Court, a verdict was returned in favor of defendants. In response to the following special interrogatory, posed as to each defendant, the jury responded in the negative.
“Do you find that [defendant] was grossly negligent in the delivery of emergency medical services to Zachary Contois on March 19,1999, and, if so, do you find that such gross negligence was a proximate cause of the death of Zachary Con-tois?”
*1022 The jury found that defendant EMTs were not liable in their delivery of emergency medical treatment to Zachary Contois, and that defendant Town of West Warwick was not liable in its training and supervising of the individual EMTs. Because the jury did not find defendants to be grossly negligent, it did not reach the issue of negligent infliction of emotional distress. Subsequently, plaintiffs filed a motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 59 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, alleging that the verdict was against the fair preponderance of the evidencе and failed to do substantial justice between the parties. In response, defendants renewed their earlier motion for judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 50(b) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure.
The Superior Court denied both motions. Sitting as a “superjuror,” the trial justice reviewed the evidence and credibility of the witnesses at trial, determined that the verdict was not against the fair preponderance of the evidence, and found that the jury’s verdict was a valid response to the merits of the case. With respect to defendant’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, the trial justice, without assessing the credibility of the witnesses or weighing the evidence, found that factual issues were present as to the existence of a delay and the moment of aspiration, and that reasonable minds could have drawn different conclusions from the evidence. Therefore, the Court denied the renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and ordered that the verdict stand.
On appeal to this Court, plaintiffs allege that the trial justice’s jury instructions were deficient in two respects. First, Mr. and Mrs. Contois contend that the trial justice, аfter allowing testimony over ob-jeetion consistent with the loss of chance doctrine, failed to charge the jury on the doctrine as they requested, thereby confusing the jury. 4 They argue that because the trial court allowed their experts to testify about Zachary’s loss of chance of survival, that doctrine should have been part of the jury instruction, and, further, that this Court should formally adopt it as part of Rhode Island common law. Second, plaintiffs appeal the trial justice’s instruction on intervening cause. They contend that the evidence was not sufficient tо warrant such an instruction.
Standard of Review
The plaintiffs argue that the trial justice erred by failing to charge the jury on the loss of chance doctrine and by instructing the jurors on intervening cause. The standard of review for jury instructions is well settled. “[T]he charge given by a trial justice need only ‘adequately cover [ ] the law.’ ”
Plourde v. Myers,
*1023 Analysis
I
Overview of the Loss of Chance Doctrine
The plaintiffs urge this Court to formally adopt the loss of chance doctrine as an alternative to traditional notions of proximate causation. Tort law ordinarily focuses on negligence and proximate cause. “ ‘It is well settled that in order to gain recovery in a negligence action, a plaintiff must establish * * * proximate causation between the conduct and the resulting injury * * *.’ ” English v. Green, 787 A.2d 1146, 1151 (R.I.2001). “ ‘[Proximate cause is established by showing that but for the negligence of thе tortfeasor, injury to the plaintiff would not have occurred.’ ” 5 Id.
In contrast to traditional theories of tort liability, the loss of chance doctrine presents a more liberal and expansive view of causation. Loss of chance occurs when “the defendant’s negligent conduct caused the plaintiff to lose a chance to avoid the ultimate harm.”
Mead v. Adrian,
In general, there are three approaches courts have taken when addressing loss of chaiice.
See United States v. Cumberbatch,
Acceрtance of the loss of chance doctrine would present a host of potential problems, particularly because of the “very real concern that expanded recognition of the loss of chance doctrine could threaten to swallow whole the equitable, established principles of causation and damages that have guided tort law for centuries.”
Mead,
Also rejecting the doctrine, the Supreme Court of South Carolina held that “ ‘the loss of chance doctrine is fundamentally at
odds with the requisite degree of medical certitude necessary to establish a causal link between the injury of a patient and the tortious conduct of a [medical provider].’”
Owings,
*1025
This case presents our first opportunity to examine and consider the loss of chance doctrine. To support their argument, plaintiffs direct us to our decision in
Carew v. Khoury,
II
Application of the Loss of Chance Doctrine
In those jurisdictions that have adopted the loss of chance doctrine, the cases have tended to follow a particular pattern. Each case presents a clear act or omission on the alleged tortfeasor’s part preceding harm or death, and the question exists as to whether or not that negligence deprived the injured party of an appreciable chance of survival. In
Blinzler v. Marriott International, Inc.,
Likewise, other cases in which the application of the loss of chance doctrine resulted in liability fоr negligent acts or omissions follow a similar pattern. In
Jones v. Montefiore Hospital,
In
Perez v. Las Vegas Medical Center,
The case at bar presents a complicated set of facts that cannot be reconciled with the loss of chance doctrine. Despite plaintiffs’ claims that their experts testified that a sixty-second delay would have deprived Zachary of a chance for survival, there is a lack of clarity in the testimony that is fatal to plaintiffs’ claims. To begin, Dr. Laposata, chief medical examiner for the State of Rhodе Island, determined that Zachary died a natural death, from “asphyxia due to massive aspiration of gastric contents associated with seizures following acute febrile illness.” Doctor Laposata had no knowledge of the alleged delay in suctioning, but she did testify that it was impossible to know when Zachary aspirated. In her opinion, aspiration could have occurred prior to suctioning, even within seconds of vomiting, or it could have taken place during the suctioning itself.
In addition to Dr. Laposata’s testimony, the plaintiffs’ two medical experts rendered thеir opinions on the factors leading to Zachary’s death. Doctor James Weiner, a medical examiner for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, testified that “any delay in suctioning in these circumstances would reduce the chances of successfully resuscitating the child. Or, in other words, any delay in suctioning this child would have increased the likelihood that he would have died.” When asked by plaintiffs’ attorney whether a sixty-second delay, if proven, “was a substantial factor in bringing about the child’s death,” and whether such delay “negated a substantial possibility that the child would have survived, Dr. Weiner answered both questions in the affirmative.
At the same time, however, Dr. Weiner testified to his inability to determine when Zachary began to aspirate. Using the autopsy report as a guide, Dr. Weiner concurred with Dr. Laposata’s testimony about the amount of gastric contents that Zachary aspirated, and quantified the aspirated material at less than a tablespoon. Doctor Weiner then testified that “[Zachary] could have aspirated that material between several seconds from vomiting to several minutes from vomiting. I couldn’t narrow down that time framе any narrower than that.”
The plaintiffs’ second medical expert, Dr. Peter Terry, a pulmonary and critical care specialist, similarly testified that it was his opinion that a sixty-second delay, if proven, “would have caused a substantial decrease in his chance of survival or loss of his chance of survival.” Yet, like Drs. Laposata and Wiener, Dr. Terry also testified that Zachary could have begun to aspirate when he first vomited. In fact, Dr. Terry testified that it was “very probable” that Zachary began to aspirate at that time, and that though very unlikely, it would have been possible for Zachary to aspirate even before the time that he vomited.
Doctor Terry also testified about situations in which aspiration has taken place, and described the more invasive treatment methods necessary to prevent asphyxiation *1027 and fatal harm once gastric contents have been aspirated. Further, Dr. Terry conceded that suctioning is not a fail-safe method of preventing aspiration. In response to defense counsel’s question that “if someone suctions that is it, you are in the clear?,” Dr. Terry answered “no.” Additionally, in regard to the alleged delay, defense counsel further questioned Dr. Terry about the effects of a delay in suctioning.
“Q: Finally, Doctor, a 60-[second] delay you say based on a number of factors would substantially increase or decrease the chance of survival. What would a 30-second delay do?
“A: That would also increase if there was food in the mouth aspirating for a 30-second delay.
“Q: But not as much as a 60-second delay?
“A: One would have to say that.”
In view of the testimony elicited in this case, it is our opinion that the loss of chance doctrine is inapplicable and it was not error for the trial justice to decline to instruct on it. We hold that the uncertainty over when Zachary began to aspirate negates a determination that he had any appreciable chance of survival. Thus, even were we to adopt the loss of chance doctrine, the facts here would invite speculation by the jury as to when aspiration occurred.
Ill
Intervening Cause
The plaintiffs also contend that the trial justice committed error when she included an instruction on intervening cause.
9
Intervening cause exists when an independent and unforeseeable intervening or secondary act of negligence occurs, after the alleged tortfeasor’s negligence, and that secondary act becomes the sole proximate cause of the plaintiffs injuries.
Pantalone v. Advanced Energy Delivery Systems, Inc.,
The plaintiffs allege that a sixty-second delay occurred before Zachary was properly suctioned, аnd that that constituted gross negligence on the part of the EMTs. Mrs. Contois admits that once the device was activated, she took it from the EMT and attempted to suction Zachary herself before handing it back to the EMTs, who then continued the process. However, this evidence is insufficient to support an instruction on intervening cause because the record does not include evidence of any intervening negligent act that may have superceded the alleged initial negligence to become the proximate cause of the resulting injury. Unfortunately, when plaintiff objected to the intervening negligence charge at the sidebar, the trial justice failed to indicate what she perceived to be any intervening cause which would excuse the alleged negligence of the defendants.
*1028
Although we conclude that the instruction on intervening cause was erroneous, viewed in the context of the charge as a whole, the error was harmless. It is well-established that when reviewing jury instructions, we do so holistically, and not in a piecemeal fashion.
State v. Perry,
Conclusion
Based on the facts in this case, we hold that the trial justice did not err by declining to charge the jury on loss of chance, nor do we conclude that the instruction on intervening сause constitutes reversible error. Accordingly, and for the foregoing reasons, the judgment appealed from is affirmed. The papers of this case are remanded to Superior Court.
Notes
. According to Dr. Peter Terry, one of plaintiffs' expert witnesses, aspiration is a significant risk associated with seizures. Because the body’s natural reflexes do not function properly during a seizure, the risk of aspirating vomit material through the larynx into the lungs is increased. Suctioning is a method of clearing vomit from the patient’s mouth in an effort to prevent the vomit from being aspirаted. ■
. Mrs. Contois did not specifically allege a sixty-second delay until nearly two years after Zachary's death. In response to opposing counsel's interrogatory about the length of the delay, she looked at her watch, and then played out the situation in her mind. When she looked back down at her watch, sixty seconds had passed.
. At trial, Dr. Laposata testified to the meaning of "massive” in the context of blockage and aspiration. She stated that "when you get material in the airways, it obstructs all the airways. That would be described as massive obstruction of the airway. That doesn't actually take much volume to do. So massive refers to massive obstruction of the airways, not necessarily a massive amount.” The autopsy report documents that the gastric contents consisted of less than ten cubic centimeters of food material.
. We do not approve of this practice. A trial justice should alert counsel that a requested instruction will not be given as soon as that decision is reached. If the trial justice reserves deciding the motion, counsel should be so informed.
. In their complaint, plaintiffs alleged gross negligence on the part of defendants because under Rhode Island law, EMTs are immune from liability unless guilty of gross negligence or willful misconduct. See G.L.1956 § 23-4.1-12.
. In
Mead v. Adrian,
.Some of the courts which have adopted the loss of chance doctrine have done so in reliance on the Restatement (Second)
Torts
§ 323 at 135 (1965).
Jones v. Owings,
*1024 “Negligent Performance of Undertaking to Render Services. One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another which he should recognize is necessary for the protection of the other's person or things, is subject to liability to the other for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to perform his undertaking, if (a) his failure to exercise such care increases the risk of such harm * * * .” Restatement (Second) Torts § 323 at 135.
The Restatement standard is extremely relaxed, allowing for recovery when a defendant's negligence increased the risk of harm by any degree.
See Crosby v. United States,
. Approximately twenty-one states recognize some degree of loss of chance, including Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Washington, and Virginia. The states that have refused to recognize loss of chance include Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota,
*1025
Mississippi, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, and Utah. California, Illinois, and Missouri have had conflicting decisions.
Crosby,
. After properly instructing the jury on gross negligence and proximate cause, the trial justice included the following instruction:
"However, an act is not a proximate cause of an incident if an intervening cause which cannot be reasonably expected, intervenes between the negligent act and the incident so that the intervening act becomes the sole, direct and proximate cause of the incident. If you find that an independent intervening act proximately caused the child's death, then you return a verdict for the defendant.”
