Court Opinion

ID: 4201262
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-09-05 22:09:42.466285+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:14:07.478718
License: Public Domain

2017 IL App (2d) 160972
                                  No. 2-16-0972
                          Opinion filed September 5, 2017
______________________________________________________________________________

                                             IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

ABIGAIL KIERSTEN GROSSHUESCH,           ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
Independent Administrator of the Estate of
                                        ) of Du Page County.
Isabella Kitsen Zormelo, Deceased,      )
                                        )
      Plaintiff-Appellee,               )
                                        )
v.                                      ) No. 15-L-464
                                        )
EDWARD HOSPITAL, DU PAGE                )
NEONATOLOGY ASSOCIATES, S.C.,           )
MICHAEL J. FITZGERALD, LESLIE           )
FAROLAN, DEANNA L. HOLLEMAN-            )
DURAY, ROBERT F. COVERT, and            )
RAJEEV S. DIXIT,                        )
                                        )
      Defendants                        ) Honorable
                                        ) Ronald D. Sutter,
(Edward Hospital, Defendant-Appellant). ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE SCHOSTOK delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Presiding Justice Hudson and Justice Birkett concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                             OPINION

¶1     The defendant Edward Hospital claims that certain of its documents are confidential and

that the circuit court of Du Page County should not have ordered it to produce them during

discovery in a civil case. Edward Hospital insists that the Medical Studies Act (735 ILCS 5/8-

2101 et seq. (West 2014)) protects those documents from disclosure. We agree with the trial

court that all the documents at issue should be produced.
2017 IL App (2d) 160972

¶2                                      BACKGROUND

¶3     On October 13, 2013, the plaintiff, Abigail Kiersten Grosshuesch, was admitted to

Edward Hospital. She was 30 weeks’ pregnant and the baby, Isabella Kitsen Zormelo, was born

that day. Isabella suffered from numerous medical issues, including necrotizing entercolitis.

Isabella died on November 1, 2013.

¶4     In December 2013, the plaintiff contacted Edward Hospital’s patient advocate and

expressed concern about the care and treatment rendered to her and Isabella. Pursuant to Edward

Hospital’s medical staff quality committee (MSQC) charter and its peer-review policy (both

enacted in 2008), the plaintiff’s concern in conjunction with Isabella’s death constituted “review

indicators” resulting in a referral to the MSQC. Nancy Rosenbery, in her capacity as the MSQC

liaison, consulted two expert peer reviewers—each a member of the hospital’s medical staff with

the same specialty as the physician whose care was being reviewed. One peer reviewer reviewed

and commented on the obstetrical care given to the plaintiff, and one peer reviewer commented

on the neonatal care given to Isabella. Rosenbery then entered her notes on each peer reviewer’s

input, including the reviewer’s conclusion and/or requests for additional information, into an

electronic database on February 24 and 25, 2014. The MSQC considered these notes when it

met on March 5 and April 2, 2014.

¶5     On October 31, 2014, the plaintiff filed a complaint against Edward Hospital and other

defendants.   As pertinent to this appeal, on October 21, 2015, the plaintiff filed a second

amended complaint, which included two counts. Count I was a wrongful-death action, seeking

to recover for Isabella’s death. Count II was a survival action, seeking to recover for injuries

sustained by Isabella between the date of her birth and the date of her death. The plaintiff

subsequently issued a written discovery request to Edward Hospital, seeking all documentation

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regarding the care of Isabella. Edward Hospital refused to disclose the notes Rosenbery authored

on February 24 and 25, 2014, asserting that they were privileged pursuant to the Medical Studies

Act.

¶6     On March 3, 2016, the plaintiff filed a motion to compel an in camera inspection of the

allegedly privileged documents.

¶7     On August 3, 2016, the trial court conducted a hearing on the plaintiff’s motion. In

support of its claim of privilege, Edward Hospital submitted the affidavit of Christine Koman,

the system claims counsel for Edward-Elmhurst Health.           She stated that the MSQC, in

conjunction with Edward Hospital’s medical executive committee of the medical staff,

promulgated the peer-review policy. The purpose of that policy was to improve the overall

quality of care rendered and to reduce morbidity and mortality. She further stated that, after the

plaintiff expressed her concerns about the care that she and Isabella had received, the matter was

referred to the MSQC for peer review pursuant to the peer-review policy. Koman concluded that

the information and conclusions resulting from the peer-review investigation—which were later

provided to the MSQC for its consideration and evaluation, consistent with the peer review

policy—were part of the internal quality-control process and therefore privileged.

¶8     At the close of the hearing, the trial court ruled that the notes Rosenbery had authored on

February 24 and 25, 2014, which contained information acquired before the MSQC met, must be

produced because Koman’s affidavit was insufficient to raise a privilege.            The trial court

explained that there was nothing in Koman’s affidavit showing when the MSQC requested the

investigation to begin or which member of the MSQC requested the investigation to begin. The

trial court further found that Koman’s affidavit did not establish that the MSQC was engaged in

the peer-review process for this occurrence prior to the March 2014 meeting.

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¶9     On August 19, 2016, Edward Hospital filed a motion to reconsider and supported it with

a second affidavit from Komen. In that affidavit, Koman stated that the MSQC had instructed

Rosenbery, in her capacity as the MSQC liaison, to assist it by coordinating the investigation into

the plaintiff’s concerns for the purpose of quality control and improvement and the reduction of

morbidity and mortality. As part of her investigation, Rosenbery worked with consultants who

reviewed the care that the plaintiff and Isabella had received. On February 24 and 25, 2014,

Rosenbery authored notes based on her investigation. Komen further asserted that Rosenbery’s

notes “served an integral function in the peer review gathering and decision making process and

serve as documentation vital to the process of improving the quality and care rendered at Edward

Hospital.”

¶ 10   On October 12, 2016, following a hearing, the trial court denied Edward Hospital’s

motion to reconsider.

¶ 11   On October 26, 2016, after Edward Hospital continued to refuse to disclose Rosenbery’s

notes, the trial court found Edward Hospital in contempt and imposed a fine of $1 per day until

Edward Hospital complied with the trial court’s order. Edward Hospital appeals from that order.

¶ 12                                       ANALYSIS

¶ 13   On appeal, Edward Hospital argues that the trial court erred in ordering disclosure of

Rosenbery’s notes from February 24 and 25, 2014, because those notes are privileged under the

Medical Studies Act. Specifically, Edward Hospital contends that the MQSC’s peer-review

policy provides that, if certain indicators are met (such as the death of a patient and a concern

raised about that death), then an investigation begins. Edward Hospital insists that, because the

peer-review policy authorized the investigation, everything that was discovered through that

investigation is privileged under the Medical Studies Act.

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¶ 14   Whether the Medical Studies Act’s privilege applies is a question of law, which is

reviewed de novo; however, whether specific materials are part of an internal quality-control

process “is a factual question,” on which the defendant bears the burden.            Berry v. West

Suburban Hospital Medical Center, 338 Ill. App. 3d 49, 53-54 (2003). The trial court’s factual

determination will not be reversed “unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence.” Id.

at 54. A decision is against the manifest weight of the evidence if it is unreasonable, arbitrary, or

not based upon the evidence. Freese v. Buoy, 217 Ill. App. 3d 234, 244 (1991).

¶ 15   The purpose of the Medical Studies Act is to encourage candid and voluntary studies and

programs used to improve hospital conditions and patient care or to reduce the rates of death and

disease. Niven v. Siqueira, 109 Ill. 2d 357, 366 (1985). The Medical Studies Act 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.               Richter v.

Diamond, 108 Ill. 2d 265, 269 (1985). Documents generated specifically for the use of a peer-

review committee receive protection under the Medical Studies Act. Toth v. Jensen, 272 Ill.

App. 3d 382, 385 (1995). However, the Medical Studies Act does not protect against disclosure

of information generated before the peer-review process began. Chicago Trust Co. v. Cook

County Hospital, 298 Ill. App. 3d 396, 403 (1998).

¶ 16   We find that Edward Hospital’s argument is contrary to over 20 years of precedent

establishing that the Medical Studies Act cannot be used to conceal relevant evidence that was

created before a quality-assurance committee or its designee authorized an investigation into a

specific incident. See, e.g., Roach v. Springfield Clinic, 157 Ill. 2d 29 (1993); Chicago Trust,

298 Ill. App. 3d 396; Berry, 338 Ill. App. 3d 49; Kopolovic v. Shah, 2012 IL App (2d) 110383;

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Lindsey v. Butterfield Health Care II, Inc., 2017 IL App (2d) 160042; Nielson v.

SwedishAmerican Hospital, 2017 IL App (2d) 160743.

¶ 17   In Roach, the parents of a child with birth defects brought a medical malpractice claim

against the hospital where the child was born and against the mother’s obstetricians. The child’s

birth defects allegedly resulted from problems with the mother’s anesthesia. After the child’s

birth, the hospital’s chief of anesthesiology spoke with a nurse and a nurse anesthesiologist about

the cause of the defects. These conversations occurred well before the monthly meeting of the

hospital’s peer-review committee. The parents sought to compel the chief of anesthesiology to

disclose the contents of these conversations. The hospital objected, citing the Medical Studies

Act. The hospital asserted that, because the chief of anesthesiology was on the peer-review

committee, his communications were privileged. The supreme court rejected the hospital’s

argument, holding that, where the committee is composed of the hospital’s medical staff, the

committee must be involved in the peer-review process before the privilege will attach. Roach,

157 Ill. 2d at 40. The supreme court explained:

       “If the simple act of furnishing a committee with earlier-acquired information were

       sufficient to cloak that information with the statutory privilege, a hospital could

       effectively insulate from disclosure virtually all adverse facts known to its medical staff,

       with the exception of those matters actually contained in a patient’s records.” Id. at 41.

¶ 18   In Chicago Trust, a hospital patient’s ventilator accidently became disconnected. He then

lapsed into a coma and suffered brain damage. The plaintiff filed a malpractice action against

the hospital and sought discovery of certain incident and situation reports that hospital staff

members created shortly after the ventilator accident. The hospital refused to disclose the

reports. The hospital asserted that the reports were prepared at the request of the hospital

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oversight committee and were an integral part of the quality-assurance process. The trial court

ordered that the reports be disclosed. After the hospital still refused to produce the reports, the

trial court held the hospital in contempt. Chicago Trust, 298 Ill. App. 3d at 398-401.

¶ 19   On appeal, the reviewing court held that the trial court properly ruled that the reports at

issue should be disclosed. Id. at 406. The court explained that documents initiated, created,

prepared, or generated by a peer-review committee are privileged under the Medical Studies Act;

conversely, documents that are created in the ordinary course of the hospital’s medical business

or for later corrective action by the hospital staff are not. Id. at 402-03. The court specifically

rejected the hospital’s suggestion that its oversight committee could invoke the Medical Studies

Act’s protection by declaring in advance that all incident documents prepared by the hospital

staff were part of the peer-review process. Id. at 406. The court explained:

               “The Hospital’s position goes too far. Such a policy, if effective, would swallow

       the rule. The [Medical Studies] Act would not create exceptions to disclosure. It would

       make everything confidential, except for the patient’s own medical records.” Id.

¶ 20   In Berry, the plaintiff sought to compel the defendant hospital to produce a letter written

to the chair of the hospital’s obstetrics and gynecology department by a physician involved in the

incident at issue, regarding the facts of the incident. The hospital claimed that the letter was

privileged under the Medical Studies Act and refused to produce it. Specifically, the hospital

argued that the submission of such letters or reports was the prescribed method of initiating the

internal quality-control process at the hospital. The appellate court rejected this argument,

finding that the letter was not privileged as a report or statement used in the course of internal

quality control, because the hospital’s procedure did not transform letters or reports written by

doctors into “information of” a quality-control committee, as required under the Medical Studies

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Act. Berry, 338 Ill. App. 3d at 54. “Even if the *** letter notified [the department chair, as a

representative] of the investigatory committee[,] of a potential quality control issue, the Medical

Studies Act’s privilege does not apply because the *** letter was information of the Hospital’s

staff rather than information of any committee, peer-review or otherwise.” Id. The appellate

court commented that the physician who wrote the letter could not successfully argue that she

was acting on behalf of the department or a quality-control committee when she wrote the letter,

because the department clearly was not aware of the incident until after it received the letter and

it did not meet to discuss the letter until months after the letter was written. Id. at 56.

¶ 21    In Kopolovic, this court held that a memorandum written by an anesthesiologist who was

not a member of any peer-review or quality-control committee, expressing his concerns about

alleged deception concerning a recent surgical procedure by a plastic surgeon, was not privileged

under the Medical Studies Act. Kopolovic, 2012 IL App (2d) 110383, ¶ 36. The memo was

written at the suggestion of the president and another member of the board of the defendant

surgical center, and it was addressed to the board, the consulting committee (the center’s peer-

review and credentialing committee), and the surgeon.            We rejected the anesthesiologist’s

argument that the memo was privileged because he sought to bring to light practices that he

viewed as unethical. Id. ¶ 21. We noted that the case law (Roach and Grandi v. Shah, 261 Ill.

App. 3d 551 (1994)) held that the privilege applied to information generated or created by a

committee already engaged in the peer-review or quality-control process with regard to the

incident at issue. Kopolovic, 2012 IL App (2d) 110383, ¶¶ 24-26. Even though the content of

the memo was in harmony with the promotion of quality control, it could not be privileged where

it was not generated by a committee of the type described in the statute. Id. ¶ 26. We also

rejected the anesthesiologist’s argument that, because he was advised to write the memo by

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members of the board, he was engaged in ongoing quality control and, thus, the memo must be

considered information of the board. Id. ¶ 27. We expressed two reasons for our holding. First,

citing Roach, Berry, and Anderson v. Rush-Copley Medical Center, Inc., 385 Ill. App. 3d 167

(2008), we noted chronology. Specifically, we determined that, when the memo was written, the

board was not already engaged in the peer-review or quality-control process regarding the

incident at issue. Kopolovic, 2012 IL App (2d) 110383, ¶¶ 28-30. Second, relying on Roach and

Pietro v. Marriott Senior Living Services, Inc., 348 Ill. App. 3d 541 (2004), we concluded that

the actions of individual board members are not actions of the board as a whole and that the

evidence did not reflect that the board members were authorized by the board to investigate,

“outside the review process conducted at monthly meetings,” the anesthesiologist’s concerns

before he wrote his memo. Kopolovic, 2012 IL App (2d) 110383, ¶¶ 31-32.

¶ 22   In Lindsey, in a negligence action against a nursing home, this court construed the Long-

Term Care Peer Review and Quality Assessment and Assurance Protection Act (745 ILCS 55/1

et seq. (West 2014)) by looking at Medical Studies Act case law and held, following Roach and

Chicago Trust, that internal quality-assurance investigation reports relating to incidents or

accidents involving resident injuries, and required under a nursing home’s quality-assurance

process for consideration only by the quality-assurance committee, were not privileged. We

explained that a policy “declaring in advance” that reports are part of the peer-review process

“ ‘goes too far,’ ” as the reports at issue constituted earlier-acquired information and were made

before any peer-review committee met. Lindsey, 2017 IL App (2d) 160042, ¶¶ 15, 16 (quoting

Chicago Trust, 298 Ill. App. 3d at 406).

¶ 23   This court most recently revisited the Medical Studies Act in Nielson. There, the plaintiff

underwent a scheduled outpatient surgery at the defendant’s hospital in Belvidere to remove a

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vaginal cyst. During the surgery, the plaintiff’s bladder was injured. The plaintiff was then

transported on an emergency basis to the defendant’s hospital in Rockford for surgical repair of

her bladder. Three nurses involved either in the plaintiff’s original or second surgery each

prepared a quality control report (QCR) between December 17 and 20, 2013. The defendant’s

director of risk management averred that the defendant’s medical staff bylaws established

various quality-assurance committees, including the quality and safety committee (QA/I). The

QA/I requested that certain medical information be collected on its behalf in the form of QCRs.

The QA/I developed the QCR template in 1999 in an effort to comply with the Medical Studies

Act. QCRs were gathered at the direction and (standing) request of the QA/I. Nielson, 2017 IL

App (2d) 160743, ¶¶ 4-9.

¶ 24    On January 29, 2015, the plaintiff filed a suit against the defendant, sounding in

negligence. The plaintiff subsequently sought to compel the defendant to produce the three

QCRs.    The defendant refused, arguing that the documents were protected from discovery

pursuant to the Medical Studies Act. The trial court ordered the defendant to disclose the

documents. Id. ¶¶ 22-24.

¶ 25    On appeal, this court affirmed. We determined that the QCRs at issue were effectively

incident reports because they did not commence an investigation and because they were used for

the dual purposes of quality assurance and risk management. We therefore explained that, in

light of the holdings in Roach, Lindsey, Chicago Trust, Kopolovic, and Berry, which preclude

designating in advance that certain materials are generated by and for a quality-assurance or

peer-review committee, and in light of the case law holding that the statutory privilege does not

apply where the materials are used for the dual purposes of quality-assurance and risk

management, the QCRs were not privileged. Id. ¶¶ 75, 80.

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¶ 26   Based on the foregoing authorities, the Medical Studies Act does not insulate from

discovery documents that were generated before a peer-review committee or its designee

authorized an investigation of a specific incident. Thus, there is no merit to Edward Hospital’s

claim that the policies its MSQC enacted in 2008 were sufficient to shield from discovery

Rosenbery’s notes on the peer-reviewers’ input regarding the care that the plaintiff and Isabella

received in 2013.

¶ 27   Edward Hospital attempts to distinguish the above cases on the basis that they involved

different types of documents than are at issue here. Specifically, Edward Hospital argues that

those cases involved a hallway conversation (Roach), a memorandum (Kopolovic), a letter

written outside the peer-review process (Berry), witness statements (Lindsey), incident reports

(Chicago Trust), or dual-purpose reports (Nielson). By contrast, the hospital insists, Rosenbery’s

notes on the peer reviewers’ input are more similar to the information that was found to be

privileged in Ardisana v. Northwest Community Hospital, Inc., 342 Ill. App. 3d 741 (2003), Eid

v. Loyola University Medical Center, 2017 IL App (1st) 143967, and Anderson, 385 Ill. App. 3d

167.

¶ 28   The distinctions that Edward Hospital is trying to draw are without significance. The fact

remains that the documents at issue herein, like those in the foregoing authorities, were generated

before any peer-review committee or its designee authorized an investigation into a specific

incident. Furthermore, we find the hospital’s reliance on Ardisana, Eid, and Anderson to be

misplaced.

¶ 29   In Ardisana, the trial court directed a hospital to provide, for an in camera review, a

privilege log, a copy of the documents in dispute, and a copy of the complaint. Ardisana, 342 Ill.

App. 3d at 744. The hospital filed the requested documents and, in addition, filed the affidavit of

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its risk manager. Id. The risk manager’s affidavit indicated that the documents at issue were

generated in conjunction with investigations by the general surgery quality audit and anesthesia

quality improvement audit committees.       She identified the following documents as being

privileged:

              “1. A quality management worksheet prepared for the surgical quality audit

       committee, dated February 23, 2000, and minutes of audit committee meetings held on

       February 23 and April 19, 2000, at which plaintiff’s care was discussed.

              2. A quality management worksheet prepared for the anesthesia department

       quality audit committee dated May 10, 2000, minutes of an audit committee meeting held

       May 10, 2000, and a letter from the chairman of the audit committee to Dr. Subhash

       Balaney dated June 5, 2000, requesting certain additional information about plaintiff’s

       care.” Id.

¶ 30   The trial court ruled that all of the disputed documents were discoverable, in part because

the hospital failed to establish when the peer-review process commenced and ended. Id.

Thereafter, the hospital filed a motion to reconsider, attaching additional affidavits with

information regarding the start and end dates of the internal review processes and information as

to the steps taken to preserve the confidentiality of the documents generated during the process.

Id. at 745. On appeal, the reviewing court reversed for two reasons. First, the reviewing court

held that the documents at issue were privileged on the basis that they constituted

recommendations, not results used in the course of internal quality control. Id. at 747. Second,

the reviewing court determined that the documents were privileged because they “served an

integral function in the peer-review information-gathering and decision-making process,” noting

that an affidavit showed that they were generated in the process of investigations by the

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committees and solely for their use. Id. at 748. In so ruling, the reviewing court explicitly noted

that the Medical Studies Act does not protect against disclosure of information generated before

a peer-review process begins or after it ends. Id.

¶ 31   Here, Edward Hospital points to the language in Ardisana that refers to results being

discoverable but recommendations not being discoverable, and it argues that recommendations

are at issue here. It also argues that Ardisana is analogous because that case involves documents,

like those here, that “served an integral function in the peer-review information-gathering and

decision-making process.” Id. The hospital’s argument, however, overlooks the context of

Ardisana. In Ardisana, the reviewing court explained that the privilege does not attach to

documents generated before a peer-review process begins or after it ends. Id. Thus, it is

apparent that the reviewing court found that the documents at issue were privileged because they

were created while the quality audit committee was meeting or before its investigation had

ended. As such, the instant case is distinguishable from Ardisana because the documents at issue

here were produced before the MSQC authorized an investigation into the incident at issue.

¶ 32   In Eid, the reviewing court held that information generated for use by a hospital peer-

review committee was privileged where a committee designee, pursuant to his authority under

hospital bylaws, began an investigation of a patient’s treatment and instructed another committee

member to collect information. Eid, 2017 IL App (1st) 143967, ¶ 39. Specifically, after a child

died following surgery, the hospital’s risk manager, who was also a member of the peer-review

committee, began contacting individuals to preserve records. She also contacted the chair of the

peer-review committee, who instructed her to investigate the incident on the committee’s behalf,

from a quality perspective. The chair averred that the committee directed and empowered

individuals to assemble information about incidents and to report the information back to the

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committee for its use in evaluating and improving the quality of patient care. The risk manager,

he further averred, was such a designee in this instance. The First District upheld the trial court’s

finding that the privilege applied to documents generated by the risk manager after she obtained

the chair’s directive on the committee’s behalf. Id. The court noted that the 1995 amendment to

the Medical Studies Act provided that “ ‘designees’ ” could create or generate information

covered by the statute. Id. ¶ 43. Thus, if the risk manager and the chair were designees under

the Medical Studies Act, the documents were privileged. Id. ¶ 44. In assessing this question, the

court rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that the privilege does not apply to information generated

before the peer-review committee, acting as a whole, either becomes aware of an incident or is

engaged in the peer-review process. Id. ¶ 49. The court noted that the statute was amended after

the Roach decision and that subsequent cases citing Roach either do not acknowledge the 1995

amendment or do not involve situations where an individual was authorized to act on behalf of a

peer-review committee. Id. (citing Chicago Trust, Pietro, Anderson, and Kopolovic). The court

held that the privilege applied to the documents generated by the risk manager after she obtained

the chair’s directive on the committee’s behalf, where the risk manager’s and the chair’s

affidavits established that the committee was a peer-review committee covered by the Medical

Studies Act and where the chair used his authority to commence the committee’s investigation

after being informed that the incident at issue might warrant peer-review proceedings. Id. ¶ 53.

¶ 33   Eid thus stands for the proposition that, where a member of a peer-review committee,

acting on its behalf, authorizes an investigation by a designee into a potential quality issue, any

documents generated thereafter as part of the investigation are privileged. It is distinguishable

from this case, because a designee was not declared in Eid until after the committee became

aware of the incident and authorized the investigation. Here, Edward Hospital is relying on

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policies its MSQC enacted five years before the incident at issue to support its claim that certain

documents should be privileged.

¶ 34   In Anderson, the decedent died after being admitted to the defendant hospital. Nine days

later, the hospital’s peer-review committee met to address the medical care that the decedent had

received. Anderson, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 169. The hospital’s risk manager testified in her

discovery deposition that the members of the committee were assigned to conduct research

concerning issues involving the decedent’s medical care and that this research resulted in

locating and using medical journal articles related to the decedent’s medical care. Id. at 171.

The plaintiff sought to have the hospital disclose the medical journal articles that the committee

had relied upon. The trial court agreed that the medical journal articles were not privileged

under the Medical Studies Act, because those articles had not been generated by a hospital

committee in formulating its recommendations. Id. On appeal, this court reversed. Id. at 178.

We explained that the medical journal articles were privileged because they reflected the

committee’s internal review process, including information-gathering and deliberations. Id. at

175. We additionally found that, as “the medical journal articles could not reference the care

administered to decedent, because they existed before [she] sought treatment,” “applying the

privilege to the medical journal articles would not frustrate the [Medical Studies] Act’s goal of

improved patient care, because doing so would not conceal any ‘adverse facts’ known to

defendant’s medical staff about decedent’s care.” Id. at 177.

¶ 35   Anderson is distinguishable from the instant case because in that case the peer-review

committee had already started its investigation when it located the articles in question. In the

present case, when Rosenbery wrote her notes, the MSQC was not engaged in an investigation of

the care that the plaintiff and Isabella had received.

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¶ 36   Finally, we note that “a contempt citation is an appropriate method for testing the

propriety of a discovery order.” Flannery v. Lin, 176 Ill. App. 3d 652, 655 (1988). Here, the

record reveals that Edward Hospital was not contemptuous of the trial court’s authority. Rather,

its refusal was made in good faith, as it merely sought appellate review of its unsuccessful

assertions of privilege. Accordingly, we vacate the trial court’s finding of contempt. See People

ex rel. Birkett v. City of Chicago, 292 Ill. App. 3d 745, 756 (1997).

¶ 37                                     CONCLUSION

¶ 38   The decision of the circuit court of Du Page County requiring Edward Hospital to

produce the disputed documents is affirmed. The contempt order is vacated. We remand for

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

¶ 39   Affirmed in part and vacated in part; cause remanded.

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