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PUBLISHED OPINION

COURT OF APPEALS

DECISION

DATED AND FILED

NOTICE

May 19, 1998

This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports.

Marilyn L. Graves

Clerk, Court of Appeals

of Wisconsin

A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See § 808.10 and Rule 809.62, Stats.

[T]he duty of the doctor is to make such disclosures as appear reasonably necessary under circumstances then existing to enable a reasonable person under the same or similar circumstances confronting the patient at the time of disclosure to intelligently exercise his right to consent or to refuse the treatment or procedure proposed.

Scaria v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 68 Wis.2d 1, 13, 227 N.W.2d 647, 654 (1975). This duty was codified in the first sentence of §448.30, Stats., which sets forth the informed consent standard: "Any physician who treats a patient shall inform the patient about the availability of all alternate, viable medical modes of treatment and about the benefits and risks of these treatments."

On the question of contributory negligence, in such cases as the one at bar, it is the law that "It is not a part of the duties of a patient to distrust his physician, or to set his judgment against that of the expert whom he has employed to treat him, or to appeal to other physicians to ascertain if the physician is performing his duty properly. The very relation assumes trust and confidence on the part of the patient in the capacity and skill of the physician; and it would indeed require an unusual state of facts to render a person who is possessed of no medical skill guilty of contributory negligence because he accepts the word of his physician and trusts in the efficacy of the treatment prescribed by him. A patient has the right to rely on the professional skill of his physician, without calling others in to determine whether he really possesses such skill or not. The patient is not bound to call in other physicians, unless he becomes fully aware that the physician has not been, and is not, giving proper treatment ...."

Kelly v. Carroll, 219 P.2d 79, 90 (Wash. 1950) (quoting Halverson v. Zimmerman, 232 N.W. 754, 759 (N.D. 1950)). We perceive under §448.30, Stats., only an affirmative duty on the physician and none on the patient. Therefore, in the context of informed consent, we agree that a patient would not be contributorily negligent by failing to ask a sufficient number of the proper questions or, in all but the most extraordinary instance, by consenting to a treatment option that a doctor presents as a viable option. The evidence does not place this case in the realm of the extraordinary. Brown was concerned about the abnormalities she found in her breast and thus sought medical advice. She followed through on Dibbell's recommendation that she obtain a second opinion. This opinion buttressed Dibbell's. At trial, the defendants did not claim that the procedure Brown claims the doctors recommended and that Dibbell performed was not medically viable. This evidence belies the jury's verdict that Brown was negligent when she opted for one viable treatment method among the several Dibbell testified Brown was afforded.

A physician who proposes to perform an operation must make such disclosures as will enable a reasonable person under the circumstances confronting the patient to exercise the patient's right to consent to, or to refuse, the operation proposed.

The doctor's disclosure must be sufficient to enable a reasonable person, situated as was the patient, to understand: his or her existing physical condition, the risks to his or her life or health which the operation imposes, and the purposes and advantages of the operation.

The doctor must inform the patient whether the operation proposed is ordinarily performed in the circumstances confronting the patient whether alternate procedures approved by the medical profession are available, what the outlook is for success or failure of each alternative procedure, and the risks inherent in each alternate procedure.

Wis JI-Civil 1023.2. Dibbell contends that he is entitled to a new trial because the trial court refused to inform the jury of the applicable exceptions to the duty to inform set forth in §448.30, Stats.,5 together with the optional fourth paragraph from the standard instruction. That paragraph reads:

If, however, the doctor comes forward and offers to you an explanation as to why the doctor did not make a disclosure to the plaintiff, and if such explanation satisfies you that it was reasonable for the doctor not to have made such disclosures, then you will find that the defendant did not fail in the duties owed by the doctor to the patient.

1 The jury found Johnson entirely non-liable. He does not join Dibbell's cross-appeal.

2 She argues that this information includes: (1) Dibbell's conversations with radiologists and their opinions that there was a low probability of the lesion being cancerous; (2) the radiologists only recommended a six-month follow-up mammogram; (3) the radiologists found nothing wrong with Brown's left breast; (4) the risks of surgery relative to needle localization including the risks if the implants were punctured; (5) any statistics quantifying the risk; (6) her risk of getting breast cancer in the next 20 years was one out of 25 (an undisputed statistic); (7) what her risk would be if she waited; (8) she would lose all sensitivity and sensibility in her breasts; (9) the effect her social background, feelings of womanliness or self-image might have on her decision to have surgery; (10) she could consider psychiatric, psychological and/or oncological consultation; (11)any brochures or other written information on mastectomies or risks of cancer; and (12) the risks of disfigurement, sensitivity loss, undue scarring and thinning of the tissue cover.

3 We are hesitant to declare an absolute rule that a patient can never be negligent when following what a physician represents as a viable treatment option.

4 See Wis JI-Civil 1007 Contributory Negligence: Defined:

To be free of negligence, a person must exercise ordinary care in choosing his or her course of conduct and in the pursuit of that choice. A person is not guilty of negligence in making a choice of conduct if the person has no knowledge that one course of conduct carries a greater hazard than another, provided that such lack of knowledge is not the result of the person's failure to exercise ordinary care.

5 Section 448.30, Stats., provides in part:

The physician's duty to inform the patient ... does not require disclosure of:

(1)Information beyond what a reasonably well-qualified physician in a similar medical classification would know.

(2)Detailed technical information that in all probability a patient would not understand.

(3)Risks apparent or known to the patient.

(4)Extremely remote possibilities that might falsely or detrimentally alarm the patient.

6 See note 2, supra.