In this medical malpractice case, the court of appeals reversed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Petitioner Robert Smith, M.D. We granted a writ of certiorari to review the court of appeals decision in
Hoard v. Roper Hospital, Inc.,
I.
Shortly after Jamia Hoard was born at Roper Hospital in Charleston, South Carolina on March 30, 2002, she developed respiratory distress and was transferred from the Level 1 newborn nursery to the Level 2 nursery. Jamia’s treating physician was Marshall Goldstein, M.D., a board-certified neonatologist. Dr. Goldstein determined it was necessary for Jamia to have a peripheral intravenous line (IV) for infusion of medications and fluids and for withdrawal of blood for testing. After nurses were unable to place the IV, Dr. Goldstein ordered pediatric nurse practitioner Karen Johnson to insert an umbilical vein catheter (UVC). 1
A chest X-ray was taken prior to insertion of the UVC. Johnson initially advanced the UVC to a depth of 11 to 13 centimeters. Because the UVC was not drawing blood, Johnson inserted it deeper into Jamia’s chest. A second X-ray was made to confirm whether the UVC was placed properly. When Johnson read the second X-ray, she did not observe a problem with the UVC placement. The X-rays were sent to the radiology department for review by a radiologist.
The next morning, the on-call radiologist, Robert Smith, M.D., read Jamia’s X-rays. Dr. Smith’s written report stated: “An umbilical vein catheter has been placed. The tip terminates high within the right atrium. There are persistent bilateral coarse infiltrates essentially unchanged compared with the prior exam. No pneumothorax is seen.” At 10:34 a.m., Dr. Smith sent the X-rays and his report to the nursery.
At approximately 4:00 a.m. the next day, April 1, Jamia went into cardiac arrest. The nursing staff called Dr. Gold-stein, who instructed staff to pull the UVC back and to transfer Jamia immediately to the Level 3 nursery at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC). 2 At MUSC, neonatologists determined Jamia was experiencing “cardiac tamponade,” a potentially fatal syndrome. 3
In her deposition, neonatologist Anne Hansen, M.D. explained that the tip of the UVC slowly eroded the wall of the right atrium. Hansen explained that the fluid, which was being infused on a continuous basis, was filling the pericardial sac instead of going into the bloodstream. Ultimately, the volume of fluid surrounding the heart rendered it unable to properly expand and contract. Hansen described the process that led to Jamia’s cardiac arrest:
[T]he fluid actually [comes] out of the tip of the [UVC] causing a perforation through the atrium wall and then this fluid filling up this potential space between the pericardial sac and the [heart] muscle____ So here is this line with intravenous fluid coming through. [B]etween the plastic itself and the fluid eroding, eroding, eroding until it erodes all the way through the [heart] muscle wall. And then it accumulates and pushes this sac away and pushes the heart muscle in and causes a pressure build up all the way around the heart.
[T]he effects of this tamponade situation were severe enough that ... it actually perfused the heart muscle where it was so poor that the muscle itself stopped working.
Jamia and her parents (the Hoards) filed professional malpractice actions against Drs. Smith and Goldstein, Roper Hospital, and Karen Johnson, alleging their actions or omissions caused Jamia to experience cardiac arrest, which in turn caused her to suffer brain damage and partial paralysis. All defendants, except Dr. Smith, settled with the Hoards. Dr. Smith moved the trial court for summary judgment, contending no evidence was presented to suggest that his alleged negligence was the proximate cause of Jamia’s injury.
The Hoards contended at summary judgment that Jamia’s injuries were caused by the improper insertion of the UVC. They additionally asserted Jamia may not have suffered cardiac arrest if Dr. Smith had contacted the nursery after he read the X-rays at 10:34 a.m. or had stated in his written report that the UVC was “malpositioned.” Four expert witnesses testified regarding the standard of care applicable to radiologists and neonatologists.
The trial court initially determined the evidence presented a question of fact regarding Dr. Smith’s alleged negligence in failing to clearly indicate that the UVC was “malpositioned” or other term of similar import. Summary judgment was granted, however, as the trial court held that “[t]he Plaintiffs’ case against Dr. Smith fails because there was no proximate causation between Dr. Smith’s alleged negligence and the injury to Jamia Hoard.” The Hoards appealed.
On appeal, Jamia’s parents asserted: “It is hornbook law that a jury is the judge of the credibility of a witness and may disregard all or part of a witness’s testimony.” The court of appeals agreed with this position and reversed the grant of summary judgment. We accepted Dr. Smith’s petition for certiorari to review the court of appeals decision.
II.
This case turns on whether there is any evidence that Dr. Smith’s alleged negligence was a proximate cause of the injury. The trial court found no evidence that Dr. Smith’s alleged failure to act within the established standard of care
Dr. Goldstein considered repositioning the UVC, but decided the risks outweighed the potential advantages. Dr. Gold-stein was concerned that if he withdrew or repositioned the UVC twenty-two hours after it was placed, withdrawal of the line could dislodge a blood clot and cause additional problems. Moreover, it was Dr. Goldstein’s assessment that Jamia was improving and the only indication of a problem with the UVC was Dr. Smith’s report.
In reversing the trial court’s order, the court of appeals held “a jury could have chosen not to believe Dr. Goldstein’s testimony. Simply because testimony is uncontradicted does not render it undisputed.”
Hoard,
A.
Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is a drastic remedy and should be cautiously invoked so that a litigant will not be improperly deprived of trial on disputed factual issues. '
Cunningham ex rel. Grice v. Helping Hands, Inc.,
[T]he pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, showthat there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
Rule 56(c), SCRCP.
When reviewing the grant of a summary judgment motion, this court applies the same standard which governs the trial court under Rule 56(c), SCRCP, and summary judgment is proper only when there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Fleming v. Rose,
B.
Proximate Cause
A plaintiff alleging medical malpractice must provide evidence showing: (1) the generally recognized and accepted practices and procedures that would be followed by the average, competent physician in the defendant’s field of medicine under the same or similar circumstances, and (2) the defendant departed from the recognized and generally accepted standards.
Jones v. Doe,
“In a medical malpractice action, it is incumbent on the plaintiff to establish proximate cause as well as the negligence of the physician.”
Ellis v. Oliver,
“Negligence is not actionable unless it is a proximate cause of the injuries, and it may be deemed a proximate cause only when without such negligence the injury would not have occurred or could have been avoided.”
Hughes v. Children’s Clinic, P.
A.,
III.
In his motion for summary judgment, Dr. Smith presented evidence that Dr. Goldstein read the radiology report and reviewed the X-rays on the afternoon of March 31 and knew the UVC was not optimally placed. It was Dr. Goldstein’s judgment that, as described above, removing the UVC presented greater risk to Jamia than leaving it in place. Well aware that the UVC was not optimally placed, Dr. Goldstein made a knowing judgment not to move the line. Fourteen hours later, Jamia experienced cardiac arrest.
The Hoards presented the deposition testimony of several experts. Dr. Anne Hansen, a neonatologist, testified for the Hoards. According to Dr. Hansen, if Dr. Goldstein had repositioned the UVC on March 31, Jamia would have been fine. Dr. Hansen stated that, in her practice, when an X-ray shows the UVC is in the right atrium, “we pull those lines back as soon as we find out and those babies are all fine.” Dr. Hansen was asked: “Is there anything in [Dr. Goldstein’s] admission note at 2:00 p.m. on the 31st of March that would justify a clinical decision by him to leave the UVC in the position he notes there?” She responded: “No.” Hansen testified that Jamia’s blood pressure reading at 2:00 p.m. on March 31 indicated there was “no tamponade going on at that point.” Dr. Hansen explained:
[T]here was probably slow erosion of the inner wall of the right atrium, but it had not happened to the extent that there was actually erosion through into the pericardial space at this point. So if they had pulled this line out on the 31st at 2:00 p.m., the baby would have been fine.
The Hoards counter that the court of appeals properly reversed the grant of summary judgment because the evidence established a question of fact regarding the element of proximate cause. In making this argument, they contend it is possible that Dr. Goldstein gave false testimony and did not actually know the standard of care. Therefore, if Dr. Smith had been clearer in his report or had orally communicated his findings, then Dr. Goldstein may have been alerted to the “malposition” of the UVC and may have repositioned it. We reject this “speculative hypothetical.”
David v. McLeod Regl. Med. Ctr.,
We turn to the standard relied on by the court of appeals, in which it adopted the Hoards’ position that “a jury could have disregarded Dr. Goldstein’s testimony and found Dr. Smith’s failure to alert Dr. Goldstein of the line’s position was a proximate cause of Jamia’s injuries____ Simply because testimony is uncontradicted does not render it undisputed.”
Hoard,
The court of appeals relied upon
Black v. Hodge,
One may not, however, avoid summary judgment by asserting that a jury may disbelieve uncontradicted evidence. This argument, if accepted, would render summary judgment obsolete, and it is in any event at odds with Rule 56, SCRCP, and our summary judgment jurisprudence:
[R]ule 56(e), SCRCP, requires that when a motion for summary judgment is made and supported as provided by the rule, an adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his pleadings. The adverse party’s response, including affidavits or as otherwise provided by the rule, must set forth specific facts showing there is a genuine issue for trial.
SSI Med. Servs., Inc. v. Cox,
A plaintiff cannot create a genuine issue of material fact with the argument that the jury does not have to believe a witness. A party defeats summary judgment by affirmatively demonstrating the presence of a genuine issue of material fact. As Rule 56(e), SCRCP, states, a party “may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his pleading[s].”
In response to Dr. Smith’s evidence that his alleged breach of the standard of care was not a proximate cause of Jamia’s injury, the Hoards could rely on neither speculation nor the suggestion that a jury may ultimately find Dr. Goldstein not believable to create a genuine issue of material fact. We find the Hoards failed to produce any evidence that Dr. Smith’s alleged negligence was a proximate cause of Jamia’s injuries.
We reverse the decision of the court of appeals and reinstate the trial court’s order granting Dr. Smith summary judgment.
REVERSED.
Notes
. An umbilical vein catheter (UVC) is inserted into the large vein that travels thorough the umbilical cord.
. MUSC has the only Level 3 nursery in the Charleston-area.
. “Cardiac tamponade" is the mechanical compression of the heart by large amounts of fluid within the pericardial space. This compression limits the normal range of motion and function of the heart. Medline Plus (Merriam-Webster 2010) (available at http://www. merriamwebster.com/medlineplus).
. Experts testified that the standard of care requires that the UVC generally be placed "above the diaphragm and below the heart,” also referred to in the record as the “11 to 13 cm. range.”
