Appellee, a 93-year-old woman, was admitted to the Washington Hospital Center for treatment of a fractured right hip. Several days later, while still on post-operative care after surgery on her right hip, she fell from her bed and fractured her left hip. Appellee sued the hospital, alleging that it had been negligent in leaving her unattended and in failing to protect her from falling out of bed. A jury returned a verdict in her favor and awarded damages. The hospital brings this appeal, arguing that the trial court erred (1) in treating this case as one of ordinary negligence, rather than one involving the exercise of professional medical judgment and requiring appellee to present expert testimony, which she did not do, 1 and (2) in instructing the jury on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. We reject both arguments and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
I
Eartha Massey, a licensed practical nurse employed by the hospital, testified that she was at the nurses’ station one afternoon, between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m., when she heard a “thump” in appellee’s room. She went to investigate and found appellee sitting on the floor. Returning to the nurses’ station, Massey told Sharon Miller, a registered nurse, that appellee had fallen. Both nurses went to appellee’s room and, after examining her, placed her back in bed and called the doctor.
Nurse Miller corroborated Massey’s testimony. In addition, she said that earlier in the afternoon, “around 3:00,” she had stopped by appellee’s room to check on her and found her sitting up in a geriatric chair. 2 Appellee told her that she was feeling fine but that she was tired and wanted to go back to bed, so Miller asked Gail Johnson, a student nurse, to help appellee get back in bed and put her in restraints, which her doctor had prescribed for her.
There was no direct evidence on the issue of whether appellee was in restraints at or immediately before the time she fell, since neither appellee nor Nurse Johnson testified. Nurse Miller said that she believed appellee must have been in restraints prior to her fall, because when she and Nurse Massey went to appellee’s room to put her back in bed, they had to lower the side rails on the bed. Her belief was buttressed by the fact that the wrist restraints were tied to the side rails, since these restraints could not be tied to the rails unless the rails were up. Miller was impeached with a report she had written which stated that appellee “was left unrestrained on a.m. shift,” although she offered an explanation for this apparently inconsistent statement. She also admitted that there was nothing in her report or in any other hospital record indicating that the side rails were up or that appellee had been in restraints before she fell.
Other evidence established that appellee was, at least some of the time, confused and disoriented during her stay in the hospital, and that she had a history of slipping out of her restraints and trying to get out of bed, although she never succeeded. Appellee’s doctor, an orthopedic surgeon, read from a nursing protocol signed by the hospital’s Chief Assistant Administrator for Nursing, 3 which said that patients should be checked *308 “at least every half-hour” while in restraints. The doctor was then asked whether checking up on a patient one hour after restraints had been applied, when that patient had a history of removing her restraints, would fall below a reasonable standard of care for the nurses. He replied, “If the patient was a known crawler-outer and escapee from restraints, you would like to have the patient seen more often.” 4
II
In denying appellant’s motion for directed verdict, the trial court ruled that appel-lee had presented sufficient evidence to go to the jury and that expert testimony was not required to establish negligence on the part of the hospital. Appellant contends here, as it did below, that expert testimony was necessary to prove the standard of care before a jury could find that the hospital’s acts or omissions did not meet that standard.
“[T]o warrant the use of expert testimony, the subject dealt with must be so distinctively related to some science, profession, business or occupation as to be beyond the ken of the average layman .... ”
Waggaman v. Forstmann,
[I]f a case involves the merits and performance of scientific treatment, complex medical procedures, or the exercise of professional skill and judgment, a jury will not be qualified to determine whether there was unskillful or negligent treatment without the aid of expert testimony-
Harris v. Cafritz Memorial Hospital,
The issue in this case was not whether the doctor correctly prescribed restraints for appellee or whether the nursing staff applied them properly. Those are matters which generally involve professional judgment and skill, and if the exercise of such judgment and skill is at issue, expert testimony would no doubt be needed in an appropriate case. Here, however, the issues before the jury were whether appellee was in fact under restraints immediately prior to her fall and, if not, whether the hospital was negligent in leaving her unattended. The trial court, citing Washington Hospital Center v. Butler, supra, concluded that these were not questions on which expert testimony was either necessary or helpful. We agree with the trial court that Butler controls this case.
In
Butler
a diabetic patient was injured when she fell from an X-ray table in a hospital as it was rotated to a vertical position during an examination. A doctor’s admission note entered on the hospital chart stated that the patient had experienced “recent weakness, dizziness, and near-synco-pal episodes for about 8 days.” However, the requisition form for the diagnostic tests that the doctor ordered to be performed, which was prepared by a nurse, stated only
*309
“diabetes with complications” in summarizing the patient’s history, without any reference to the symptoms described on the chart. In holding that on these facts expert testimony was not required to show that the hospital was negligent, the court drew a distinction between cases in which the issue involves “the merits and the performance of scientific treatment,”
5
requiring expert testimony for its resolution, and “ordinary” negligence cases, in which jurors may apply their own experience in deciding how any reasonably prudent person would have acted under the circumstances.
Recognizing that the Butler case seriously undermines its position, appellant attempts to distinguish it by pointing out that there was “clearly no involvement of sophisticated professional judgment in the transactional fact pattern underlying Butler’’ (Appellant’s Brief at 17). But the same can be said of this case. Appellee never asserted that her injuries resulted from the use of restraints; 7 therefore, the exercise of “sophisticated professional judgment” in the application of restraints was not at issue.
Appellant suggests that to follow Butler in this case would create “a new type of medical negligence ease to which the exacting requirement of expert medical testimony would not apply, i.e., the ‘fall’ case” (Appellant’s Brief at 15). We do not go nearly so far. The mere fact that a patient falls in a hospital will not normally determine whether expert testimony is called for in a given case. Some fall cases require expert testimony; others do not. We hold only that in a ease such as this, in which the standard of care is simply that which a reasonable and ordinary lay person would expect a hospital to provide to any patient under like circumstances, expert testimony is not needed to withstand a motion for directed verdict. 8
*310 III
We may quickly dispose of appellant’s contention that a
res ipsa loquitur
instruction should not have been given. “The doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur,
when applicable, permits the jury to infer negligence from the mere occurrence of an accident.”
Quin v. George Washington University,
The propriety of a
res ipsa loquitur
instruction in a fall case, when the facts warrant it, finds implicit support in our decision in
Harris v. Cafritz Memorial Hospital, supra.
In discussing the applicability of
res ipsa
to a medical malpractice claim, we specifically cited
Washington Hospital Center v. Butler, supra,
which is of course a fall case.
See
Affirmed.
Notes
. The testimony of a witness whom appellee proffered as an expert was excluded by the trial court for reasons unrelated to this appeal.
. A geriatric chair was described as “a wheel chair with a table on top of it,” similar in design to a child’s high chair.
.According to the doctor, a nursing protocol was “a manual for nurses, written by nurses.”
. Appellee’s theory with respect to this bit of evidence was that even if she had been placed in restraints at approximately 3:00 p.m., her fall sometime after 4:00 p.m. could have been prevented if she had been checked every half-hour.
.
Brown v. Keaveny,
. Numerous cases have held that in an action by a patient against a hospital for injuries sustained in a fall, expert testimony is not required to establish the standard of care.
E.g., Gin Non Louie v. Chinese Hospital Ass’n,
.
Compare Schwabach v. Beth Israel Medical Center,
. Appellant contends that a decision that fall cases do not always require expert testimony will be somehow inconsistent with this court’s decision in
Morrison v. MacNamara,
. The instruction actually given by the trial court was incomplete. The doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur
applies when three conditions are met: “(1) the event must be of a kind which ordinarily does not occur in the absence of someone’s negligence; (2) it must be caused by an agency or instrumentality within the exclusive control of the defendant; (3) it must not have been due to any voluntary action on the part of the plaintiff.” W. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 39, at 214 (4th ed. 1971), cited with approval in
Sullivan v. Snyder,
