In this рetition for original jurisdiction, the plaintiff, Juli George, seeks review of the order of the Superior Court (Brown, J.) granting the motion of defendant Merrimack River Medical Services, Inc. d/b/a Community Substance Abuse Centers (CSAC) to refer her claim against it to a pretrial screening panel for medical injury claims (medical injury screening panel) pursuant to RSA chapter 519-B. We affirm.
In her 2009 writ against defendants Amy Steadman and CSAC, the plaintiff alleged that Steadman’s vehicle crossed the centerline and struck her vehicle head-on, causing her to suffer “grievous injuries.” The plaintiff alleged that the accident happened because Steadman fell asleep at the wheel as a result of having been given methadone at CSAC. The plaintiff alleged that Steadman was negligent for failing to drive safely and that CSAC was negligent for allowing Steadman
In her claim against CSAC, the plaintiff specifically alleges that CSAC: (1) failed to monitor Steadman properly and/or supervise her while she was under the influence of methadone; (2) failed to determine the proper dosage of methadone that should have been given to her; (3) failed to implement a proper procedure for monitoring patients after they receivеd methadone that would have prevented Steadman from leaving the clinic in an impaired condition; (4) failed to intervene and prevent Steadman from leaving the clinic while she was under the influence of methadone; and (5) failed to monitor adequately whether Steadman was affected by other factors, such as drugs or alcohol, whiсh might have exacerbated the effect of methadone. The plaintiff alleges that as a result of CSAC’s negligent treatment of Steadman, Steadman succumbed to the effects of methadone and fell asleep at the wheel. Because Steadman was asleep, her car crossed the centerline and struck the plaintiffs car, causing her to suffer injuries.
CSAC moved to defer a scheduled structuring conference and refer the plaintiff’s claim against it to a screening panel for medical injury claims pursuant to RSA chapter 519-B. The court granted this motion and, subsequently, denied the plaintiffs motion to reconsider. The plaintiff moved for leave to file an interlocutory appeal of the trial court’s ruling, see SUP. Ct. R. 8, which the trial court denied. This petition for original jurisdiction followed.
The narrow question before us is whether the plaintiffs claim against CSAC is an “action for medical injury” within the meaning of RSA 507-E:l, I, III (2010), and, thus, must be presented to a medical injury screening panel. See RSA ch. 519-B (2007). Given that the parties have had an opportunity to litigate only whether the trial court erred by referring the plaintiffs claim against CSAC to a medical injury screening panel, we confine ourselves to this narrow issue. In particular, we express no opinion as to the viability of the plaintiffs claims.
The plaintiff argues that her claim against CSAC is not an “action for medical injury” because she is not a patient of CSAC. We cоnclude that the plaintiffs claim against CSAC is an “action for medical injury” because, to recover on it, she must prove that CSAC was negligent in its care, treatment and supervision of Steadman. We further conclude that the plain language of the pertinent statutes does not require that an “action for medical injury” be brought by a patient or that thе “medical injury” at issue be suffered by a patient.
Resolving the issues in this petition requires that we engage in statutory interpretation, which presents a question of law that we review
de novo. Petition of Farmington Teachers Assoc.,
The medical injury screening panel statute provides that, “[u]pon the entry of a medical injury case,” RSA 519-B:3, 11(a), a medical injury screening panel shall be convened, and, “no later than 6 months from the return date ... all the relevant
Following a hearing, the panel must answer three questions: (1) “[wjhether the acts or omissions complained of constitute a deviation from the applicable standard of care by the medical care provider charged with that care”; (2) “[wjhether the acts or omissions complained of proximately caused the injury complаined of’; and (3) “[i]f fault on the part of the medical care provider is found, whether any fault on the part of the patient was equal to or greater than the fault on the part of the provider.” RSA 519-B:6, I. If the panel unanimously finds “in the plaintiffs favor, the defendant shall promptly enter into negotiations to pay the claim or admit liability” and if the claim gоes to trial, the panel’s findings are admissible at trial. RSA 519-B:10, I; see RSA 519-B:8, 1(b). Conversely, if the panel unanimously finds “in the defendant’s favor, the plaintiff shall release the claim or claims based on the findings, without payment, or be subject to the admissibility of those findings” at trial. RSA 519-B:10, II; see RSA 519-B:8, 1(c).
The medical injury screening panel statute specifically incorporates the definitions contained in RSA chapter 507-E for “[a]ction for medical injury,” “Medical care provider,” and “Medical injury.” RSA 519-B:2. The parties agree that CSAC is a “medical care provider” within the meaning of RSA 507-E:l, II. An “[a]ction for medical injury” is “any action against a medical care provider, whether based in tort, contract or otherwise, to recover damages on aсcount of medical injury.” RSA 507-E:l, I. RSA 507-E:l, III defines a medical injury as:
any adverse, untoward or undesired consequences arising out of or sustained in the course of professional services rendered by a medical care provider, whether resulting from negligence, error, or omission in the performance of such services; from rendition of such servicеs without informed consent or in breach of warranty or in violation of contract; from failure to diagnose; from premature abandonment of a patient or a course of treatment; from failure properly to maintain equipment or appliances necessary to the rendition of such services; or otherwise arising out of or sustained in the course of such services.
The plaintiffs allegations against CSAC fit comfortably within this definition. The plaintiff has alleged that CSAC was negligent in the professional services it rendered to Steadman because it failed to: monitor and/or supervise her while she was under the influence of methadone, determine the right amount of methadone tо give her, determine whether she was under the influence of other drugs or alcohol before giving her methadone, and prevent her from leaving the clinic when she was impaired by methadone. The plaintiff has also alleged that because of CSAC’s negligent treatment of Steadman, the plaintiff suffered adverse consequences. She contеnds that because of CSAC’s negligent treatment of Steadman, Steadman fell asleep at the wheel and crashed into the plaintiff’s car, causing the plaintiff to suffer injuries. Because the plaintiff cannot recover on her claim against CSAC unless she proves that CSAC was negligent in its treatment of Steadman, it is an “[ajction for medical injury” and is subject tо the medical injury screening panel requirement.
The third-party nature of the plaintiff’s claim against CSAC does not remove it from the scope of RSA chapter 519-B.
See Vasa,
Similarly, the definition of “medical injury” does not require the person injured to be the patient. RSA 507-E:l, III defines a “medical injury” as
“any
adverse, untoward or undesired consequences arising out of or sustained in the course of professional services rendered by a medical cаre provider.” (Emphasis added.) Nothing in this language limits a medical injury to an injury suffered by a patient. Indeed, as we noted in
Lord v. Lovett,
The plaintiff argues that the fact that the medical injury screening panel must make a finding about whether, if the medical care provider is at fault, the fault of the “patient” is equal to or greater than the medical care provider’s fault, see RSA 519-B:6, 1(c), indicates that the legislature intended that the medical injury screening panel statute apply only to claims brought by patients. We agree with CSAC that this language “should not be interpreted to override the overall purpose and broad scope of the statutory scheme established by RSA [chapter] 507-E and RSA [chapter] 519-B.” As CSAC aptly notes: “[T]he statute’s goals are ensured only if all actions for medical injury, i.e., сlaims of professional negligence, are subjected to the screening panel process.” Exempting an entire class of claims from the process would contravene the broad definition of “medical injury,” which the legislature specifically incorporated into the medical injury screening panel statute, and would conflict with the legislature’s stated goal of containing “the costs of the medical injury reparations system” and promoting “availability and affordability of insurance against liability for medical injury.” RSA 519-B:1,1.
The plaintiff also contends that because the screening panels “are charged ... with determining only whether the patient bears more or less fault than the medical cаre provider,” the panels “have neither the duty nor the authority to examine the comparative fault of any non-patient claimant.” Accordingly, the plaintiff argues, “if the law is read to apply to claimants other than patients, the [screening panels are] required to leave unaddressed the key issue of comparative fault in its analysis of the merits of a non-patient’s claim.”
The fact that the screening panels are charged with finding only whether the patient bears more or less fault than the medical care provider is entirely consistent with allowing the panels to address the “medical injury” claims of non-patients, such as the plaintiff. The viability of the plaintiff’s “medical injury” claims depends upon whether the medical care provider is chargeable with negligence toward the patient.
Although we conclude that the statute requires medical screening panels to review claims for medical injury by non-patients, we express no opinion as to whether a medical care provider’s negligent trеatment of a patient gives rise, generally, to a duty to non-patients, or whether, in particular, CSAC’s alleged negligent treatment of Steadman gave rise to a duty to the plaintiff. Courts around the country have reached different conclusions in factually similar cases.
Compare Cheeks v. Dorsey,
The plaintiff next argues that applying the statutory definition of “medical injury” to claimants who are not patients of the defendant medical care provider violates the Equal Protection Clauses of thе State and Federal Constitutions. Her constitutional claims are premised upon her assumption that only patients may assert claims for “medical injury” under RSA 507-E:l, III, an assumption with which we have already disagreed. Because the plaintiffs constitutional arguments rest upon a faulty premise, we reject them.
Affirmed.
