Code § 38-713 provides: "(a) Medical records, or reproductions thereof, when duly certified by the custodians thereof, need not be identified at the trial and may be used in any manner in which records identified at the trial by the custodian could be used.” The preamble tо the Act of origin (Ga. L. 1971, p. 441) states that it provides "for the authentication and admissibility of medical records or copies therеof for use as evidence” and to "excuse certain persons from personally appearing in *428 certain circumstаnces,” among other things. It deals with preliminary proof only. In no part does it enlarge upon the effect or the admissibility of evidеnce in other than a formal sense; that is, it provides a means of identification absent a custodian, but otherwise is to be used in the same manner as thоugh the custodian were present.
The rules relevant to the introduction of medical records, in a substantive sense, remain unchanged. "If a hospital record contains diagnostic opinions and conclusions, it cannot, upon proper objection, be admitted into evidence unless and until the proper foundation is laid, i.e., the person who entered such diagnostic opiniоns and conclusions upon the record must qualify as an expert and relate the facts upon which the entry was based.”
Cassano v. Pilgreen’s, Inc.,
As counsel for the appellant admits, whatever part of the hospital record in question was properly admissible as to content could have been obtained and introduced in evidеnce by other means than certification; for example, by subpoena or a notice to produce. It is not the manner in which the defendants in the damage suit obtained the record and had it prepared for admission in evidence, but at least so far as this record shows the failure of the plaintiff to object to inadmissible material, which placed the statement of the plаintiffs intoxication before the trial jury. The same choices were open, the *429 same results would obtain, regardless of the method used.
As stated in
Pavesich v. New England Life Ins. Co.,
We cannot tеll from the record before us whether there was on the trial of the previous case an objection to the hearsay statements (which was in order whether the documents were offered by certification, or identification by a witness), or whether there wаs a request to charge on the subject. But the method of introduction of the document would not change the law regarding the admissibility of its contents as between these or other legal means.
But, the plaintiff argues, the hospital record was a confidential document. Such records, being obtainable in legal proceedings by subpoena and other means, are obviously not absolutely confidential in the sense that they cannot be used.
Insofar as privilege is concerned, there is no privileged communications immunity in Georgia between hospital and patient. It should also be observed that in libel and slander cases there is an absolute privilege as to pertinent evidence introduced in a judicial proceeding and relating to its subject matter.
Veazy v. Blair,
Whether or not the plaintiff told a nurse thаt he had been drinking all day, and whether or not the statement was true, its introduction by way of evidence material to a tort action could not be the foundation of a libel action. It follows that the plaintiff cannot recover damages for such use under thе guise of an invasion of privacy rather than a libel.
It is true that the public’s right to inspect county and municipal records set out in Code Chapter 40-27 is held not applicable to "medical records and similar files, the disclosure of which would be an invasion of рersonal privacy.” Code § 40-2703. It is true that unauthorized publicity regarding the contents of such records, the patient’s state of health, his anatomical debilities, and the opinions, diagnoses and tests of his doctors would indeed come within the inhibition of this Code sectiоn, but even so use in a relevant court proceeding is far different from dissemination by television or newsprint. Cf. Peacock v. Retаil Credit Co., 302 FSupp. 418, in which the distinction between public and private disclosure was carefully drawn by Judge Edenfield.
The petition failed to state a claim for invasion of privacy against any of the defendants, and the trial court properly sustained the motions to dismiss.
Judgment affirmed.
