In this appeal from an order refusing to remove a compulsory non-suit, we are asked to review rulings by the trial court that (1) plaintiffs expert, a board certified internist and cancer specialist, was unqualified to express an opinion regarding the standard of care expected of a physician’s assistant, and (2) plaintiffs evidence was insufficient to submit to a jury the issue of causation.
On August 13, 1985, Renee Montgomery presented herself for an annual physical examination at the South Philadelphia Medical Group. 1 There she was examined by Barbara O’Rourke, a physician’s assistant. According to Montgomery’s testimony, she informed O’Rourke that she had been experiencing pain in her left breast. 2 At the completion of the examination, O’Rourke noted that Montgomery had fibrocystic breasts and ordered a baseline mammogram. The mammogram was performed at the offices of the medical group on August 20, 1985, and revealed no abnormality. During the succeeding year, Montgomery was treated at various times by the defendant medical group and continued to complain of pain in her left breast. 3 However, she was not referred to a physician or told to seek other medical advice.
On September 8, 1986, after experiencing irregular vaginal bleeding, Montgomery was seen by Dr. Larry Seidman, a gynecologist in the offices of the medical group, and he found a suspicious mass in her left breast. He immediately referred Montgomery to Dr. John Fobia, who confirmed the presence of the mass and performed a biopsy. When the mass was determined to be malignant, Montgomery underwent a modified radical mastectomy of the left breast, followed by chemo *151 therapy. The cancer was found to be Stage II and had spread to one lymph node.
Montgomery filed a civil action against the medical group in which she contended that O’Rourke, an employee of the medical group, had been negligent in failing to refer her to a physician after she had complained of pain in her left breast. At the close of her case, the trial court entered a compulsory non-suit, which it subsequently refused to remove.
A motion for a non-suit may be granted only where it is clear that no other conclusion could be reached under the evidence presented.
Bowser v. Lee Hosp.,
At trial, the plaintiff introduced the testimony of Dr. George I. Karp, M.D., a board certified internist, to establish that O’Rourke had breached a duty of care by failing to refer the plaintiff to a qualified physician after the plaintiff had complained of breast pain. Initially, the trial court overruled an objection to the expertise of the witness and permitted his testimony to be heard by the jury. 4 At the close of the *152 plaintiffs case, however, the court ruled that the witness was not qualified to testify to the appropriate standard of care for a physician’s assistant and entered a compulsory non-suit.
Whether a witness should be permitted to testify as an expert is a question for the discretion of the trial court, whose decision will not be overruled absent an abuse thereof.
Gray v. H.C. Duke & Sons, Inc.,
A witness may qualify as an expert if his or her experience or education logically or fundamentally embraces the matter at issue.
Dambacher by Dambacher v. Mallis,
In
Taylor v. Spencer Hosp., supra,
It is evident that the nurses in the instant case made decisions involving the medical treatment of [the plaintiff], and that these decisions were not uniquely administrative or outside the knowledge of a medical doctor. All areas of medical expertise within the knowledge of nurses are also within the knowledge of medical doctors. This issue has never been considered or decided before in Pennsylvania, but our Supreme Court has, by implication, approved the use of the testimony of a medical doctor to establish acceptable standards of nursing care. Baur v. Mesta Machine Co.,405 Pa. 617 ,176 A.2d 684 (1961).
Id.
The decision in
Dierolf v. Slade,
Dr. Karp, the expert in the instant case, had been educated in medicine and trained in the care and treatment of cancer patients. He was a board certified internist with a sub-specialty in cancer treatment since 1981. He had worked at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and the Dana Farber Cancer Center in Boston, Massachusetts, and had held a position as an instructor at Harvard Medical School and the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. At the time of trial he possessed staff privileges at two hospitals and was a member of the cancer committee of the Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, where he reviewed administrative aspects of the care of cancer patients. His primary experience had been in the care and treatment of cancer patients, and he had treated between 250 to 400 patients with breast cancer. Given his background and experience, Dr. Karp was qualified to testify to the standard of care owed by medical practitioners to a patient with unidentified pain in her breast and to render an opinion as to the steps which should have been taken by a medical practitioner in caring for such a patient. The trial court erred, therefore, when it excluded Dr. Karp’s testimony that the physician assistant employee of the medical center had been negligent in her treatment of the plaintiff.
*155 After careful consideration, however, we are compelled to agree with the trial court that the plaintiffs evidence of causation was insufficient to require submission to a jury.
A cause of action sounding in medical malpractice requires proof of four elements: (1) that the medical practitioner owed a duty to the patient; (2) that the practitioner breached that duty; (3) that the breach of duty was the proximate cause of, or a substantial factor in, bringing about the harm suffered by the patient; and (4) that the damages suffered by the patient were the direct result of the harm.
Mitzelfelt v. Kamrin,
[An] expert must testify with “reasonable certainty” that “in his ‘professional opinion, the result in question did come from the cause alleged.’ ” McCrosson v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.,283 Pa. 492 , 496,129 A. 568 , 569 (1925). See Hamil v. Bashline, supra,481 Pa. 256 ,392 A.2d 1280 . An expert fails this standard of certainty if he testifies “ ‘that the alleged cause “possibly”, or “could have” led to the result, that it “could very properly account” for the result, or even that it was “very highly probable” that it caused the result.’ Niggel v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,219 Pa.Super. 353 , 354, 355,281 A.2d 718 , 719 (1971); Menarde v. Philadelphia Trans. Co.,376 Pa. 497 ,103 A.2d 681 (1954); Vorbnoff v. Mesta Machine Co.,286 Pa. 199 ,133 A. 256 (1926); Moyer v. Ford Motor Co.,205 Pa.Super. 384 ,209 A.2d 43 (1965).” Albert v. Alter,252 Pa.Super. 203 , 225,381 A.2d 459 , 470 (1977).
Id.
In
Hamil v. Bashline,
Such cases by their very nature elude the degree of certainty one would prefer and upon which the law normally insists before a person may be held liable. Nevertheless, in order that an actor is not completely insulated because of uncertainties as to the consequences of his negligent con *157 duct, Section 323(a) [of the Restatement (Second) of Torts] tacitly acknowledges this difficulty and permits the issue to go the jury upon a less than normal threshold of proof.
Id.
at 271,
In Jones v. Montefiore Hosp., supra, the plaintiff had been referred to the defendant-hospital for treatment of an unidentified mass in her right breast. The plaintiff submitted to surgery in which the hospital’s doctors removed two masses; however, they did not entirely remove a part of one of the masses. During the next year the remaining mass continued to grow, but the hospital’s doctors, although aware of the problem, did not provide or recommend further treatment. It was later discovered that the mass was cancerous, that the cancer had metastasized to a lymph node, and that treatment with chemotherapy and a modified radical mastectomy would be required. The plaintiff sued the hospital and its doctors, but the jury returned a verdict for the defendants. In reversing, the Supreme Court said:
In Hamil v. Bashline, supra,481 Pa. 256 ,392 A.2d 1280 , we noted that Section 323(a) of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965) has long been recognized as part of the law of Pennsylvania, and then held that the effect of that section was to relax the degree of certainty ordinarily required of a plaintiffs evidence to provide a basis upon which a jury may find causation:
*158 [OJnce a plaintiff has demonstrated that defendant’s acts or omissions, in a situation to which Section 323(a) applies, have increased the risk of harm to another, such evidence furnishes a basis for the fact-finder to go further and find that such increased risk was in turn a substantial factor in bringing about the resultant harm; the necessary proximate case will have been made out if the jury sees fit to find cause in fact.
481 Pa. at 272 ,392 A.2d at 1288 (emphasis supplied). Thus, medical opinion need only demonstrate, with a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that a defendant’s conduct increased the risk of the harm actually sustained, and the jury then must decide whether that conduct was a substantial factor in bringing about the harm.
Id.,
Later, in
Mitzelfelt v. Kamrin, supra,
Q. Doctor I asked you to advise everybody in this courtroom whether the type of injury that [the plaintiff] suffered after this operation ... is or is not necessarily a result of negligence or malpractice?
*159 A. Not necessarily is the answer. Nobody can be sure. Twenty percent of these patients do badly, no matter what you do. (emphasis supplied).
******
Q. The bottom line is, do you know within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, ... that this drop in that blood pressure, ... caused the problem that [the plaintiff] has? A. No. It is my opinion that it could have, but I wouldn’t put it as a reasonable degree of medical certainty.
Id.,
In such a case, where the plaintiff faces a risk of harm regardless of any negligence on the part of the defendant, the Court held, the plaintiff need not eliminate every possible cause of the injury; rather, the plaintiff need only present sufficient evidence so that reasonable minds could conclude that the defendant’s conduct had been a substantial cause of the harm.
Id.
at 64,
A defendant cannot escape liability because there was a statistical possibility that the harm could have resulted without negligence. “The fact that some other cause concurs with the negligence of the defendant in producing an injury does not relieve the defendant from liability unless he [or she] can show that such other cause would have produced the injury independently of his [or her] negligence.” Majors v. Brodhead Hotel,416 Pa. 265 , 273,205 A.2d 873 , 878 (1965). Once there is sufficient testimony to establish that (1) the physician failed to exercise reasonable care, that (2) such failure increased the risk of physical harm to the plaintiff, and (3) such harm did in fact occur, then it is a question properly left to the jury to decide whether the acts or omissions were the proximate cause of the injury. See *160 Bashline, supra,481 Pa. at 262 ,392 A.2d at 1286 ; Gradel v. Inouye, 491 Pa. [534] at 541, 421 A.2d [674] at 677 [(1980)]. “The jury, not the medical expert, then has the duty to balance probabilities and decide whether defendant’s negligence was a substantial factor in bringing about the harm.” Bashline, supra,481 Pa. at 273 ,392 A.2d at 1288-89 ; Gradel,491 Pa. at 544 ,421 A.2d at 679 .
Mitzelfelt v. Kamrin, supra,
In the instant case, there was evidence that the plaintiff had been examined by employees of the defendant and that the plaintiff had complained of pain in her left breast. There also was evidence that, despite this complaint, the plaintiff had not been referred to a physician. There was no evidence, however, of the presence of any lump or mass; and a mammogram showed no abnormality. Thus, there was no evidence that an examination by a physician would have disclosed anything more than was discovered by the physician’s assistant. The time when the tumor could first have been detected does not appear. Was it detectable a year earlier or only a short time before it was discovered by Dr. Seidman? Although Dr. Karp testified that the failure to refer plaintiff to a physician fell below the standard of care required of a physician’s assistant, he was either unable or unwilling to say that the risk of harm had been increased thereby. He said only that it was “very possible” that the failure to refer her to a physician “may have increased her chance of having a positive lymph node” when the cancer was eventually diagnosed and that it “may have *161 increased her risk for requiring a mastectomy with chemotherapy.” On cross-examination he said, “[H]ad the tumor been diagnosed one year eariier, it is indeed possible that if it were small enough, the breast could have been conserved and treated by lumpectomy/radiation therapy alone.” All of this was speculative, he conceded, saying “one can only speculate as to had it been diagnosed earlier what its size may have been, since we don’t know, nor will we ever know.”
After careful consideration, we hold that this testimony was insufficient even under the relaxed standards of
Hamil v. Bashline, supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Annual physical examinations were required pursuant to Montgomery's employment by the Albert Einstein Medical Center.
. This testimony was contradicted by O'Rourke, who was called as of cross-examination by the plaintiff, and by the patient’s medical records, which contain no reference to such a complaint.
. This, too, is contradicted by the patient’s medical records, which contain no reference to such complaints.
. Pursuant to agreement of the parties, the testimony of Dr. Karp was presented to the jury through a deposition which had been recorded on video tape.
. Section 323(a) of the Restatement (Second) of Torts provides:
§ 323. Negligent Performance of Undertaking to Render Services One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another which he should recognize as necessary for the protection of the other’s person or things, is subject to liability to the other for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to perform his undertaking, if
(a) his failure to exercise such care increases the risk of such harm[ ]. . ..
