The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This case requires the Court to consider the application of the doctrine first developed nearly twenty-five years ago in
Anderson v. Somberg,
67
N.J.
291,
The case before the Court involves a patient who died from an air embolism when gas was introduced into her bloodstream during a surgical procedure. The nature of the fatal injury was such that it was certainly the result of the negligent use of a medical instrument, but it was unclear who was at fault. This medical malpractice suit was brought against all the defendants who had a possible role in the events leading to the patient’s death: the doctor who performed the procedure; the nurses in the *460 operating room; the hospital; and the manufacturer of the medical instrument used in the operation.
The central issue posed in this appeal is to what extent the burden of proof in respect of liability should shift to defendants rather than remain with plaintiff. In addition, we are asked to consider whether the doctrine of common knowledge, which allows the jury to determine the negligence of professionals without expert testimony concerning professional standards of care, is applicable to this case.
I
Angelina Chin died at the age of forty-five from a massive air embolism during a diagnostic hysteroseopy at St. Barnabas Medical Center. An hysteroseopy is a procedure used to determine abnormalities in a woman’s uterus. The doctor uses an hystero-seope, a wand-like instrument with a lens at one end, to view the walls of a woman’s uterus on a television monitor. The physician’s view of the uterus is enhanced by stretching the uterine walls with a continuous flow of fluid into the uterus. Typically, this type of medical procedure involves minimal risk. In the case of Ms. Chin, however, gas was pumped into her uterus rather than fluid, causing the gas to be introduced into her coronary arteries and resulting in the air embolism that killed her. The record clearly demonstrates that the embolism was the direct result of an incorrect hook-up of the hysteroscope.
Ms. Chin’s treating physician, defendant Dr. Herbert Goldfarb, performed the procedure using an hysteroscope manufactured by defendant C.R. Bard, Inc. This type of hysteroscope, called the Hystero-Flo Pump, uses a pump driven by compressed nitrogen to create a vacuum that forces fluid to be drawn into a tube. The fluid passes through the tube, into the hysteroscope unit and finally into the patient’s uterus. In order to perform this function, the Bard Hystero-Flo Pump has several tubes. An “irrigation tube” draws fluid into the woman’s uterus and a “suction tube” draws waste fluid out of the uterus. Both are connected to the *461 pump. A third tube connects the nitrogen source to the pump. Lastly, an “exhaust hose” carries the by-product of the nitrogen that drives the pump; it is attached to the gas line coming off the pump. When the exhaust hose arrives from the manufacturer, it is attached by three wire clips to indicate that it should remain away from the operating field and remain non-sterile.
In addition to Dr. Goldfarb, three nurses were in the operating room during this procedure. Defendants Nurse Teresa Leib and Nurse Immacula Louis-Charles were assigned to the procedure. Because Leib and Louis-Charles had no experience, familiarity, or training on the Hystero-Flo Pump, they asked defendant Nancy Hofgesang, a nurse who had some experience with the equipment, to assist. She acted as circulating nurse, although she was not officially scheduled by the hospital to be there.
During Ms. Chin’s operation, one of the tubes was incorrectly connected to the hysteroscope, causing a closed circuit pathway that permitted the nitrogen gas to enter Ms. Chin’s uterus and resulted in the embolism. Defendants presented several theories regarding which tube was wrongly attached. Because Dr. Gold-farb removed the tubes from the pump shortly after Ms. Chin went into cardiac arrest, their exact configuration was ascertainable only by inference.
Plaintiff Robert Chin, individually and as administrator ad prosequendum of the Estate of Angelina A. Chin, brought suit against defendants Dr. Goldfarb, Nurses Leib, Louis-Charles, and Hofgesang, St. Barnabas Medical Center and C.R. Bard for the death of his wife. At trial, defendants presented conflicting testimony regarding which party or parties incorrectly hooked up the apparatus. At the close of evidence, defendant C.R. Bard moved for a directed verdict. The trial court granted the motion and none of the remaining parties argue that C.R. Bard is liable for the death of Ms. Chin.
The trial court submitted plaintiffs case to the jury under the principles set forth in
Anderson v. Somberg, supra,
67
N.J.
291,
The jury awarded plaintiff two million dollars in damages. It apportioned liability against the several defendants: Dr. Goldfarb, 20% liable; Nurse Leib, 20% liable; Nurse Hofgesang, 25% liable; St. Barnabas Medical Center, 35% liable. Nurse Louis-Charles was found not liable for the death of Ms. Chin. The trial court thereafter granted the hospital and nurses’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, reasoning that the case was improperly submitted under Anderson v. Somberg, supra, and the doctrine of common knowledge. The trial court then entered a judgment against Dr. Goldfarb alone for the entire two million dollar judgment, plus interest.
Dr. Goldfarb appealed, and the Appellate Division reversed, ruling that the jury was properly instructed both in the doctrine of
Anderson
and in the doctrine of common knowledge. 312
N.J.Super.
81,
II
The primary issue in this case is the application of the principles set forth in our plurality opinion in
Anderson v. Somberg, supra,
67
N.J.
291,
The facts in
Anderson v. Somberg
help in understanding the reasoning behind this exception to the usual allocation of burdens of proof. In
Anderson,
a surgical instrument broke during surgery and was lodged in the plaintiffs spinal canal, requiring multiple surgeries and resulting in severe and permanent physical injuries. The plaintiff, who was unconscious at the time, could not be blamed for the mishap. The plaintiff sued his physician, the hospital, the medical supply distributor and the manufacturer of the instrument. No explanation other than the negligence or fault of one of the defendants was available as the cause of the accident. Nevertheless, because the plaintiff could not prove which defendant caused the accident, the jury returned a verdict of no cause of action for each of the defendants. The evidence led to the inference that the break in the medical instrument may have been caused by weak metal, a crack during manufacture, cumulative misuse by other surgeons, or misuse by the operating surgeon. Hence, one, some or all of the defendants indisputably caused the instrument to break; a determination that no defendant was responsible would be an unjust result. In order to avoid the injustice resulting from the failure of liability against any defendant, this Court sustained the Appellate Division’s determination that “at least one of the defendants was liable for plaintiffs injury,” and held that the entire burden of proof shifts to the defendants.
Anderson, supra,
67
N.J.
at 298,
Here, the hospital defendants argue that
Anderson v. Somberg
requires a shifting only of the burden of going forward, but that the burden of persuasion remains -with the plaintiff. They rely on
Maciag v. Strato Medical Corp.,
274
N.J.Super.
447,
*464
The principle recognized in
Anderson
has its origin in the doctrine of alternative liability. That doctrine recognizes that where a plaintiff is harmed by two or more defendants, but it is uncertain which defendant caused the harm, each defendant must sustain the entire burden of proof with regard to liability and prove his or her own non-culpability.
Summers v. Tice,
33
Cal.
2d 80,
The Court in
Anderson
recognized the distinction between the burden of production and the burden of persuasion and that the construct of burden of proof embraces these related but distinct elements. The Court specifically addressed the insufficiency of a “mere shift in the burden of going forward” with the evidence.
Anderson, supra
at 300,
*465
Our support of this principle has been consistent and clear.
E.g. Myrlak v. Port Auth. of N.Y. and N.J.,
157
N.J.
84, 100,
Under the principles of
Anderson v. Somberg,
the plaintiff must show three things in order to shift the burden of proof to the defendants. First, the plaintiff must herself be entirely blameless. The fact pattern to which the principles of
Anderson
most readily apply is where a plaintiff was “clearly helpless or anesthetized” when her injury occurred.
Myrlak, supra,
157
N.J.
at 100,
This case presents a fact pattern that mirrors that presented in Anderson v. Somberg. All three requirements for the application of Anderson have been met. Angelina Chin, who was *466 unconscious, helpless, and utterly blameless, suffered a fatal injury that bespeaks negligence on the part of one or more of the defendants. It is not contested that the air embolism could have been caused only by negligent use of the hysteroscope. All the potential defendants, that is, all those who participated in the chain of events leading up to Ms. Chin’s injury, were sued in this case.
The hospital defendants argue that the verdict cannot be supported by the evidence and raise the possibility that the jury rendered a verdict against them in response to the compulsion of the jury charges. That argument echos Justice Mountain’s original criticism of the plurality decision in Anderson v. Somberg:
The absence of sufficient evidence upon which a verdict might justly rest, coupled with the compulsion to reach a verdict against someone, removes from the case any semblance of rationality.
[ 67 N.J. at 312, 338 A.2d 1 (Mountain, J., dissenting).]
The imputation of irrationality, however, is unfounded. Jurors are not required to find all the defendants liable. They are enjoined to weigh the evidence carefully and admonished to consider the role of each defendant. The verdict in this case reflects that the jury reached its determination conscientiously on sufficient evidence. The jurors thoroughly considered the evidence and exonerated Nurse Louis-Charles. Consistent with the jury’s verdict, all the testimony indicated that this nurse was not at fault.
The hospital defendants also argue that because the case against the manufacturer, C.R. Bard, was dismissed, the case against them should be dismissed as well. Implicit in that argument is the suggestion that not all potentially responsible defendants were present when the case was submitted to the jury.
The basis of the
Anderson
principles is the certainty that one or more of the defendants participating in the events surrounding the accident was negligent.
Anderson, supra,
67
N.J.
at 304,
The jury, weighing the conflicting testimony and contradictory evidence, found various levels of liability among defendants. There is nothing irrational about these findings of fact and they are supported by the evidence. The standard for reviewing a judgment notwithstanding the verdict is whether, when all evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, reasonable minds might differ about the moving party’s culpability.
Caterinicchio v. Pittsburgh Corning Corp.,
127
N.J.
428, 437,
At the beginning of the surgical procedure, Nurse Hofgesang, acting as a circulating nurse, removed the packing containing sterile tubing from the operating room cabinet, opened it and presented the package to Nurse Louis-Charles, the scrub nurse. While circulating nurses may act off the sterile field of the operation, obtaining the equipment for the sterile nurses and doctors, scrub nurses remain sterile throughout the procedure and do not circulate around the operating room. Nurse Louis-Charles handed all the non-sterile tubing to Nurse Hofgesang, while placing the sterile irrigation tube on Ms. Chin’s abdomen for use *468 during the procedure. Nurse Hofgesang apparently was responsible for hooking up the gas line to the nitrogen gas regulator and hooking up the exhaust tube to the gas line. Nurse Louis-Charles then asked Nurse Leib for a suction tube. Nurse Leib kept the non-sterile end of the suction tube, which was to be connected to a suction canister. Nurse Louis-Charles placed the sterile end of the suction tube on the patient’s abdomen for Dr. Goldfarb to connect to the scope in the patient’s uterus.
The evidence was consistent with two potential versions of the events. Either the non-sterile end of the suction tube was improperly connected to the exhaust hose, or the sterile end of the suction tube was improperly connected to the outflow port of the hysteroscope. Either of these misconnections could have created the closed circuit that killed Ms. Chin.
Because Nurse Louis-Charles did not connect any tubing, retained control only over two sterile tubes that were not part of the closed circuit, and was exonerated by Dr. Goldfarb’s expert witness, the jury’s finding that she was not liable was not against the weight of the evidence. As for the other hospital defendants, there was ample evidence to enable the jury to find that either one of the circulating nurses misconnected the suction tube to the exhaust hose and that Dr. Goldfarb was partly responsible for this mishap because he did not supervise the procedure adequately.
As
pointed out by the Appellate Division, because the hysteroscope and its various tubes were disconnected in the immediate aftermath of the accident, the only source of information is the conflicting witness testimony. 312
N.J.Super.
at 95,
*469
In sum, there was inadequate support for granting a judgment notwithstanding the jury’s verdict. Accepting as true all the evidence supporting defendant Goldfarb, who opposed the motion, we find that reasonable minds could differ, and therefore the hospital defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict was improperly granted by the trial court.
Caterinicchio, supra,
127
N.J.
at 437,
Ill
The trial court instructed the jurors that they may consider their own common knowledge in evaluating whether the hospital defendants had breached their duty of care to Ms. Chin. The hospital defendants argue that the nurses’ actions should have been evaluated only with reference to the professional nursing standard of care.
The general rule in malpractice cases is that “evidence of a deviation from accepted medical standards must be provided by competent and qualified physicians.”
Schueler v. Strelinger,
43
N.J.
330, 345,
In some medical malpractice cases, the jurors’ common knowledge as lay persons is sufficient to enable them, using ordinary understanding and experience, to determine a defendant’s negligence without the benefit of the specialized knowledge of experts. The doctrine of common knowledge is appropriately invoked where the “carelessness of the defendant is readily apparent to anyone of average intelligence and ordinary experience.”
*470
Rosenberg, supra,
99
N.J.
at 325,
The trial court determined that the evidence appropriately enabled the jury to rely on its common knowledge in determining whether any of the defendants breached their duty of reasonable professional care. After the jury had returned its verdict, however, the trial court granted judgment in favor of the hospital and the nurses notwithstanding the verdict, on the basis that it was error to have allowed the jury to consider and rely on its common knowledge in determining the issue of negligence.
The trial court was right the first time. At trial, counsel for the hospital defendants conceded that “if there is a hook-up which is incorrect, that ... is a matter of common knowledge and a jury can draw the inference that there was professional negligence.” An attempt by plaintiffs expert, a physician, to offer testimony on the professional standards of care that should be applied to nurses was overruled by the court on defendants’ objections. The basis for that ruling and objection, however, was that the expert, a medical doctor, was not qualified to testify on professional nursing standards. That ruling itself may have been problematic.
Cf. Rosenberg, supra,
99
N.J.
at 334,
Nevertheless, this ease did not require expert evidence concerning professional standards of nursing care. Rather, the case
*471
“hinged primarily on the jury’s determinations regarding who did what with the exhaust line, rather than with regard to professional standards of care.” 312
N.J.Super.
at 93,
Ms. Chin’s injury was caused by an incorrect hook-up of the hysteroscope, which introduced gas into her uterus and bloodstream. All the parties agreed that Ms. Chin’s death was caused by an erroneous hook-up of the apparatus. Expert testimony was not required to establish that only a lack of reasonable care or negligence by one or more of the defendants could cause this medical accident. No party contested the fact that the misconnection was the result of negligence on the part of at least one defendant. Each defendant simply insisted that he or she was not the party individually responsible.
Recognizing that the common knowledge of lay persons is not infallible, this Court reasoned that the “remedy for inaccuracy is then the right of those who dispute the common knowledge to produce proof to the contrary.”
Klimko, supra,
84
N.J.
at 504,
IV
We affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division and remand for an entry of judgment in accordance with the jury’s verdict.
For affirmance and remandment — Chief Justice PORITZ and Justices HANDLER, POLLOCK, O’HERN, GARIBALDI, STEIN and COLEMAN — 7.
Opposed — None.
