The
In this appeal we consider what causes of action will lie when a plaintiff contends that a physician misrepresented his credentials and experience at the time he obtained the plaintiffs consent to surgery.
I.
Plaintiff, Joseph Howard, came under the
In January 1997, another automobile accident caused plaintiff injuries that included a cerebral concussion, cervical syndrome with bilateral radiculopathies, and low back syndrome with bilateral radiculopathies. Plaintiff sought the care of Dr. Boston Martin, who had treated him after the 1991 accident. Dr. Martin concluded that plaintiffs spinal condition had worsened significantly and recommended that plaintiff be seen at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) by Dr. Heary, a Professor of Neurosurgery and the Director of UMDNJ’s Spine Center of New Jersey.
Dr. Heary had two pre-operative consultations with plaintiff. In the first consultation, Dr. Heary determined that plaintiff needed surgery to correct a cervical myelopathy secondary to cervical stenosis and a significantly large C3 C4 disc herniation. Because of the serious nature of the surgery, Dr. Heary recommended that plaintiffs wife attend a second consultation. The doctor wanted to explain again the risks, benefits, and alternatives to surgery, and to answer any questions concerning the procedure.
Plaintiff returned with his wife for a second consultation, but what transpired is disputed. An “Office Note” written by Dr. Heary detailing the contents of the consultation states that “[a]ll alternatives have been discussed and patient elects at this time to undergo the surgical procedure, which has been scheduled for March 5, 1997.” Dr. Heary asserts that he informed plaintiff and his wife that the surgery entailed significant risks, including the possibility of paralysis. Plaintiffs dispute that they were informed of such risks. Further, they contend that during the consultation plaintiffs wife asked Dr. Heary whether he was Board Certified and that he said he was. Plaintiffs also claim that Dr. Heary told them that he had performed approximately sixty corpectomies in each of the eleven years he had been performing such surgical procedures. According to Mrs. Howard, she was opposed to the surgery and it was only after Dr. Heary’s specific claims of skill and experience that she and her husband decided to go ahead with the procedure.
Dr. Heary denies that he represented that he was Board Certified in Neurosurgery. 1 He also denies that he ever claimed to have performed sixty corpectomies per year for the eleven years he had practiced neurosurgery.
Dr. Heary performed the surgical procedure on March 5, 1997, but it was unsuccessful. A malpractice action was filed alleging that Mr. Howard was rendered quadriplegic as a result of Dr. Heary’s negligence.
During pretrial discovery, Dr. Heary and Mr. and Mrs. Howard were deposed. Plaintiffs claim that they learned from Dr. Heary’s deposition that he had misrepresented his credentials and experience during
the
pre-surgery consultation. In his deposition Dr. Heary stated that he was not Board Certified at the time of the surgery, and that he had performed approximately
In denying the motion, the trial court reasoned that “the plaintiff can get before the jury everything that is necessary without clouding the issue [with] is there a fraud here against the doctor.... I have to agree with counsel for defendant that that, in essence, is not the nexus of malpractice.” The court added that the fraud count would be duplicative, because if it were true that the doctor had misrepresented his credentials and experience plaintiffs still would be required to prove that Dr. Heary deviated from the acceptable standard of care to be entitled to recovery.
On leave to appeal the interlocutory order, the Appellate Division reversed and remanded with direction to the trial court to permit amendment of the complaint to include a “deceit based claim.”
Howard v. University of Medicine and Dentistry,
338
N.J.Super.
33, 39,
We granted defendant’s motion for leave to appeal, 168
N.J.
287,
II.
Presently, a patient has several avenues of relief against a doctor: (1) deviation from the standard of care (medical malpractice); (2) lack of informed consent; and (3) battery.
Colucci v. Oppenheim,
326
N.J.Super.
166, 180,
A.
We focus first on the distinction between lack of informed consent and battery as they are recognized in New Jersey. The doctrine of informed consent was tied initially to the tort of battery, but its evolution has firmly established it as a negligence concept. See
Largey v. Rothman,
110
N.J.
204, 207-08,
By the mid-twentieth century, as courts began to use a negligence theory to analyze consent causes of action, the case law evolved from the notion of consent to
informed
consent, balancing the patient’s need for sufficient information with the doctor’s perception of the appropriate amount of information to impart for an informed decision. See
Largey, supra,
110
N.J.
at 208,
The doctrine of informed consent continued to be refined. See
Natanson v. Kline,
186
Kan.
393,
In New Jersey, as in most jurisdictions, informed consent is “a negligence concept predicated on the duty of a physician to disclose to a patient information that will enable him to ‘evaluate knowledgeably
Thus, to sustain a claim based on lack of informed consent, the patient must prove that the doctor withheld pertinent medical information concerning the risks of the procedure or treatment, the alternatives, or the potential results if the procedure or treatment were not undertaken.
Perna, supra,
92
N.J.
at 460,
A plaintiff seeking to recover under a theory of lack of informed consent also must prove causation,
id.
at 215,
[t]o establish a prima fade case for medical negligence premised on a theory of liability for lack of informed consent, a plaintiff must show “(1) the physician failed to comply with the [reasonably-prudent-patient] standard for disclosure; (2) the undisclosed risk occurred and harmed the plaintiff, (3) a reasonable person under the circumstances would not have consented and submitted to the operation or surgical procedure had he or she been so informed; and (4) the operation or surgical procedure was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries.”
[Teilhaber., supra, 320 N.J.Super. at 465,727 A.2d 518 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).]
The damages analysis in an informed consent case involves a comparison between the condition a plaintiff would have been in had he or she been properly informed and not consented to the risk, with the plaintiffs impaired condition as a result of the risk’s occurrence.
Canesi, supra,
158
N.J.
at 505,
the plaintiff must prove not only that a reasonably prudent patient in [his or] her position, if apprised of all material risks, would have elected a different course of treatment or care. In an informed consent case, the plaintiff must additionally meet a two-pronged test of proximate causation: [he or] she must prove that the undisclosed risk actually materialized and that it was medically caused by the treatment.
[Ibid.]
B.
Our common law also authorizes a medical battery cause of action where a doctor performs a surgery without consent, rendering the surgery an unauthorized touching.
Perna, supra,
92
N.J.
at 460-61,
In circumstances where the surgery that was performed was authorized with arguably inadequate information, however, an action for negligence is more appropriate.
Tonelli v. Khanna,
238
N.J.Super.
121, 126-27,
The decision in
Pema
represents the unusual circumstance where the consent granted was vitiated, rendering the circumstances the equivalent of an unauthorized touching-in other words, a battery. In that matter, the defendant urologists were part of a medical group that operated as a self-described “team.”
Perna, supra,
92
N.J.
at 451,
Plaintiff sued based on lack of informed consent.
Perna, supra,
92
N.J.
at 452,
Thus, although a claim for battery will lie where there has been “ghost surgery” or where no consent has been given for the procedure undertaken, if consent has been given for the procedure only a claim based on lack of informed consent will lie. A claim based on lack of informed consent properly will focus then on the adequacy of the disclosure, its impact on the reasonable patient’s assessment of the risks, alternatives, and consequences of the surgery, and the damages caused by the occurrence of the undisclosed risk. See W. Page Keeton, et ah, Prosser and Keeton on Tarts § 32 at 190 (5th ed.1984).
III.
A.
In finding that a deceit-based claim was appropriate in this matter, the Appellate Division analogized the allegations concerning Dr. Heary’s misrepresentations about his credentials and experience to the “ghost surgery” situation discussed in
Pema. Howard, supra,
338
N.J.Super.
at 38-39,
New jurisdictions have confronted the question of what cause of action should lie when a doctor allegedly misrepresents his
The thoughtful decision of the Appellate Division notwithstanding, we are not convinced that our common law should be extended to allow a novel fraud or deceit-based cause of action in this doctor-patient context that regularly would admit of the possibility of punitive damages, and that would circumvent the requirements for proof of both causation and damages imposed in a traditional informed consent setting. We are especially reluctant to do so when plaintiffs damages from this alleged “fraud” arise exclusively from the doctor-patient relationship involving plaintiffs corpectomy procedure. See Spinosa, supra, 571 N.Y.S.2d at 753 (citations omitted) (holding that concealment or failure to disclose doctor’s own malpractice does not give rise to claim of fraud or deceit independent of medical malpractice, and noting that intentional tort of fraud actionable “ ‘only when the alleged fraud occurs separately from and subsequent to the malpractice ... and then only where the fraud claim gives rise to damages separate and distinct from those flowing from the malpractice’”). Accordingly, we hold that a fraud or deceit-based claim is unavailable to address the wrong alleged by plaintiff. We next consider whether a claim based on lack of informed consent is the more appropriate analytical basis for the amendment to the complaint permitted by the Appellate Division.
B.
Our case law never has held that a doctor has a duty to detail his background and experience as part of the required informed consent disclosure; nor are we called on to decide that question here. See
In re Conroy,
98
N.J.
321, 346,
Although personal credentials and experience may not be a required part of an informed consent disclosure under the current standard of care required of doctors, the question raised in this appeal is whether significant misrepresentations concerning a physician’s qualifications can affect the validity of consent obtained. The answer obviously is that they can.
In certain circumstances, a serious misrepresentation concerning the quality or extent of a physician’s professional experience, viewed from the perspective of the reasonably prudent patient assessing the risks attendant to a medical procedure, can be material to the grant of intelligent and informed consent to the procedure. See 1 Dan B. Dobbs,
The Law of Torts,
§ 251 at 660-61 (2001) (citing
Kokemoor, supra,
and discussing that some authority has begun to suggest that patient is entitled to information concerning doctor’s experience in performing specific surgery). In
Kokemoor, supra,
the Supreme Court of Wisconsin reviewed a ease in which the plaintiff alleged that her surgeon did not obtain her informed consent to perform a surgical procedure because he had misrepresented his experience in response to a direct question during a pre-operative consultation.
The allegation here is that defendant’s misrepresentations concerning his credentials and experience were instrumental in overcoming plaintiffs reluctance to proceed with the surgery. The theory of the claim is not that the misrepresentation induced plaintiff to proceed with unnecessary surgery. See
Tonelli, supra,
238
N.J.Super.
at 128,
As noted earlier, a patient-specific standard of what is material to a full disclosure does not apply in a claim based on lack of informed consent. Thus, plaintiffs subjective preference for a Board Certified physician, or one who had performed more cor-pectomies than defendant had performed, is not the actionable standard. Nonetheless, assuming the misrepresentations are proved, if an objectively reasonable person could find that physician experience was material in determining the medical risk of the corpectomy procedure to which plaintiff consented, and if a reasonably prudent person in plaintiffs position informed of the defendant’s misrepresentations about his experience would not have consented, then a claim based on lack of informed consent may be maintained.
Modern advances in medicine coupled with the increased sophistication of medical consumers require an evolving notion of the reasonably prudent patient when assessing a claim based on lack of informed consent. See Schultz,
supra,
95
Yale L.J.
at 221-22. That said, most informed consent issues are unlikely to implicate a setting in which a physician’s experience or credentials have been demonstrated to be a material element affecting the risk of undertaking a specific procedure. The standard requires proof on which an objectively reasonable person would base a finding that physician experience could have a causal connection to a substantial risk of the procedure.
Largey, supra,
110
N.J.
at 213-15,
The alleged misrepresentations in this case about “physician experience” (credentials and surgical experience) provide a useful context for demonstrating the difficulty inherent in meeting the materiality standard required in order for physician experience to have a role in an informed consent case. We recognize that a misrepresentation about a physician’s experience is not a perfect fit with the familiar construct of a claim based on lack of informed consent. The difficulty arises because physician experience is not information that directly relates to the procedure itself or one of the other areas of required medical disclosure concerning the procedure, its substantial risks, and alternatives that must
be disclosed to avoid a claim based on lack of informed consent. But the possibility of materiality is present. If defendant’s true level of experience had the capacity to enhance substantially the risk of paralysis from undergoing a corpectomy, a jury could find that a reasonably prudent patient would not have consented to that procedure had the misrepresentation been revealed. That presumes that plaintiff can prove that the actual level of experience possessed by defendant had a direct and demonstrable relationship to the harm of paralysis, a substantial risk of the procedure that was disclosed to plaintiff. Put differently, plaintiff must prove that the additional undisclosed risk posed by defendant’s true
The standard for causation that we envision in such an action will impose a significant gatekeeper function on the trial court to prevent insubstantial claims concerning alleged misrepresentations about a physician’s experience from proceeding to a jury. We contemplate that misrepresented or exaggerated physician experience would have to significantly increase a risk of a procedure in order for it to affect the judgment of a reasonably prudent patient in an informed consent ease. As this case demonstrates, the proximate cause analysis will involve a two-step inquiry.
The first inquiry should be, assuming a misrepresentation about experience, whether the more limited experience or credentials possessed by defendant could have substantially increased plaintiffs risk of paralysis from undergoing the corpectomy procedure. We envision that expert testimony would be required for such a showing. The second inquiry would be whether that substantially increased risk would cause a reasonably • prudent person not to consent to undergo the procedure. If the true extent of defendant’s experience could not affect materially the risk of paralysis from a corpectomy procedure, then the alleged misrepresentation could not cause a reasonably prudent patient in plaintiffs position to decline consent to the procedure. The court’s gatekeeper function in respect of the first question will require a determination that a genuine issue of material fact exists requiring resolution by the factfinder in order to proceed to the second question involving an assessment by the reasonably prudent patient. Further, the trial court must conclude that there is a genuine issue of material fact concerning both questions in order to allow the claim to proceed to trial.
Finally, to satisfy the damages element in a claim based on lack of informed consent, a plaintiff typically has to show a causal connection between the inadequately disclosed risk of the procedure and the injury sustained.
Canesi, supra,
158
N.J.
at 505,
In conclusion, plaintiffs medical malpractice action will address any negligence in defendant’s performance of the corpectomy procedure. We hold that in addition plaintiff may attempt to prove that defendant’s alleged misrepresentation about his credentials and experience presents a claim based on lack of informed consent to the surgical procedure, consistent with the requirements and limitations that we have imposed on such a claim.
IV.
We reverse that portion of the decision below that would permit a separate action for fraud in view of our conclusion that misrepresentations concerning a physician’s credentials and experience
ordinarily are to be cognizable in a claim based on lack of informed consent. All aspects of plaintiffs complaint against
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed in part, and reversed in part. The matter is remanded to the trial court to allow plaintiff the opportunity to amend his complaint to allege lack of informed consent, consistent with the requirements for prevailing on that claim as set forth in this opinion.
For affirmance in part; reversal and remandment — Chief Justice PORITZ and Justices STEIN, COLEMAN, LONG, YERNIERO, LaVECCHIA, and ZAZZALI — 7.
Opposed — None.
Notes
Although he was Board Eligible at the time of Mr. Howard's surgery, Dr. Heary did not become Board Certified in Neurosurgery until November 1999. "A physician is considered to be a surgical specialist if the physician: (1) Is certified by an American surgical specialty board approved by the American Board of Medical Specialties; or (2) Has been judged eligible by such a board for its examination by reason of education, training and experience.” American College of Surgeons Statements on Principles, Section II.A.
