Case Name: DOREIKA v. BLOTNER
Court: Court of Appeals of Georgia
Jurisdiction: Georgia
Decision Date: 2008-06-18
Citations: 292 Ga. App. 850
Docket Number: A08A0585
Parties: DOREIKA v. BLOTNER.
Judges: Barnes, C. J., Smith, E J., Ellington, Phipps, Adams and Bernes, JJ., concur. Ruffin, P. J., Blackburn, P. J., Andrews, Miller and Mikell, JJ., dissent.
Reporter: Georgia Appeals Reports
Volume: 292
Pages: 850–860

Head Matter:
A08A0585.
DOREIKA v. BLOTNER.
(666 SE2d 21)

Opinion:
JOHNSON, Presiding Judge.
This is a professional negligence case in which Paul Doreika alleged that he sustained serious injuries as a result of chiropractor Gregg Blotner's treatment. Doreika specifically asserted that Blot-ner failed to inform him about the risks of neck adjustments or treatment alternatives for his neck before performing a neck adjustment which either caused a herniated disc or aggravated a preexisting disc condition. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Blotner. Doreika appeals, alleging the trial court erred in refusing to give requested jury charges regarding the law on informed consent. Our duty in this case is to first determine whether the doctrine of informed consent applies to chiropractors in Georgia. If it does, we must then decide whether the trial court erred in not instructing the jury on informed consent in light of the evidence introduced at trial.
1. Georgia's Informed Consent Law.
We find that Georgia law required Dr. Blotner to obtain Dorei-ka's informed consent prior to rendering chiropractic treatment. In Ketchup v. Howard, this Court corrected dicta in old cases that had been carried forward for years. In doing so, we brought Georgia in line with that of the other 49 states by recognizing the common law doctrine of informed consent and expressly indicating that a medical professional must inform a patient of the material risks of a proposed treatment or procedure which are or should be known and must inform the patient of available alternatives to the proposed treatment or procedure.
The source of this duty is three-fold. First, we need look no further than the Georgia and United States Constitutions. As the Supreme Court noted in Cruzan v. Director, Mo. Dept. of Health, no right is more carefully guarded by the common law than an individual's right to possession and control of his own person free from restraint. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal constitution gives patients'a constitutionally protected liberty interest which includes the right to refuse unwanted medical treatment. The Supreme Court recognized that the common law duty of informed consent is a corollary to this constitutionally protected liberty interest and is firmly reflected in these constitutionally protected rights. Likewise, the Supreme Court of Georgia held that all persons have a liberty interest, protected by the Georgia Constitution, to make all decisions regarding their medical care, so long as they are legally competent. This constitutionally protected liberty interest includes the right to refuse all medical treatment, even where the treatment is necessary to save the patient's life. Clearly, "in the absence of the common law doctrine of informed consent, the constitutionally protected liberty interests that individuals enjoy to make all decisions regarding their medical treatment is rendered meaningless."
The duty to obtain informed consent is also recognized in the ethical standards adopted by the various medical professional fields. While we discussed the ethical standards associated with the American Medical Association and American Dental Association in Ketchup, the same analysis applies to the ethical standards and policies adopted by the American Chiropractic Association. Section V of the American Chiropractic Association Code of Ethics provides as follows: "Doctors of chiropractic should employ their best good faith efforts to provide information and facilitate understanding to enable the patient to make an informed choice in regard to proposed chiropractic treatment. The patient should make his or her own determination on such treatment." And, the American Chiropractic Association Policies, one of which is entitled "Informed Consent," note:
Informed consent is generally applied, from a legal standpoint, when measuring the degree of responsibility and/or liability of a doctor in malpractice cases. In other words, the fact that a patient submits to treatment and does so voluntarily does not in itself lessen the liability of the doctor.
Today, the stand [sic] by which the doctor is judged is that of "informed consent". By that is meant, to what degree has the patient been informed of all of the potential consequences, dangers, and other factors, so that his consent is given with full knowledge of the inherent dangers to which he is exposed. Full knowledge in this sense could be construed as "informed consent" and would relieve the doctor of much liability, as there would be an assumption of the risk on the part of the patient.
The concept of "informed consent" can also be applied to other contractual relationships such as those for examination and treatment, which are every day occurrences in the doctor's office.
As with the American Medical Association and the American Dental Association, the American Chiropractic Association's ethical standards and policies embrace the doctrine of informed consent. And it is a well-settled principle that the standard of care is determined by the medical profession, not the courts.
The duty to obtain informed consent is also rooted in the legislative enactment of OCGA § 31-9-6.1, which requires medical professionals to provide information to their patients concerning the risks of some, but not all, medical procedures. Although OCGA § 31-9-6.1 is a limited codification of the common law doctrine of informed consent, it expresses a clear adoption by the legislature to require disclosure of material risks generally recognized and accepted by reasonably prudent physicians which, if disclosed to a reasonably prudent person in the patient's position, could reasonably be expected to decline the proposed treatment or procedure because of the risk of injury that could result. This legislation has no effect on the recognition of the common law doctrine of informed consent.
The position adopted by the dissent in this case is the same position argued by Judge Andrews in his Ketchup special concurrence and resoundingly rejected by the majority of this Court in that case. Ketchup was not wrongly decided and should not be overruled. The dissent's position in this case would represent, if adopted, a gigantic step backward for the people of Georgia. Not only would Georgia once again be the only state in the nation refusing to recognize the common law doctrine of informed consent, but the dissent's position would render our constitutionally protected liberty rights and the medical canons of ethics meaningless. How can a patient be expected to make a decision about his treatment if the doctor rendering the treatment is not required to provide the patient with all the necessary information to enable the patient to make that decision?
Contrary to the dissent's argument, Albany Urology Clinic v. Cleveland does not require a different result. The issue addressed in Albany Urology was whether a physician had a duty to disclose to his patients factors of his life, namely his drug use, which might adversely affect the physician's performance. The case dealt specifically with the applicability of OCGA § 31-9-6.1 and did not decide the issue of whether a physician has a common law duty to disclose the risks associated with a particular medical treatment or procedure. Clearly, the mention of the common law principle of informed consent in the case was dicta. Moreover, the Supreme Court has recently adopted our rationale in Ketchup, citing the case for the proposition that expert testimony is required in an informed consent case to establish whether the particular risks of the surgery were known or should have been known. Albany Urology has only been cited once by the Supreme Court, and it has not been cited since Ketchup was decided in 2000. The dissent's attempt to overrule Ketchup is misplaced.
2. Jury Instructions.
Because Blotner had the duty to obtain Doreika's informed consent prior to performing the neck adjustment, and because the issue of informed consent represented a legal theory of recovery in the case, the trial court was obligated to give jury charges on this legal theory of recovery. The trial court's duty is to instruct the jury on the law as to "every controlling, material, substantial and vital issue in the case." And failure to charge on any legal theory of recovery is harmful as a matter of law. As a general rule, a requested charge should be given where it has been raised by the evidence, embraces a correct and complete principle of law, has not been substantially included in the general instructions given, and is specifically adjusted to the facts of the case. Because the jury charges at issue in this case may be raised on retrial, we address each of Doreika's requested jury instructions.
(a) Doreika contends the trial court erred in failing to give proposed charge number 12 regarding ambiguity in consent:
If you find that there exists any ambiguity concerning the Defendant's obtaining consent from the Plaintiff prior to performing the manipulation procedure on Plaintiffs neck, you are instructed to resolve any ambiguity against the Defendant doctor, if you also find that there existed an inequality of bargaining position between the two parties. In other words, if you find that the Defendant doctor was in a superior position with respect to knowledge of the procedure, as well as the risks, benefits and necessity for the procedure, then you are to resolve any ambiguities concerning the nature and extent of consent obtained by the doctor, if any, against him.
This language was taken from Hubert v. Falconer, where this Court upheld a similar charge in a case involving a written informed consent form. In Hubert, the issue turned on whether the doctor had obtained a patient's consent through ambivalent disclosures in the informed consent form. This case does not present the same factual scenario.
Here, contrary to Doreika's argument, there is no evidence in the record of any contractual or written ambiguity for the jury to determine. Rather, the case turns on the credibility of the witnesses, which the trial court did charge to the jury. Doreika claims he did not give his informed consent for the procedure and Blotner claims he received informed consent for the procedure.
Given the undisputed fact that this case does not involve any ambiguity in the language of a written consent form, the trial court correctly determined that proposed jury charge number 12 was not a correct statement of the law and was not adjusted to the facts of this case. In order for a refusal to charge the jury to be error, the requests for jury instructions must be entirely correct and accurate, adjusted to the pleadings, law and evidence, and not otherwise covered in the general charge. If any portion of the requested charge is "inapt, incorrect, misleading, confusing, argumentative, not precisely adjusted or tailored, or not reasonably raised or authored by the evidence," a refusal to charge does not constitute error. The trial court did not err in refusing to give this requested jury charge.
(b) Doreika contends the trial court erred in failing to give proposed jury charges number 17, number 18, and number 19 regarding informed consent. Proposed jury charge number 17 stated as follows:
The Plaintiff contends that the Defendant failed to obtain his informed consent. Under Georgia common law, a medical professional is required to obtain a patient's informed consent prior to treating him. If you find that the Defendant failed to obtain the Plaintiffs informed consent to treat his neck, you are authorized to find that the Defendant was negligent, and you must then determine whether this negligence caused or contributed to Plaintiffs injuries and damages.
Proposed jury charge number 18 stated as follows:
A medical professional, including a chiropractor, must inform a patient of the material risks of a proposed treatment or procedure which are or should be known, and he must inform a patient of available alternatives to the proposed procedure or treatment. If you find that the Defendant did not inform the Plaintiff of the risks of the treatment at issue and available alternatives then you are required to find that there was no informed consent for the procedure.
Proposed jury charge number 19 stated as follows:
The requirement that there be informed consent prior to medical treatment is satisfied when a medical professional, including a chiropractor, fully informs a patient of the risks of and alternatives to the proposed treatment so that the patient's right to decide is not diminished by a lack of relevant information.
These proposed jury requests sought to instruct the jury about the informed consent theory of recovery and the effect of Blotner's failure, if any, to obtain Doreika's informed consent. As stated previously, the trial court erred in refusing to give any jury instruction on Doreika's informed consent theory of recovery. The question we must address is whether the trial court erred in refusing to give Doreika's proposed jury instructions.
Clearly, proposed jury request number 17 is a correct statement of the law and is adjusted to the evidence. The trial court erred in failing to give this instruction. In addition, proposed requests number 18 and number 19 provide the jury with a description of the theory of recovery. However, those two proposed jury charges appear duplicitous, so the trial court erred in failing to give only one of the requested charges. In addition, proposed jury charge number 18 should inform the jury that they are "authorized" not "required" to find a lack of informed consent. Blotner argues that the trial court's refusal to give the requested charges was not error because a herniated disc was not a material risk of which he needed to inform Doreika. However, it is the jury's province to decide what is and is not a material risk given the evidence in the case.
A jury charge on informed consent is necessary if informed consent is a legal theory raised by the plaintiff and borne out by the evidence in the case. Here, the trial court erred by refusing to give a jury charge on informed consent since it was a legal theory of recovery in the case.
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
Barnes, C. J., Smith, E J., Ellington, Phipps, Adams and Bernes, JJ., concur. Ruffin, P. J., Blackburn, P. J., Andrews, Miller and Mikell, JJ., dissent.
247 Ga. App. 54 (543 SE2d 371) (2000).
Id. at 59 (1).
497 U. S. 261, 269 (110 SC 2841, 111 LE2d 224) (1990).
Id.
State of Ga. v. McAfee, 259 Ga. 579 (385 SE2d 651) (1989); Zant v. Prevatte, 248 Ga. 832 (286 SE2d 715) (1982).
See McAfee, supra; Zant, supra.
Ketchup, supra.
Ketchup, supra at 60-61 (2).
272 Ga. 296 (528 SE2d 777) (2000).
Id. at 298.
See Nathans v. Diamond, 282 Ga. 804, 805 (1), n. 2 (654 SE2d 121) (2007).
(Citations omitted.) Fowler v. Gorrell, 148 Ga. App. 573, 577 (2) (b) (251 SE2d 819) (1978).
Id.
See SCM Corp. v. Thermo Structural Products, 153 Ga. App. 372, 379 (7) (A) (265 SE2d 598) (1980).
248 Ga. App. 243, 244 (1) (545 SE2d 680) (2001).
See A.A.L., Inc. v. Colonial Pipeline Co., 280 Ga. App. 237, 240 (3) (633 SE2d 560) (2006).
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Roberts v. Chapman, 228 Ga. App. 365, 367 (2) (492 SE2d 244) (1997).
See generally Nat. Life &c. Ins. Co. v. Crew, 119 Ga. App. 573, 575 (1) (168 SE2d 181) (1969) (whether a misrepresentation is material, like questions as to negligence, proximate cause and similar matters, should ordinarily be submitted to the jury).