On this appeal from an order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant hospital and physician, the issue is whether a mother who underwent a diagnostic x-ray and surgery during the first trimester of her pregnancy can recover for the mental distress she experienced out of concern for her health and the health of her unborn twins where the treating physician and hospital were negligent in failing to ascertain and inform her that she was pregnant and in failing to warn her of potential consequences of those procedures before performing them but where the twins were in fact born healthy. We hold that summary judgment was inappropriate because it is far from clear on this record that Mrs. Jones will not be able to satisfy the requirements of the zone of danger rule recently adopted by this court in
Williams v. Baker,
I.
Because we are reviewing the trial court’s grant of a summary judgment, we must construe the facts in the light most favorable to the appellant.
See Burt v. First Am. Bank,
Approximately two weeks after the surgery and while Mrs. Jones was still a patient in the hospital, she was informed that she was pregnant with twins of fourteen to fifteen weeks gestation. The twins were born healthy and normal, and since birth have demonstrated no physical or mental problems that their physicians have related to exposure to radiation.
The realization that she had been pregnant when she undеrwent the x-rays and surgery caused Mrs. Jones to suffer emotional distress and anxiety over the potential injury to her twin unborn children. She also became concerned over the prospect that she might experience a spontaneous abortion or other complications. The procedure that was performed in fаct created a risk of spontaneous abortion. A clinical psychologist diagnosed Mrs. Jones as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, symptoms of which included depression, anxiety, sleep disturbance, guilt, mistrust of authority figures, denial, and avoidance. Mrs. Jones’s emotional distress lasted throughout her pregnancy, and she continues to hаve profound fears regarding her children’s health and well being, both present and future.
Mrs. Jones filed suit against Howard University and Dr. Scott on two counts: 1) that appellees were negligent in subjecting her to radiation without first performing appropriate tests for pregnancy or taking an adequate history that would have revealed that she wаs pregnant; and 2) that appellees failed to obtain her informed consent to the x-rays and surgery. 2 According to Mrs. Jones, she would not have consented to either the x-rays or the surgery had she known that she was pregnant and instead would have continued with the antibiotic treatment to which she was responding. Her own medical expert, hоwever, stated at deposition that eventually her gall bladder would have to have been removed.
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants consistent with the then-controlling law that there could be no recovery for emotional distress absent an accompanying physical injury.
See Asuncion v. Columbia Hosp. for Women,
II.
We first аddress appellant’s claim that the doctor and the hospital are liable for damages to her because they failed to
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obtain her informed consent, and explain why we reject it. In the context of medical malpractice cases based on a lack of informed consent, a physician’s breach of duty to disclose is actionable in negligence only if “it induces a patient’s uninformed consent to a risky operation from which damages actually result.’’
Gordon v. Neviaser,
No more than breach of any other legal duty does nonfulfillment of the physician’s obligation to disclose alone establish liability to the patient. An unrevealed risk that should have been madе known must materialize, for otherwise the omission, however unpardonable, is legally without consequence.
Here, assuming that Dr. Scott and the hospital were negligent in failing to inform Mrs. Jones that she was pregnant before obtaining her consent to the x-rays and surgery, Mrs. Jones still cannot recover on a malpractice claim grounded uрon lack of informed consent because the unrevealed risk that her unborn twins would be physically harmed did not materialize. The x-rays and surgery of themselves cannot be viewed as supplying the physical injury necessary for recovery under an informed consent theory because, having served their intended purpose, they did not constitutе the realization of an undisclosed risk.
Cf. Kelton, supra,
III.
We now turn to the question of whether appellant can seek recovery under the zone of danger rule adopted by this court in
Williams, supra.
Under traditional principles of tort law, a plaintiff who did
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not suffer direct physical injury as a result of the defendant’s negligence could not recover for negligently inflicted emotional distress.
See Asuncion, supra,
In
Williams, supra,
this court held that a plaintiff may recover for negligent infliction of serious emotional distress, even without an accompanying physical injury, “if the plaintiff was in the zone of physical danger and was caused by defendant’s negligence to fear for his or her own safety ... regardless of whether plaintiff experienced a physicаl impact as a direct result of defendant’s negligence.”
In applying the zone of danger rule we must recognize that its logic requires that the plaintiff’s presence in the zone of danger be contemporaneous with her fear for her own safety.
See Williams, supra,
Another issue presented by this case is whether an injury to the unborn twins was an injury to Mrs. Jones herself. With respect to
viable
unborn children, we held in
Greater Southeast Community Hosp. v. Williams,
if the plaintiff was in the zone of physical danger and was caused by defendant’s negligence to fear for his or her own safety, thе plaintiff may recover for negligent infliction of serious emotional distress and any resultant physical injury, regardless of whether the plaintiff experienced a physical impact as a direct result of defendant’s negligence.
Williams, supra,
A question we left open in
Williams, supra,
and which we must now address, is whether the zone of danger rule allows recovery only for emotional distress thаt results in physical injuries or physical manifestations.
The fact that [the different forms of emotional disturbance] are accompanied by transitory, non-recurring physical phenomena, harmless in thеmselves, such as dizziness, vomiting, and the like, does not make the actor liable where such phenomena are in themselves inconsequential and do not amount to any substantial bodily harm. On the other hand, long continued nausea or headaches may amount to physical illness, which is bodily harm; and even long continued mental disturbance, as for example in the case of repeated hysterical attacks, or mental aberration, may be classified by the courts as illness, notwithstanding their mental character. This becomes a medical or psychiatric problem, rather than one of law.
Thus, if Mrs. Jones’s distress was serious and verifiable 9 she can recover for the mental distress she has suffered as a result of her fear that the x-ray radiation or surgical procedure had injured her or her unborn children or would cause the children to be born with injuries.
In sum, the absence of an accompanying physical injury does not preclude Mrs. Jones from recovering for serious and verifiable mental distress shе has suffered as a result of her fears that exposure to radiation or the surgery would cause harm to herself or her unborn twins. It is clear from our recitation above of the facts of this case as seen in the light most favorable to Mrs. Jones that she has raised genuine issues as to facts material to her right to recover on a zone of danger theory. We therefore remand this case for a trial at which Mrs. Jones will have the *425 opportunity to establish that she is entitled to recover under that theory.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. We withheld decision of this appeal pending our en banc reconsideration of
Williams v. Baker,
. Mrs. Jones originally sought to recover damages on her own behalf and on behalf of her twin sons. She subsequently dismissed the complaint as to her sons.
. The ruling of the trial judge was correct when made. Reversal results from our conclusion that it is clearly appropriate, pursuant to the criteria we set forth in
Mendes v. Johnson,
. We note that while an unauthorized surgical procedure can be the basis for a battery claim, a physician's failure to disclose risks attendant to a medical procedure is actionable only on a theory of medical negligence.
See Crain v. Allison,
. We do not rule out the possibility that a plaintiff could recover for emotional harm under an informed consent theory. If a course of treatment includes a risk that it would cause emotional harm or some kind of mental injury, and such a risk were unrevealed and should materialize, the emotionally-harmed person would have a cause of action based on lack of informed consent, even in the absence of physical injury. Mrs. Jones's emotional harm, however, was not the result of the materialization of an unrevealed risk of her medical trеatment.
.Nor can Mrs. Jones recover on the theory that appellees breached their contractual duty of reasonable care. In
Asuncion, supra,
this court declined to adopt a rule based on a contract theory that would allow recovery for negligent infliction of emotional distress without accompanying physicаl injury where traditional- tort law would preclude recovery.
. We will not pass upon the question whether Mrs. Jones can proceed on a combined informed consent and zone of danger theory by contending that the failure of the appellees to obtain her informed consent negligently placed her in the zone of danger and is therefore actionable if she suffers serious and verifiable harm as a consequence. To permit that result wоuld require the abandonment of the principle that the informed consent theory cannot justify recovery unless the undisclosed injury materializes. It is, in any event, unnecessary to contemplate the marriage of the informed consent and zone of danger theories. As our discussion makes clear, Mrs. Jones can proceed under a straightforward application of the zone of danger theory.
. We do not reach the question whether a person born subsequent to surviving an injury incurred as a non-viable fetus can later bring an action for damages for such injury.
. With respect to future consequences to Mrs. Jones of the theoretical injury to herself or her unborn children,
i.e.,
consequences that will be felt after trial, they are compensable only if such injuries are "reasonably or probably certain to follow.”
American Marietta Co. v. Griffin,
