delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Frank Rodriguez-Erdman, M.D., appeals from the dismissal of his complaint against Ravenswood Hospital Medical Center, Ravenswood Health Care Corporation, Thomas E. McGough, David M. Murdoch, Henry J. Kutsch, Steven Czarnecki, M.D., Robert Griffin, M.D., and James Gallai, M.D. (defendants), which he filed following the termination of his privileges on the medical staff of the defendant hospital.
The four-count complaint, filed on September 6, 1985, sought compensatory and punitive damages on theories of retaliatory discharge, breach of an employment contract, intentional interference with prospeсtive business advantage and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Plaintiff, a physician and board-certified specialist in internal medicine, was appointed to the provisional medical staff of Ravenswood Hospital on October 1, 1982. Provisional staff appointments at Ravenswoоd are probationary positions which terminate automatically after two years if the physician is not advanced to another category of staff membership. Beginning sometime in 1983, plaintiff expressed criticisms, at first orally and later in written form, to various hospital personnel, including the chаirman of the department of medicine, who was also the head of the internal medicine residency program, concerning the quality of care rendered to his patients by certain residents in the residency program. In November 1983, a review committee was established to investigate the charges made by plaintiff and certain other physicians in the department of internal
Following a hearing, the trial court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss on the basis of section 10.2 of the Illinois Hospital Licensing Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 111½, par. 151.2), which bars actions for civil damages, and this appeal followed.
Opinion
Plaintiff first contends that section 10.2 applies only to remedial actions taken by committees reviewing situations relating to quality control in patient care and to professional incompetence. He argues that because the termination of his staff privileges had no relation to his mental or physical competence or his treatment of patients, but, rather, was in retaliation for his criticisms of the residency program, section 10.2 is inapplicable to his action.
We disagree. Section 10.2 governing the liability of individuals and hospitals became effective on August 16,1985, and provides:
“No hospital and no individual who is a member, agent, оr employee of a hospital, hospital medical staff, hospital administrative staff, or hospital governing board shall be liable for civil damages as a result of the acts, omissions, decisions, or any other conduct of a medical utilization committee, medical review committeе, patient care audit committee, medical care evaluation committee, quality review committee, credential committee, peer review committee, or any other committee whose purpose, directly or indirectly, is internal quality control or medical study to reduce morbidity or mortality, or for improving patient care within a hospital, or the improving or benefiting of patient care and treatment, whether within a hospital or not, or for the purpose of professional discipline. Nothing in this Section shall relieve any individual or hospital from liability arising frоm treatment of a patient.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 111½, par. 151.2.
Contrary to his interpretation, we think it is clear from the use of disjunctive phrases which refer generally to “improving and benefiting patient care and treatment” and “for the purpose of professional discipline” that the immunity provided in section 10.2 is not limited only to decisions concerning impaired or medically incompetent physicians and that plaintiff’s action for monetary damages, arising from defendants’ decision not to advance him to nonprobationary staff membership for reasons which, he asserts, are unrelated to his ability as a physician, is also barred by the statute.
Plaintiff further contends that section 10.2 constitutes “special legislation” in that it confers a special benefit and exclusive privilege on hospitals because it allows them to revoke a physician’s staff privileges with impunity and to thereby “destroy thе income and reputations of doctors” without liability. He maintains that no other class of tortfeasors has such a privilege.
“Special legislation” has been defined by our supreme court
In Jenkins, the plaintiff in a medical malpractice action challenged, as “special legislation,” section 8 — 2101 of the Code of Civil Proсedure, which provides:
“All information, interviews, reports, statements, memoranda or other data of [medical agencies, societies and peer review committees] used in the course of internal quality control or of medical study for the purpose of reducing morbidity or mortality, or fоr improving patient care, shall be privileged, strictly confidential and shall be used only for medical research, the evaluation and improvement of quality care, or granting, limiting or revoking staff privileges, except that in any hospital proceeding to decide upon a physician’s stаff privileges, or in any judicial review thereof, the claim of confidentiality shall not be invoked to deny such physician access to or use of data upon which such a decision was based.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1985, ch. 110, par. 8—2101.
She argued that there was no sound, reasonable basis for denying her access tо the same data available to physicians whose staff privileges were limited or revoked.
The supreme court upheld the statute as constitutional, stating that its purpose was to “ensure the effectiveness of professional self-evaluation, by members of the medical professiоn, in the interest of improving the quality of health care [and] is premised on the belief that, absent the statutory peer-review privilege, physicians would be reluctant to sit on peer-review committees and engage in frank evaluations of their colleagues.” (
We think it is apparent from the similarity of the language
Plaintiff further argues, however, that assuming the objective of section 10.2 is the improvement of health care by encouraging frank peer review, the termination of his staff privileges because of criticisms he made in an еffort to point out the inadequacies of the patient care rendered by the residents not only contradicted, but actually subverted, that purpose.
Although plaintiff couches his argument in terms of statutory construction and legislative intent, it is apparent that what he seeks is judicial review of defendants’ decision not to advance him to a non-probationary medical staff position. Initially, we note that a division of this court recently held that judicial review should extend to the question whether a private hospital’s decision to exclude a physician from staff membership was arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable. (Barrows v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital (1987),
In a related contention, plaintiff posits that because there is no basis upon which he can maintain an action for violation of the bylaws, and because section 10.2 precludes recovery of money damages, he is left without a remedy. He argues that section 10.2 must, therefore, be construed as substantive in nature and be given only prospective apрlication.
As noted earlier, plaintiff filed this action on September 6, 1985, three weeks after the effective date of section 10.2. It is his position, however, that since his claims arose on May 1, 1985, when his staff privileges were formally terminated, section 10.2 is inapplicable and was improperly givеn retroactive effect by the trial court.
While the general rule is that a statute is ordinarily construed as being prospective in its operation, an amendatory act may be applied retroactively where the statute affects only the remedy or law of procedure unless suсh application of the change in procedure or existing remedies results in the deprivation of a vested right. (Mailer v. Chicago Board of Education (1980),
Section 10.2 merely precludes recovery of civil damages as a remedy in cases arising out of the acts and decisions of hospitals and individuals in internal review situations. It does not, as in the cases cited by plaintiff, destroy all causes of action or take away a constitutionally protected, vested right. As stated above, limited judicial review is available in appropriate cases. In this case it was plaintiff’s decision not to pursue another form of relief. Whether that decision was based on his determination that because there had been no violation of the hospital bylaws he could not prevail in a different form of action or, as is suggested by his brief, that he did not want the type of relief, such as an injunction to reinstate him, that might have been
For the reasons stated, the order dismissing plaintiff’s complaint is affirmed.
Affirmed.
McNAMARA, P.J., and PINCHAM, J., concur.
Notes
The parties have informed us that the Barrows case is currently pending in the Illinois Supreme Court.
