delivered the opinion of the court:
Rоbert Salingue filed suit against Sheila Overturf for damages and injuries sustained when the parties’ motor vehicles collided. During discovery, defense counsel utilized Supreme Court Rule 215 (134 Ill. 2d R. 215) and retained Dr. Herbert Rosenbaum to examine Robert and Esther Salingue. The Salingues then served a request to produce all of Dr. Rosenbaum’s reports of examinations of any plaintiffs performed fоr any defendants for the past three years which were in the possession or control of defendant, defendant’s counsel, or defendant’s agents or employees, including Dr. Rosenbaum. Defense counsel acknowledged that Dr. Rosenbaum examined two plaintiffs at their request within the past three years. Defendant filed a motion for a protective order against the production of any reports and claimed that the reports contain confidential information about individuals that defense counsel is not authorized to reveal. The trial court granted a protective order and certified the following questions for our review:
(1) Whether defense counsel may be required to obtain from defendant’s nontreating examining physiсian, under Supreme Court Rule 215, paragraphs (a) through (c), copies of other reports generated by the same doctor under similar circumstances in other cases, in the light of the holding in Adams v. Industrial Comm’n (1993),245 Ill. App. 3d 459 ,614 N.E.2d 533 , that such an examining doctor may be treated for some purposes as an agent of the defendant.
(2) Whether defense counsel who is proposing to produсe the evidence of a nontreating physician examining the plaintiff pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 215 may assert any privilege against the production of previous reports by the same nontreating examiner in other cases in which defense counsel was also counsel for the defendants.
With regard to the first issue, the Salingues argue that Dr. Rosenbaum is an agent of the defense and, as such, defense counsel should produce the requested reports. In the recent case of Taylor v. Kohli (1994),
We now turn to the issue of whether defense counsel may assert any privilege against the production of reports that it has in its possession which Dr. Rosenbaum generated in other cases in which defense counsel participated. During the past three years Dr. Rosenbaum exаmined two individuals, Mr. Hobbs and Mr. Minton, at this defense counsel’s request. The Salingues argue that defense counsel has no privilege against the production of those individuals’ reports. Plaintiffs maintain thаt a physician-patient privilege was not created when Dr. Rosenbaum examined Hobbs and Minton because those plaintiffs were examined by a defendant’s doctor retained by defendant to prepare a report in the course of litigation. Plaintiffs also argue that there is no attorney-client privilege because defense counsel obtained thе doctor’s reports on Hobbs and Minton not from Hobbs and Minton, but from a doctor who examined them on behalf of their adversary.
Defendants argue that Hobbs and Minton are not parties in this cаse, and therefore their medical condition is not discoverable. Defense counsel expresses its concern that because Hobbs and Min-ton have not consented to thе release of information concerning their medical condition, releasing such information without their consent could result in a claim against defendants and defendants’ counsel.
In Moore v. Centreville Township Hospital (1993),
The physician-patient privilege is a creature of statute:
"No physician or surgeon shall be permitted to disclose any information he or she may have acquired in attending any patient in a professional character, necessary to enable him or her professionally to serve the patient, except only *** in all actions brought by or against the patient ***.” (735 ILCS 5/8 — 802 (West 1992).)
The relationship between Dr. Rosenbaum and each of the plaintiff "patient” reports sought in this сase was created by litigation, as were those in Moore. (See Moore,
Even though we have concluded that the physician-patient privilege does not protect the contents of the reports in the possession of defense counsel, we аre still reluctant to require their disclosure. When plaintiffs submit themselves to a doctor’s examination, they do so only because a court has ordered them to do so. The court ordered the examination because the plaintiffs placed their physical condition in issue by filing the lawsuit and the defendant in that case is entitled to a physical examination in order to properly defend the case. However, neither the parties nor the court contemplated that the reports of such examinations would be transferred freely among people not involved in the controversy.
We are aware that the contents of such reports may be testified about in courtrooms, may become a part of the publiс record, and may even be reported in newspapers. All such disclosures, however, are a part of the process of either discovery or trial in those plaintiffs’ cases. They are not a part of the discovery or trial in some other person’s case.
Plaintiff contends that the reports contain material relevant to their case, and that may be true (see Moore,
We conclude that the preferred procedure in such cases is for plaintiff’s counsel to contact other plaintiffs’ counsel in an attempt to secure copies of the desired reports. In this way, the concerns еxpressed in Moore by both the majority and the dissent can be minimized. We see no need to require defense counsel to produce reports when an alternate means of obtaining the same information is readily available. See Petrillo v. Syntex Laboratories, Inc. (1986),
Therefore, we conclude that the trial court properly entered a protective order.
In light of the foregoing, the decision of the circuit court of Franklin County is affirmed.
Affirmed.
LEWIS and WELCH, JJ., concur.
