Carol Stewart Kemp brought this products liability action based on an allegedly defective intrauterine device. Both sides filed motions for summary judgment based on the statute of limitations. The trial court granted the motion of the defendant, G.D. Searle & Co., and denied Kemp’s motion. Kemp timely appealed. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In the light most favorable to Kemp, as we must review a summary judgment, the facts are as follows. In 1977, Kemp was prescribed a Copper 7 (“Cu-7”) intrauterine device (“IUD”), manufactured by G.D. Searle & Co. (“Searle”), for birth control. In a routine procedure, this first IUD was removed and a second one inserted by Dr. Susan Hakel in July of 1980. In August of 1984, after Kemp went to an emergency room complaining of abdominal cramps, she was- diagnosed with pelvic inflammatory disease (“PID”). Later that month, Dr. Hakel removed the IUD and prescribed oral contraceptives for Kemp. It is unclear whether Hakel indicated to Kemp at that time that thе PID had been caused by the IUD.
In December of 1985, Kemp went to Hakel for an annual checkup. Kemp asked Hakel about the possibility of tubal scarring from her PID incident; in her records regarding this visit, Dr. Hakel made this notation: “had PID with Copper 7, wonders re tubal scarring.” The details of the conversation that followed are unclear, but Kemp was told at least of the connection between the IUD and her PID and that PID can lead to tubal scarring which, if severe enough, can result in infertility. There are two procedures to diagnose infertility from tubal scarring: an hysterosalpingogram and a laparoscopy. Dr. Hakel described these procedures as “invasive, painful, [and] expensive” and recommended that Kemp not undergo these procedures until she had attempted conception for at least twelve to eighteen months. According to Kemp, Dr. Hakel told her that “no doctor would perform such [an] invаsive operative procedure[] until I first attempted unsuccessfully to conceive for eighteen months.”
Within a few months of her conversation with Dr. Hakel, Kemp married Sam Abazari, but for personal reasons they never attempted conception. Kemp and Abazari divorced in October of 1989. In Januаry of 1993, Kemp decided to begin attempting conception with Charles Kemp, whom she later married. In April of 1993, Kemp received treatments for pelvic pain that was unrelated to her previous PID. During the course of treatment, Kemp underwent a laparoscopy, which revealed that her fallopian tubes were severely scarred. Kemp was told that the scarring was so severe that she would be unable to conceive naturally. This was the first time that Kemp knew of her infertility. Despite the diagnosis that natural conception was impossible, Kemp and her husband attempted, unsuccessfully, to conceive.
On November 24, 1993, Kemp filed suit in Mississippi state court. Searle removed the suit to federal district court based on diversity of citizenship. Kemp moved for partial summary judgment on Searle’s affirmative defense of statute of limitations. Searle made a counter-motion for summary judgment, asserting that Kemp’s action was barred by Mississippi’s statute of limitations. 1 The district court granted Searle’s motion, concluding that the statute of limitations on Kemp’s cause of action began running at the latest in December of 1985 because of Kemp’s discussion with Dr. Hakel regarding the connections between the IUD, PID, scarring, and infertility. Kemp timely appealed.
On appeal, Kemp argues that her injury is the infertility, which she did not discover until April of 1993. Kemp asserts that she exercised reasonable diligence in discovering the infertility because she relied upon her physician’s advice not to seek the diagnostic procedures until she had attеmpted concep
Searle counters that Kemp’s claim is barred because she had only one cause of action that accrued whеn she discovered that her IUD had caused her an injury, namely the PID. Thus, Kemp’s diligence in discovering her infertility is irrelevant. In the alternative, Searle insists that Kemp did not act with reasonable diligence because she waited too long before undergoing the diagnostic procedures.
We hold that Kemp had a singlе cause of action that accrued when she discovered the PID and its source, which was more than six years before filing suit. Thus, we affirm.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review the granting of summary judgment de novo, applying the same criteria used by the district court in the first instance.
Texas Medical Ass’n v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
Because this is a diversity action, we must apply Mississippi substantive law.
Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,
■•HI. ANALYSIS
Kemp asks us to hold that a fact issue exists as to whether she actеd with reasonable diligence in discovering her infertility. Before we can determine this, we must first establish whether Kemp has a'cause of action for infertility. Kemp recognizes that she could have sued based on her PID and that the statute of limitations has run on that claim. The question then is whether Kemp’s infertility gives rise to an additional cause of action. Because we hold that Kemp had only one cause of action and that the infertility does not give rise to a new cause- of action, we do not reach the question whether Kemp acted with reasonable diligence in discovering her infertility and we exprеss no opinion on the matter.
A.
Searle urges us to follow cases from several other circuits that have addressed this specific issue. For example, the First Circuit, in
Gagnon v. G.D. Searle & Co.,
B.
Thus, the key inquiry in the case at bar is the law of Mississippi. The Mississippi Code section applicable to this cаse provides as follows:
(2) In actions for which no other period of limitation is prescribed and which involve latent injury or disease, the cause of action does not accrue until the plaintiff has discovered, or by reasonable diligence should have discovered, the injury.
Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49(2). In
Owens-Illinois, Inc. v. Edwards,
C.
None of the Mississippi cases Kemp cites dictates a contrary result. Kemp cites many discovery rule cases such as
Williams v. Kilgore,
Relying on
Schiro v. American Tobacco Co.,
While facially similar to the case at bar, Schiro does not command the result Kemp desires. While the cancer diagnosis was necessary to confirm that Schiro’s disease was in fact cancer, Kemp had a diagnosis of her disease — she was diagnosed with PID in August of 1984. Because infertility is not a separate and distinct disease but an aftereffect of the PID, a later diagnosis of infertility is irrelevant to the commencement of the statute of limitations.
Kemp asserts that it is “wеll settled Mississippi law that the gravity of the injury is a significant factor to be considered in determining whether a plaintiff has brought his or her action within the applicable limitations period.” For example, in
Struthers Wells-Gulfport, Inc. v. Bradford,
Kemp also points to
Pittman v. Hodges,
Kemp insists that because PID and infertility are not synonymous, limitations for a cause of action for infertility should bé measured on a different timeline than an action for PID. We in no way mean to suggest that PID and infertility are synonymous. However, they are both the product of the same chain of causality: the IUD caused the PID, and the PID caused the infertility. Cases in other contexts, such as asbestos, have distin
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM.
Notes
. The parties agree that the limitations period governing this suit is six years. However, the statute has subsequently been amended to allow only three years.
See
Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49 (1995);
Owens-Illinois, Inc. v. Edwards,
. For example, following exposure to asbestos, an individual can contract asbestosis or mesothelioma. These diseases can emerge years apart from each other. The asbestosis is related to the mesothelioma only in the sense that both are caused by exposure to asbestos. However, mesothelioma develops independently of asbestosis; it is possible to have mesothelioma without ever having asbestosis, and vice versa.
See Wilson v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
