OPINION
Plaintiffs, James T. and Helen K. Dikeou, the natural parents and heirs of the estate of Theodore “Ted” Dikeou, appeal the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant, Dr. Jeffrey S. Osborn. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Dr. Osborn is a board certified cardiologist who had treated Ted Dikeou since 1988. Mr. Dikeou suffered from a moderately common condition known as Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome, which is the existence of an abnormal heart beat. On the evening of February 21,1990, Mr. Dikeou called Dr. Osborn and reported that his heart was beating very fast, probably as the result of a change in asthma medications. Dr. Osborn suggested that Mr. Dikeou lie down for an hour to see if his accelerated heart beat would subside without further treatment. Mr. Dikeou called Dr. Osborn back later that same evening and reported that his condition had not improved. Dr. Osborn advised Mr. Dikeou that he needed a routine injection to slow his rapid heart beat. Mr. Dikeou stated that he wished to go to St. Mark’s Hospital Emergency Room, which was near his home, to have his condition checked and receive the necessary treatment. Dr. Osborn informed Mr. Dikeou that he did not have staff privileges at St. Mark’s, but did not counsel Mr. Dikeou against going to St. Mark’s. After Mr. Dikeou arrived at St. Mark’s, Dr. Michael D. Dowdall, the emergency room physician, telephoned Dr. Osborn and reported that Mr. Dikeou was experiencing a heart rhythm identified as paroxysmal atrial tachycardia (PAT). After exchanging additional information, Dr. Osborn told Dr. Dowdall that he thought the appropriate treatment for PAT would be a “conservative medical approach of IV Verapamil.” Although Dr. Osborn suggested to Dr. Dowdall a proposed treatment for Mr. Dikeou, Dr. Osborn made no effort to independently confirm or modify Dr. Dowdall’s underlying diagnosis of PAT. The diagnosis was, in fact, incorrect and the treatment and medication prescribed and administered to Mr. Dikeou by Dr. Dowdall exacerbated his condition, ultimately resulting in Mr. Dikeou’s death.
Mr. Dikeou’s parents, James and Helen Dikeou, brought suit against St. Mark’s Hos
ISSUES
The Dikeous raise three issues on appeal. First, they assert the trial court improvidently granted summary judgment inasmuch as the affidavit of Dr. Bushnell creates a factual issue concerning Dr. Osborn’s negligence and establishes that Dr. Bushnell is knowledgeable regarding the standard of care applicable to Dr. Osborn. Second, the Dikeous assert that the trial court should not have granted summary judgment based on their technical noncompliance with Rule 4-601 of the Utah Code of Judicial Administration. 3 Finally, the Dikeous argue that the trial court erroneously allowed Dr. Osborn to bolster the trial court record after the trial court had already made its decision regarding summary judgment. 4
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is proper only when no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Allen v. Ortez,
ANALYSIS
Medical Expert Testimony and Determination of Applicable Standard of Care
The Dikeous complain that the trial court inappropriately disqualified their medi
Dr. Bushnell is not an expert in the same area of practice as Dr. Osborn. Further, an examination of his opinion clearly reveals a lack of foundation and is also clearly based on hearsay. Even given a presumption of the ability to rely on hearsay to an expert’s testimony said affidavit does not meet the criteria required to enable him to be able to testify as to the standard of care required for a physician specializing in the same specialty as Dr. Osborn.
Dr. Bushnell is a specialist in emergency room medicine, whereas Dr. Osborn is a specialist in cardiology. Despite this obvious difference, the Dikeous argue on appeal that Dr. Bushnell is well-qualified to testify as to the applicable standard of care. 5 They insist that the appropriate standard of care in this case is a general one involving the relationship between a patient’s regular physician and an emergency room physician. Accordingly, the Dikeous argue, they do not need a cardiologist’s expert testimony to establish the proper standard of care. 6
This court has underscored the three elements that any plaintiff must establish to sustain a prima facie case of medical malpractice: “(1) the standard of care by which the doctor’s conduct is to be measured, (2) breach of that standard by the doctor, and (3) injury proximately caused by the doctor’s negligence.”
Chadwick v. Nielsen,
The seminal case in Utah on the first element — standard of care — is
Burton v. Youngblood,
It is true that, ordinarily, a practitioner of one school of medicine is not competent to testify as an expert in a malpractice action against a practitioner of another school. In light of the wide variation between schools in both precepts and practices, as a general matter this rule makes good sense. It has been judicially adopted in a majority of states, and we follow it here.
Id. at 248 (citations omitted). In a later case, the supreme court, while noting the general rule that “[practitioners in one specialty are not ordinarily competent to testify as experts on the standard of care applicable in another specialty,” clarified the exception to the general rule stated earlier in Youngblood:
An exception is made when a witness is knowledgeable about the standard of care of another specialty or when the standards of different specialties on the issue in a particular ease are the same.
Arnold v. Curtis,
In the present case, Dr. Bushnell’s affidavit contains the following statements concerning his familiarity with the applicable standard of care:
8. I have reviewed the medical records on Theodore James “Ted” Dikeou from the private practice of Jeffrey S. Osborn, M.D., and from St. Mark’s Hospital Emergency Room for the treatment rendered to Ted Dikeou on the night of February 20-21, 1990.
9. I have also read transcripts of the depositions of Mrs. Helen Dikeou, Dr. Jeffrey S. Osborn and Dr. Michael D. Dow-dall.
10. Having read and studied the documents listed above, I have formed a professional opinion as to the standard of medical care applicable in this case and whether Doctors Osborn and Dowdall adhered to that standard of care in their treatment of Ted Dikeou.
Dr. Bushnell’s statement that he “formed a professional opinion” after reviewing the documents does not meet the Youngblood standard or the exception to that standard clarified in Arnold.
The trial court is given discretion under Rule 702 of the Utah Rules of Evidence ‘“to determine the admissibility of expert testimony, and to determine if the [expert] witness is qualified to give an opinion on a particular matter.’ ”
Robb v. Anderton,
Therefore, as Dr. Bushnell’s specialty is not the same as Dr. Osborn’s, Dr. Bushnell must establish that he was knowledgeable before being retained as an expert witness about the standard of care in Dr. Osborn’s specialty of cardiology or that the standard of care for emergency room physicians is the same as cardiologists. Dr. Bushnell failed to establish in his affidavit that he had sufficient knowledge regarding the appropriate standard of care prior to his review of the documents. Furthermore, he has not established that the standard of care for emergency
CONCLUSION
The Dikeous failed to establish a prima facie case of medical malpractice. The trial court correctly ruled to strike the affidavit of the Dikeous’ medical expert because he was not a specialist in the same area as Dr. Osborn and did not adequately demonstrate that he was either familiar with the appropriate standard of care or that the standard of care in his specialty area was the same as the standard of care in Dr. Osborn’s specialty area. Additionally, any error by the trial court in supplementing the record after entry of its summary judgment order was harmless. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Dr. Osborn.
DAVIS and JACKSON, JJ., concur.
Notes
. The Dikeous settled with Dr. Dowdall and St. Mark's Hospital and thereafter stipulated to a dismissal with prejudice of all claims against them.
. The Dikeous also designated Dr. Michael D. Lesh, a licensed cardiologist, as an expert witness. The record does not reveal why the Dikeous relied on Dr. Bushnell, rather than on Dr. Lesh, to establish the applicable standard of care for Dr. Osborn, a licensed cardiologist.
. As the first issue asserted by the Dikeous is dispositive of this case on appeal, we do not address the Dikeous' second procedural argument regarding technical noncompliance with Rule 4-501(2).
See State v. Carter,
. The thrust of the Dikeous’ third argument is to criticize the trial court’s grant of Dr. Osborn's motion to supplement the record, after the trial court had already granted summary judgment, with the Dikeous’ responses to Dr. Osborn's and St. Mark's interrogatories. Specifically, the Dikeous assert that these interrogatory answers were not used by the trial court in deciding summary judgment yet are now part of the record for review by this court. We do not address this argument, or the related procedural arguments, for two reasons. First, the trial court noted, and our review of the record confirms, that the interrogatory responses added to the record after the trial court's summary judgment order duplicated information already in the record. Thus, the trial court did have this information before it, and we could review it on appeal. Second, even if the supplemental information were not duplicative, this court is well aware of its responsibility to review a trial court's grant of summary judgment using only the information on file at the time the trial court granted the motion. Thus, any error by the trial court connected to this issue, actual or perceived, did not prejudice the Dikeous' case below and does not taint our review of the trial court's ruling.
.In a letter submitted to this court under Rule 24(j) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure, the Dikeous cited the case of
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals,
- U.S. -,
. The Utah Supreme Court noted in
Nixdorf v. Hiclcen,
In the instant case, however, the facts and related medical procedure are not “so common” as to avoid the need for expert testimony. Despite the Dikeous' claim that a "general” standard of care applies in this case, we believe that the rule pronounced in Youngblood and Curtis, discussed infra, requires that the expert testimony be from a doctor who is either already in the specialty or familiar beforehand with the applicable standard of care peculiar to the medical specialty of the alleged negligent doctor.
. Because we affirm the trial court's ruling based on the Dikeous’ failure to establish the appropriate standard of care, we do not address the remaining two
Nielsen
elements necessary to establish a prima facie case for medical malpractice.
See Chadwick v. Nielsen,
