Appellant, Joseph R. DiMarco, appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, wherein the court dismissed his complaint following the filing of preliminary objections by appellees, Leonard C. Guinta, D.O., Lawrence K. Alwine, D.O., and Chester County Medical Associates. “A. preliminary objection in the nature of a demurrer is not to be sustained and the complaint dismissed unless the law says with certainty that no recovery is possible____ Therefore, if any theory of law will support the claim raised by the petition, a dismissal is improper.”
Cianfrani v. Commonwealth State Employees’ Retirement Board,
The issue which we confront in this case is one of first impression. A review of the complaint presents the following underlying facts. On June 18, 1985, Janet Viscichini, a phlebotomist, visited the Lynch Home in Kimberton, Pennsylvania, in order to draw a blood sample from one of the Lynch Home residents. The patient apparently became agitated during the procedure and struck or kicked Ms. Viscichini. As a result, Ms. Viscichini’s skin was accidentally punctured with the needle that had been used to draw the patient’s blood sample. After being advised that the patient seen by Ms. Viscichini was a carrier of diseases, including hepatitis, Ms. Viscichini visited appellees, Guinta and Alwine, (hereinafter “physicians”) on June 18, 1985, for consultation and treatment. She was advised by her physicians that if she did not contract hepatitis within six weeks *466 of June 18, 1985, she would not contract the disease. She was also advised by her physicians to refrain from sexual relations during this six week period.
Ms. Viscichini did not experience any physical symptoms of hepatitis and, eight weeks after the Lynch Home incident, Ms. Viscichini resumed sexual relations with the appellant. As the trial court noted in its opinion of July 15, 1988, Ms. Viscichini was separated from her husband and although she and the appellant did not reside together, they had been sexual partners before the July 15, 1985, incident. Further, the physicians who treated Ms. Viscichini knew both Ms. Viscichini and appellant personally and “were aware or had reason to know that [appellant] and Ms. Viscichini were intimate.” Op. of Trial Court at 2; N.T., May 19, 1988, at 34.
Ms. Viscichini was diagnosed v/ith Hepatitis B in September of 1985 and the appellant was subsequently diagnosed with this disease in December of 1985. Appellant instituted suit against Ms. Viscichini’s physicians, as well as the Lynch Home. Appellant claimed, inter alia, that the physicians had been negligent in failing to advise Ms. Viscichini that having sexual relations within six months of June 18, 1985, could cause her sexual partner to contract hepatitis. Although recognizing that in some cases physicians have been held liable in negligence to non-patients, the trial court stated:
... a physician has no control over the sexual conduct of his patients nor is he normally [apprised] of the extent to which sexual conduct is engaged in, or with whom, by his patients. Such is in line with acceptable boundaries of privacy recognized today. A physician’s duty should not extend into circumstances that might infringe on these boundaries.
Certainly, a duty may be owed to a husband in such circumstances in the medical care of his wife, whether they live together or not. The duty owed to a husband can be based on the financial obligations and responsibility of the husband to pay for necessary physician services *467 rendered to the wife. Such liability may be primary or secondary. A non-husband has no such legal responsibility.
To adopt Plaintiffs view could extend a duty by physicians to a one time infrequent or casual sexual interaction. Such a view has no soundness in public policy.
To the contrary, the public policy of this Commonwealth remains, as before, in support of marriage and the family. The distinctions noted here are consistent with that policy.
Op. of Trial Court at 4. We agree that the public policy which supports and values the family unit in our society is vitally important. It is a public policy which our courts should recognize and consider in reaching decisions in many types of cases. However, under the particular circumstances of the instant case, we find that this public policy does not outweigh other considerations to demand the result reached by the trial court.
Our courts have recognized the general rule of law that “[t]he term ‘malpractice’ denotes a breach of the duty owed by one in rendering professional services to a person who has contracted for such services; in physician-malpractice cases, the duty owed by the physician arises from the physician-patient relationship.”
Craddock v. Gross,
While a patient certainly reposes confidence in his treating physician, the same cannot be said of an employee and a physician retained by the employee, not to treat the employee, but to examine him with reference to a pending worker’s compensation claim. Moreover, when the employee has other physicians treating his injury as in the instant case, it is difficult to see how the ... ‘physician’ would have domination and influence over him.
Recently, in
Ervin v. American Guardian Life Assurance Company,
... [T]he defendant physician in the instant case owed no duty to the plaintiff’s decedent either to discover his heart problem, or, having discovered it, to inform the decedent thereof. The defendant had been employed by American to advise the company whether the applicant was an insurable risk. He was not employed to make a diagnosis for the applicant or to treat the applicant for any condition which was discovered. Neither was there any evidence that the defendant, by giving the applicant advice or otherwise, had assumed a physician-patient relationship.
Id.,
376 Pa.Superior Ct. at 139,
One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another which he should recognize as necessary for the protection of a third person or his things, is subject to liability to the third person for the physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to protect his undertaking, if
(a) his failure to exercise reasonable care increases the risk of such harm, or
(b) he has undertaken to perform a duty owed by the other person to the third person, or
(c) the harm is suffered because of reliance of the other or the third person upon the undertaking.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 324A. We found Section 324A inapplicable because, in Ervin, the physician had not read the EKG to benefit or to treat anyone but merely to advise the insurance company. Further, there was no reliance by Ervin on any medical advice offered to him by the carrier’s physician.
In the case at bar, we find that the appellant has stated a cause of action, pursuant to Section 324A, even though there was no physician-patient relationship between the appellant and Janet Viscichini’s physicians. In
Cantwell v. Allegheny County,
Although there is a dearth of case law addressing medical malpractice in relation to communicable disease, several other jurisdictions have considered cases similar to the case at bar. Although none of these cases rely on Section 324A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, we find their reasoning and underlying public policy considerations persuasive. In
Wojcik v. Aluminum Company of America, 18
Misc.2d 740,
... the defendant could have reasonably anticipated that the plaintiff-husband, without knowledge of his contagious disease, would not take precautionary measures necessary to prevent infecting others, including his wife, with the germs of the disease.
In 41 Am.Jur., Physicians and Surgeons, § 101, p. 216, it is stated: “One who by reason of his professional relations is placed in a position where it becomes his duty to exercise ordinary care to protect others from injury or danger is liable in damages to those injured by reason of his failure to do so.” The policy of the law in general is stated in 70 C.J.S. Physicians and Surgeons § 48, p. 970, as follows:
“It is the duty of a physician who is attending a patient afflicted with a contagious or infectious disease to exercise care in advising and warning members of the family and others who are liable to exposure of the existence and nature of the danger from the disease, to avoid doing any act which would tend to spread the infection, and to take all necessary precautionary measures to prevent its spread to other patients attended. A physician who fails to give such warning is negligent, and is liable in damages to any person injured as the direct and proximate result of his negligence.”
The plaintiff, Caroline Wojcik, the wife of the plaintiff Joseph Wojcik whom the doctors, as agents of the defendant, discovered was infected with tuberculosis, a contagious disease, is clearly within the ambit of the duty and
the liability of these agents____
Id.
at 746-747,
Wojcik v. Aluminum Company of America, supra,
was subsequently relied upon by the Court in
Hofmann v. Blackmon,
We hold that a physician owes a duty to a minor child who is a member of the immediate family and living with a patient suffering from a contagious disease to inform those charged with the minor’s well being of the nature of the contagious disease and the precautionary steps to be taken to prevent the child from contracting such disease and that the duty is not negated by the physician negligently failing to become aware of the presence of such a contagious disease.
Id.
at 753. More recently, in
Shepard v. Redford Community
Hospital,
*473 Finally, the facts as alleged by the appellant in the instant case, fit squarely within Section 324A, subsection (c), of the Restatement of Torts 2d (1977). Janet Viscichini’s physicians, knowing that their patient had been exposed to a communicable disease, advised her concerning precautions she was required to take in order not to spread hepatitis to a healthy person. The physicians certainly recognized that this information was necessary for the protection of third parties. It is alleged that Ms. Viscichini’s physicians were negligent because the information they provided to Janet Viscichini was erroneous. Assuming that appellant is able to establish this fact, then Ms. Viscichini’s physicians may be subject to liability pursuant to Section 324A, subsection (c), if appellant can also establish, as he states in his appellate brief, that he suffered harm because of his reliance on the advice that Janet Viscichini had received from her physicians. Appellant states that “[t]he appellee physicians are alleged to have negligently and/or recklessly dispensed medical advice, which impacted on Janet Viscichini’s decision to have sexual relations with appellant, as well as appellant’s decision to have such intimate relations with her.” Brief for Appellant at 8-9; N.T., May 19, 1988, at 39. Since appellant has claimed that he was aware of the medical advice given by Ms. Viscichini’s physicians, provided in the context of a physician-patient relationship, and that he relied on that advice in consenting to sexual relations with Ms. Viscichini, we find that appellant has set forth cause of action in negligence. We therefore *474 reverse the order of the trial court, dismissing appellant’s complaint, and we remand for further proceedings consistent with this Opinion. 3
Reversed and Remanded. 4 Jurisdiction is relinquished.
Notes
. A communicable disease is defined as “[a]n illness due to an infectious agent or its toxic products which is transmitted, directly or indirectly, to a well person from an infected person, animal or anthropoid, or through the agency of an intermediate host, vector of the inanimate environment.” 35 P.S. § 521.2(c). Other obvious examples of communicable diseases include AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome), Syphilis, Tuberculosis.
. We also take note of
Soto v. Frankford Hospital,
In the case sub judice, the physicians were not under a duty to control the conduct of Mrs. Soto. The injuries from which both she and her husband suffered were not caused by communicable disease. Moreover, the decedent was not injured as a result of an act performed by Mrs. Soto.
In the cases cited by the plaintiff, the respective courts extended a duty to the treating physicians for various reasons. In the cases dealing with a communicable disease, it was determined that the physician is in a position to prevent the diseases’ proliferation____
Id. at 1136 (footnote omitted).
. Our decision is limited to the facts of the case presently before us. Our Supreme Court stated the following principle in
Kaczkowski v. Bolubasz,
. The trial court also dismissed the complaint against the appellees Lynch Homes — Chester County, Inc. This was erroneous because Lynch Homes did not file any preliminary objections.
See Galdo v.
*475
First Pennsylvania Bank N.A.,
