                                                                               FOURTH DIVISION
                                                                                  August 2, 2007




No. 1-06-1296


KATHERINE BERGMAN, Special Adm'r of the                )      Appeal from
Estate of Isaac Bergman, Deceased,                     )      the Circuit Court
                                                       )      of Cook County.
        Plaintiff-Appellee,                            )
                                                       )
   v.                                                  )
                                                       )
ROBERT KELSEY, OLLENDORF and                          )
KELSEY, LTD., a Professional Corporation, and          )      Honorable
NORTHWESTERN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL,                        )      Lynn M. Egan
a Corporation,                                         )      Judge Presiding.
                                                       )
        Defendants-Appellants.                         )


        PRESIDING JUSTICE QUINN delivered the opinion of the court:

        Plaintiff Katherine Bergman filed a medical malpractice suit against Robert Kelsey,

Ollendorf and Kelsey, Ltd. and Northwestern Memorial Hospital (defendants) following the

death of her newborn son from a Group B streptococcus (GBS) infection. Following a trial, on

February 25, 2005, the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,750,000. The parties

agreed that the verdict was subject to a $225,000 setoff for a prior settlement, and the circuit

court entered a $1,525,000 judgment against defendants. The circuit court subsequently denied

defendants’ posttrial motion and defendants now appeal. On appeal, defendants contend that the

circuit court erred in denying their request for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (judgment

n.o.v.) and a new trial. For the following reasons, we affirm.
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                                       I. BACKGROUND

       On April 5, 2001, plaintiff filed an amended complaint at law. In her complaint, plaintiff

alleged that defendants were negligent by failing to screen for GBS during the prenatal period

and by failing to diagnose macrosomia (a fetus with significant overgrowth) and timely respond

to signs of infection and fetal distress during labor. Plaintiff’s theory about GBS was that a

prenatal culture would have identified her as a carrier and prompted prophylactic administration

of antibiotics, thereby preventing transmission of the organism to the fetus. Plaintiff also

maintained that defendants permitted plaintiff to attempt a vaginal delivery when they knew or

should have known that fetal macrosomia would prevent a safe delivery by that method.

       At trial, the parties’ experts presented similar testimony about the standard of care

applicable to GBS detection. Each expert witness agreed that the standard of care permitted

physicians to choose one of two different options for managing possible GBS infections: the

“culture” or the “risk-factor” approach. One of the primary differences between the two

approaches concerns the timing of implementation. Under the culture approach, a pregnant

woman is tested for the organism at 35 to 37 weeks of gestation. If the culture reveals the

woman is positive for GBS, she is treated with antibiotics at the beginning of labor, even in the

absence of any sign of infection. Under the risk-factor approach, treatment is deferred until a risk

factor for infection is identified, such as preterm labor, ruptured membranes (when the woman’s

water breaks) for over 18 hours, a prior child who had GBS, and a maternal fever of 100.4

degrees or more. All witnesses agreed that both approaches were appropriate and conformed to

the standard of care in 1999. Experts for plaintiff and defendants, Dr. Fields and Dr. Schwartz,


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testified that the standard of care on this issue was a “national” standard.

       Plaintiff’s expert Dr. Richard Fields testified that defendants deviated from the national

standard of care in four areas: (1) failing to inform plaintiff of the two acceptable approaches to

treat GBS, the approach adopted by defendants, and the risks and alternatives; (2) delaying the

start of antibiotics provided to plaintiff; (3) failing to take into account the macrosomia, which

should have resulted in certain discussions with plaintiff and a different method of delivery or a

different method of delivery sooner; and (4) failing to undertake a cesarean section earlier based

upon the abnormalities of the fetal heart tones or the fetal heart tracings.

       Dr. Fields testified that when a physician has what is thought to be two equal methods of

taking care of a problem in medicine, the standard of care requires the physician to discuss the

methods with the patient and help the patient make an informed consent decision as to which

method should be adopted in her particular case. Dr. Fields testified that by not engaging

plaintiff in such a discussion regarding the two approaches to treat GBS, defendants violated the

standard of care. Dr. Fields testified that guidelines issued by the American College of

Gynecologists (ACOG) and material from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) stated

that such a discussion should take place between a physician and patient. Dr. Fields testified that

he based his opinion in part on his experience at Sinai and Sinai-Grace hospitals in Detroit,

Michigan.

       Plaintiff’s exhibits included the ACOG 1996 Committee Opinion on the “Prevention of

Early-Onset Group B Streptococcal Disease in Newborns,” relied on by Dr. Fields, which

included a statement that obstetric providers use “either a strategy based on late prenatal culture


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(35-37 weeks) as the primary risk determinant or a strategy based solely on clinical risk factors”

(Emphasis Added). The ACOG opinion also provided in pertinent part:

       “Patients should be informed of the GBS prevention strategy used. This may be

       accomplished by providing patient information materials such as the patient

       information pamphlet produced by ACOG.

               If the strategy adopted by the provider is based solely on clinical risk

       factors, some patients may request that GBS cultures be done. Such requests from

       informed patients should be honored by obtaining a culture at 35-37 weeks of

       gestation as recommended by CDC [Center for Disease Control].”

       Plaintiff’s exhibits also included the 1997 joint “Guidelines for Perinatal Care” by the

American Academy of Pediatrics and ACOG, which stated in relevant part:

               “Obstetric providers should adopt a strategy for the prevention of early-

       onset GBS disease in the newborn. * * *. Women should be informed of the GBS

       prevention strategy used. If the strategy adopted by the provider is based solely on

       clinical risk factors, some women may request GBS cultures. Such requests from

       informed women should be honored by obtaining a culture at 35-37 weeks of

       gestation.”

       Dr. Fields also testified that in this case, defendants should have anticipated a long labor

because this was plaintiff’s first baby, the baby was thought to be large, plaintiff’s cervix was not

well-effaced, and the baby’s head was high in the pelvis. Dr. Fields testified that the average first

labor is 18 to 24 hours long and that, under the standard of care, defendants should have


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anticipated a labor lasting longer than 18 hours. Dr. Fields testified that 90 % of mothers who

delivered a baby infected with GBS tested positive for the organism when a prenatal culture was

obtained. Dr. Fields testified that if a physician uses the risk-factor approach to treat GBS, once

a labor has gone on longer than 18 hours, the physician administers antibiotics anyway, due to

the increased risk of infection to the baby. Dr. Fields testified that plaintiff was nowhere close to

delivery when the cesarean section was performed and that the prospects for vaginal delivery

were poor because the baby was large. Dr. Fields testified that defendants therefore deviated

from the standard of care by not providing plaintiff with antibiotics when plaintiff entered the

hospital to induce labor at about 7:15 a.m., on April 5, 2000. As to causation, Dr. Fields testified

that the death of the baby could have been avoided if defendants had administered antibiotics

upon plaintiff’s admission to the hospital.

       Dr. Fields also testified that macrosomia is described as a 4,500-gram fetal weight and

that prophylactic cesarean section is the standard of care when a physician suspects a 4,500-gram

fetus. Dr. Fields testified that about two weeks before plaintiff entered the hospital for an

induction, an ultrasound showed a 3,660-gram fetal weight. Dr. Fields testified that babies gain a

half pound, or 250 grams, each week that goes by in the last part of pregnancy. Dr. Fields

testified that it was reasonably expected that when plaintiff entered the hospital two weeks after

the ultrasound, the baby would weigh approximately 4,100 grams. Dr. Fields testified that

ultrasound is plus or minus 15 % in accuracy, and therefore, the baby could have been 4,500

grams or more, or less than 4,500 grams if the error was in the other direction. Dr. Fields

testified that the standard of care at 4,500 grams required defendants to discuss with plaintiff


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having a cesarean section to avoid the risk of shoulder dystocia or damage to the baby’s arm.

       Dr. Fields testified that the labor and delivery summary filed by one of the nurses at the

hospital showed that plaintiff’s baby weighed 4,875 grams. Dr. Fields also testified that

defendants and other health care providers at the hospital were watching fetal heart tracings

during plaintiff’s delivery. Heart rate tracing is a device that measures the fetal heart rate in

response to maternal contractions. Dr. Fields testified that there were enough abnormalities in

the nurse’s notes describing the fetal hear tracings to indicate a need for delivery by cesarean

section. Dr. Fields testified that the nurse’s notes indicated that at 11:45 p.m., “mild variables”

were noted, which means that the heartbeat is falling during the contraction and it returns back to

its baseline before the contraction ends. At 1:10 a.m., a nurse again noted that variables were

continuing, but that the return to baseline was after the contraction was completed, which Dr.

Fields testified was a “nonreassuring” sign. Dr. Fields testified that given the fall in the heart rate

for a period of time, the variables with the late return to baseline, and no prospect of imminent

vaginal delivery, the standard of care required cesarean section intervention at that time. Dr.

Fields testified that the nurse’s notes at 2:30 a.m. reflected that the variables continued. At 2:50

a.m., the notes indicate that variables continued, but that the fall in the heart rate was occurring

after the uterine contraction. Dr. Fields testified that this late deceleration was another non-

reassuring sign. The nurse’s 2:55 a.m. notes referred to Dr. Kelsey reviewing the heart rate

tracing strips. Dr. Fields’ opinion with overwhelming medical certainty was that the fetal heart

tracings showed abnormalities that should have caused a cesarean section to be performed

sooner. Dr. Fields also testified that the death of the baby could have been avoided if an earlier


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cesarean section had been performed. Dr. Fields testified that it would have been highly unlikely

that the baby would have contracted GBS had a cesarean section delivery been performed

because the baby would never have gotten into the vagina and birth canal, where the exposure to

the bacteria took place.

         Plaintiff’s expert Dr. John Seguin testified that based on the information in plaintiff’s

chart and information about the baby at birth, he believed that there was a deteriorating condition

and that it would most likely have been reflected in abnormal fetal heart rate tracings, as many as

four or five hours before birth. Dr. Seguin testified that he reviewed the nurses’ notes and other

information in plaintiff’s chart, as well as information from when the baby was born, and

plaintiff’s and the baby’s medical records.

         Dr. Seguin testified that a nursing note indicated “mild variables” at 11:45 p.m., which

described that there was some decrease in the infant’s heart rate not directly associated with a

uterine contraction. Dr. Seguin identified a second note at 12:30 a.m., in which a nurse wrote

“continuing to have mild to moderate variables.” Dr. Seguin testified that “moderate” means

more decreases in heart rate. He testified that a third nurse notation at 1:10 a.m. indicated

continuing variables as more progression of a problem that was getting more prominent in the

face of a fever that plaintiff developed by 10:30 p.m. Dr. Seguin testified that his opinion was

that the baby contracted the GBS organism at or about the time that plaintiff’s fever was first

noted.

         Dr. Seguin also identified other evidence which he testified indicated an ongoing process

depicting fetal distress. Dr. Seguin testified that the blood gas sample taken from the umbilical


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vein when the baby was born was “severely abnormal,” which he believed indicated that there

was an ongoing hypoxic (low oxygen) level to the baby’s tissues developing over time, probably

several hours. Dr. Seguin testified that this was not a sudden issue, but the culmination of a

continuing process. Dr. Seguin testified that the baby’s condition after birth indicated that it was

“severely ill” and that this was not just a recent event prior to delivery. Dr. Seguin explained that

the “Apgar” scores which reflected the baby’s condition at birth were zero, indicating an ongoing

insult that developed over time rather than a sudden event.

       Dr. Seguin testified that the record showed that plaintiff had a temperature of 101 degrees

at about 10:30 p.m. and was given antibiotics at about 12 midnight. Dr. Seguin testified that

clinical trials and treatment of GBS has shown that there is an additional risk at either 12 or 18

hours of ruptured membranes for the infant getting sick. Dr. Seguin testified that in the context

of plaintiff being in labor for about 14 hours, the risk of infection to the baby increased as the

time of ruptured membranes continued. Dr. Seguin testified that plaintiff had ruptured

membranes at about 7 a.m., and 18 hours after that would have been at about 1 a.m. Dr. Seguin

testified that the earlier antibiotics are provided to a baby with GBS, the better the expected

outcome. Dr. Seguin testified that had plaintiff received antibiotics upon her admission to the

hospital, the death of the baby could have been prevented. Dr. Seguin testified that had plaintiff

been cultured prenatally, she would have been shown to be a GBS carrier. Dr. Seguin testified

that literature states that more than 90 % of mothers of babies who had GBS tested positive when

they were cultured at 34 to 36 weeks of gestation. In 1999, if a mother was cultured and tested

positive for GBS, the mother would be administered antibiotics at the time of admission to the


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hospital. Dr. Seguin also testified that an earlier delivery by either route would have improved

the baby’s chances of survival in this case.

        Sherri Lee Haskins testified that she was a labor and delivery nurse and cared for plaintiff

at the hospital on April 5, 1999. Haskins testified to the notations made during the evening

nursing shift which culminated in the baby’s birth. Haskins testified to the increasing fetal heart

rate baseline noted in her records; a change in the long-term variability of the tracings beginning

at 1:10a.m.; a prolonged five-minute deceleration in the tracings noted at 12:08 a.m.; continuing

variables in the tracings during the early morning hours; specific temperature recordings

documenting a maternal fever throughout the night; and the administration of fever-reducing

medications.

        Defendants’ experts all denied that the standard of care required a discussion with the

patient about the GBS strategy adopted by her physician and there was no dispute at trial that

defendants adopted the “risk-factor” approach without the sort of discussion described by Dr.

Fields. Plaintiff testified that she would have chosen the culture approach if defendants advised

her of this option.

        Defendants’ expert Dr. Stanford Shulman testified that there are many different GBS

strains and that plaintiff’s strain was very virulent, replicating at a tremendous rate. Dr. Shulman

testified that the baby in this case was “very, very severely affected by this very aggressive,

overwhelming infection” and the baby died from “overwhelmingly very severe Group B

streptococcal infection sepsis.” Dr. Shulman testified that in some instances, such as in this case,

no amount of antibiotics would overcome a devastating infection to the baby. Dr. Schulman


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testified that the baby’s death was unpredictable and unknowable. Dr. Shulman testified that

there would be no way at all to know or anticipate this virulent strain of GBS and the kind of

outcome in this case.

       Defendants’ expert Dr. George Wendel testified that he believed that Dr. Kelsey

conformed to the standard of care in all respects. Dr. Wendel testified that the standard of care in

1999 did not require Dr. Kelsey to inform plaintiff of the culture approach and risk-factor

approach and ask her to decide which approach she wanted him to follow. Dr. Wendel testified

that the standard of care did not require Dr. Kelsey to perform a cesarean section any sooner than

he did at approximately 4:30 a.m., on April 6, 1999. Dr. Wendel also testified that the standard

of care did not require Dr. Kelsey to offer a cesarean section based on the fact that the baby’s

estimated fetal weight was 4,000 grams. Dr. Wendel testified that the baby was macrosomic at

birth, but he did not think that anyone knew the baby was macrosomic at the time plaintiff went

into labor. Dr. Wendel’s opinion was that the baby died from overwhelming virulent GBS

infection. Dr. Wendel also testified that had plaintiff received a cesarean section before she went

into active labor, the baby would never have developed GBS.

       Dr. Wendel testified that the standard of care in 1999 required the physician to choose

and apply either the culture approach or the risk-factor approach. Dr. Wendel testified that it was

reasonable for Dr. Kelsey to select the risk-factor approach and that he used the risk-factor

approach appropriately in this case. The first risk factor that developed was plaintiff’s fever, Dr.

Kelsey then diagnosed chorioamnionitis (an inflammation of linings in the uterus), and Dr.

Kelsey began administering broad-spectrum, very powerful antibiotics.


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       Dr. Wendel testified that the chance of culturing women is variable because some women

shed the bacteria all of the time, and most women shed it intermittently. Dr. Wendel testified

that based on studies, data would support a determination that if plaintiff had been GBS-positive

when she gave birth at 41 weeks, if she had been cultured at 35 weeks, 6 weeks before and if she

were a typical patient, she would have cultured negative.

       Defendants’ expert Dr. Jeremy Marks testified that the baby died because of

overwhelming GBS infection, which is an infection that is so large that the baby is unable to

fight it despite antibiotics and has a high likelihood of death. Dr. Marks testified that the baby’s

death was not preventable.

       Defendant Dr. Kelsey testified that he relied on the 1996 ACOG opinion in determining

the approach to adopt relative to GBS infections and to establish the standard of care. Dr. Kelsey

testified that the baby died from a GBS infection and conceded that it was transmitted from

plaintiff during labor. He also conceded that plaintiff was most likely a GBS carrier before she

went into labor. Dr. Kelsey testified that if plaintiff had been cultured and shown to have been

positive, he would have prescribed antibiotics for her as soon as she was admitted to the hospital.

However, Dr. Kelsey testified that because plaintiff had such a virulent strain of GBS, the

prophylactic administration of antibiotics would not have prevented the baby’s death. Dr. Kelsey

also disputed that 90 % of mothers who delivered a baby infected with GBS tested positive for

the organism when a prenatal culture was obtained. Dr. Kelsey testified that “there is plenty of

literature showing limitations of culture” and “there [are] a number of problems with the culture

approach in particular.” Dr. Kelsey also testified that he estimated the fetal weight of plaintiff’s


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baby before delivery to be 4,000 grams and testified that he believed plaintiff was going to have a

very large baby.

          Following closing arguments and deliberations, the jury returned a verdict in favor of

plaintiff in the amount of $1,750,000, which the parties agreed was subject to a $225,000 setoff.

On May 6, 2006, the circuit court denied defendants’ posttrial motion and defendants now

appeal.

                                            II. ANALYSIS

                             A. Defendants’ Request for Judgment N.O.V.

          Defendants contend on appeal that the circuit court erred in denying their request for

judgment n.o.v. where there was no basis for any of plaintiff’s theories of liability.

          " ' In a medical malpractice action, a plaintiff must prove: (1) the proper standard of care

by which to measure the defendants’ conduct; (2) a negligent breach of the standard of care; and

(3) the resulting injury proximately caused by the defendants’ lack of skill or care.' " Clayton v.

County of Cook, 346 Ill. App. 3d 367, 384 (2004), quoting Susnis v. Radfar, 317 Ill. App. 3d

817, 826 (2000).

          A judgment n.o.v. presents a question of law that appellate courts review de novo. Alwin

v. Village of Wheeling, 371 Ill. App. 3d 898, 910-11 (2007), citing Knauerhaze v. Nelson, 361

Ill. App. 3d 538, 547 (2005). A judgment n.o.v. should be granted “ ‘only when all the evidence,

viewed in a light most favorable to the nonmovant, so overwhelmingly favors the movant that no

contrary verdict could stand based on the evidence.’ ” Alwin, 371 Ill. App. 3d at 911, quoting

Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 547. Our supreme court has further described the standard in


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Maple v. Gustafson, 151 Ill. 2d 445, 452-53 (1992):

         “A trial court cannot reweigh the evidence and set aside a verdict merely because

       the jury could have drawn different inferences or conclusions, or because the court

       feels that other results are more reasonable. [Citations.] Likewise, the appellate

       court should not usurp the function of the jury and substitute its judgment on

       questions of fact fairly submitted, tried, and determined from the evidence which

       did not greatly preponderate either way.” Maple, 151 Ill. 2d at 452-53.

"Thus, the standard for obtaining a [judgment n.o.v.] is a ‘very difficult standard to meet’ and

[is] limited to ‘extreme situations only.’ ” [Citations.]" Alwin, 371 Ill. App. 3d at 911, quoting

Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 548.

             1. Standard of Care Relating to the Two Approaches to GBS Detection

       Defendants first assert that the circuit court erred in denying their request for judgment

n.o.v. where there was no basis for plaintiff’s claim that the standard of care required Dr. Kelsey

to inform plaintiff of the two approaches to GBS and ask her to chose between them. Defendants

argue that the sources cited by Dr. Fields do not support his opinion that the standard of care

required such a discussion between Dr. Kelsey and plaintiff.

       The record shows that there was no challenge to Dr. Fields’ competence to testify and Dr.

Fields presented testimony that when a physician has what is thought to be two equal methods of

taking care of a problem in medicine, the standard of care required the physician to discuss the

methods with the patient and help the patient make an informed consent decision as to which

method should be adopted in her particular case. Dr. Fields testified that by not engaging


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plaintiff in such a discussion regarding the two approaches to treat GBS, Dr. Kelsey violated the

standard of care. Dr. Fields testified that guidelines issued by the American College of

Gynecologists (ACOG) and material from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) state that

such a discussion should take place between a physician and patient. Dr. Fields also testified that

he based his opinion in part on his experience at Sinai and Sinai-Grace hospitals in Detroit,

Michigan. Defendants disputed Dr. Fields’ testimony about the standard of care. On cross-

examination, defendants presented guidelines from the Detroit hospitals to impeach Dr. Fields’

testimony. Dr. Fields testified on cross-examination that the guidelines defendants presented

indicated that both approaches for the prevention of GBS infection in newborns were acceptable.

Dr. Fields testified that while the guidelines did not mention informing the patient about the two

approaches and asking the patient to decide, the guidelines were not the standard of care.

Defendants also presented expert testimony denying that the standard of care required such a

discussion between patient and physician, and defendants further argued that a 1996 ACOG

opinion did not mention patient choice.

       The record shows that both parties offered conflicting expert testimony relating to the

proper standard of care and defendants’ alleged breach thereof. Thus, the conflicting testimony

was sufficient to raise a question of fact to be decided by the jury and this court will not

substitute its judgment for that of the jury and reweigh the credibility of the witnesses. Maple,

151 Ill. 2d at 452-53; see also Schuchman v. Stackable, 198 Ill. App. 3d 209, 222 (1990) (the jury

is uniquely qualified to resolve conflicting medical testimony concerning the applicable standard

of care and a defendant's breach of that standard); Sinclair v. Berlin, 325 Ill. App. 3d 458, 472


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(2001) (it is the jury’s duty to consider the conflicting evidence and resolve the discrepancies).

Further, the record shows that defendants at trial stipulated that based on Dr. Fields’ testimony

“there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the giving of a jury instruction that contains

an issue about whether Dr. Kelsey violated the standard of care by not having the Fields type

discussion about the two different strategies and allowing the patient to choose.”

       We also note that a general verdict was entered in the instant case. Under section 2-

1201(d) of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-1201(d) (West 2000)), a general

verdict can be sustained on any of several bases of liability and will not be reversed due to the

impairment of one of the theories. Elam v. Lincoln Electric Co., 362 Ill. App. 3d 884, 890

(2005). Therefore, even if plaintiff’s alternative theories should not have been presented to the

jury, plaintiff still could have recovered under the separate theory of defendants’ breach of the

standard of care relating to discussing the two different strategies of treating GBS infections with

plaintiff. We will nonetheless consider defendants’ argument that plaintiff’s alternative theories

of liability should not have been submitted to the jury.

                2. Standard of Care Relating to Prophylactic Antibiotic Treatment

       Defendants next assert that there was no basis for plaintiff’s theory that the standard of

care required Dr. Kelsey to give plaintiff antibiotics upon admission to the hospital. Defendants

argue that their expert witness, Dr. Wendel, testified that “I’ve never heard of that,” and that the

risk-factor approach did not require Dr. Kelsey to give antibiotics to plaintiff at any time before

she developed a fever.

       The record shows that plaintiff’s expert Dr. Fields testified that Dr. Kelsey should have

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anticipated a long labor because this was plaintiff’s first baby, the baby was thought to be large,

plaintiff’s cervix was not well-effaced, and the baby’s head was high in the pelvis. Dr. Fields

testified that the average first labor is 18 to 24 hours long and that, under the standard of care,

defendants should have anticipated a labor lasting longer than 18 hours. Dr. Fields testified that

if a physician uses the risk-factor approach to treat GBS, once a labor has gone on longer than 18

hours, the physician administers antibiotics anyway. Dr. Fields testified that defendants deviated

from the standard of care by not providing plaintiff with antibiotics when plaintiff entered the

hospital to induce labor and that the death of the baby could have been avoided if defendants had

administered antibiotics upon plaintiff’s admission to the hospital. Defendants’ expert Dr.

Wendel testified that it was reasonable for Dr. Kelsey to select the risk-factor approach and that

he used the risk-factor approach appropriately in this case. The first risk factor that developed

was plaintiff’s fever, Dr. Kelsey then diagnosed chorioamnionitis (an inflammation of linings in

the uterus), and Dr. Kelsey began administering broad-spectrum, very powerful antibiotics. This

conflicting evidence regarding the standard of care for administering antibiotics was properly

submitted to the jury, and this court will not usurp the function of the jury and substitute its

judgment for that of the jury. Maple, 151 Ill. 2d at 452-53; Schuchman, 198 Ill. App. 3d at 222;

Sinclair, 325 Ill. App. 3d at 472.

                           3. Standard of Care Relating to Macrosomia

       Defendants next contend that judgment n.o.v. was proper in this case because Dr. Kelsey

did not breach the standard of care regarding macrosomia and even if Dr. Kelsey had offered to

perform a cesarean section to respond to macrosomia, there was no evidence that plaintiff would

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have accepted that option.

       The record shows that the issue submitted to the jury involved whether defendant “failed

to diagnose fetal macrosomia prior to and at the time of plaintiff’s hospitalization, when he knew

or should have known that the condition was present and would require a [cesarean] section

procedure for the safe delivery of the baby.” Dr. Fields and Dr. Kelsey both testified at trial that

4,500-grams represented the current medical thinking as to what constituted a macrosomic baby.

Dr. Fields testified that prophylactic cesarean section is the standard of care when a physician

suspects a 4,500 gram fetus. Dr. Fields estimated the fetal weight of plaintiff’s baby to be 4,100

grams, while Dr. Kelsey estimated the baby’s weight at 4,000 grams. Dr. Fields also testified

that there was a 15 % error rate on ultrasounds and that an additional 500-gram weight gain could

have been expected between the time of plaintiff’s ultrasound and delivery. Dr. Fields and Dr.

Kelsey testified that plaintiff’s baby was above the 4,500 grams, constituting macrosomia, at

birth. Dr. Fields and defendants’ expert, Dr. Wendel, both testified that had plaintiff received a

cesarean section before she went into active labor, the baby would never have developed GBS.

Dr. Fields’ opinion was that Dr. Kelsey deviated from the standard of care by failing to take into

account the macrosomia, which should have resulted in discussions with plaintiff about a

cesarean section at an earlier time. However, Dr. Wendel testified that the standard of care did

not require Dr. Kelsey to perform a cesarean section any sooner than he did. This conflicting

testimony was sufficient to raise a question of fact to be decided by the jury relating to the

standard of care regarding macrosomia and Dr. Kelsey’s alleged breach thereof. Maple, 151 Ill.

2d at 452-53; Schuchman, 198 Ill. App. 3d at 222; Sinclair, 325 Ill. App. 3d at 472. There was


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no evidence in this case that plaintiff would have refused an earlier cesarean section had Dr.

Kelsey discussed such an option with her and, contrary to defendants’ assertion, such a factor is

not determinative of whether Dr. Kelsey complied with the standard of care in this case.

       Defendants also contend that plaintiff’s claim that Dr. Kelsey breached the standard of

care regarding macrosomia is irrelevant where plaintiff failed to establish proximate cause where

GBS was not a foreseeable result of any negligent treatment of macrosomia.

       "Proximate cause is one of three elements a plaintiff must prove to succeed in a

negligence action: (1) the defendant[s] owed a duty of care; (2) the defendant[s] breached that

duty; and (3) the plaintiff’s resulting injury was proximately caused by the breach." Hooper v.

County of Cook, 366 Ill. App. 3d 1, 6 (2006). The issue of the existence of proximate cause is

ordinarily determined by the jury. Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 548. "There are two

requirements for a showing of proximate cause: cause in fact and legal cause." Hooper, 366 Ill.

App. 3d at 7. Defendants, here, argue that Dr. Kelsey’s actions were not the legal cause of injury.

Legal cause presents a question of foreseeability. Legal cause is established if an injury was

foreseeable as the type of harm that a reasonable person would expect to see as a likely result of

his or her conduct. Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 549.

       "A plaintiff must generally prove the elements of a medical negligence cause of action

through medical expert testimony." Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 549. "In order to sustain the

burden of proof, a plaintiff’s expert must demonstrate within a reasonable degree of medical

certainty that the defendant's breach in the standard of care is more probably than not the cause

of the injury." Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 549. "A plaintiff does not need to present

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unequivocal or unqualified evidence of causation but can meet [her] burden through the

introduction of circumstantial evidence from which a ' "jury may infer other connected facts

which usually and reasonably follow according to *** common experience." ' [Citation.]"

Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 549, quoting Thacker v. UNR Industires, Inc., 151 Ill. 2d 343,

357 (1992).   The weight, sufficiency and credibility assessed to medical expert testimony is

within the province of the jury, as is, ultimately, the resolution of evidentiary conflicts with

respect to the factual question of proximate cause. Knauerhaze, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 550.

       Here, Dr. Fields testified that the standard of care at 4,500 grams required defendants to

discuss with plaintiff having a cesarean section to avoid the risk of shoulder dystocia or damage

to the baby’s arm. Dr. Fields testified that plaintiff was nowhere close to delivery when the

cesarean section was performed and that the prospects for vaginal delivery where poor because

the baby was large. Dr. Fields also testified that prolonged rupture of membranes longer than 18

hours, is one of the factors for GBS transmission to the baby. As a result of the increased risk of

infection to the baby, Dr. Fields testified that prophylactic antibiotics should have been

administered to plaintiff because it should have been anticipated that plaintiff would have a long

labor because this was plaintiff’s first baby, the baby was thought to be large, plaintiff’s cervix

was not well-effaced, and the baby’s head was high in the pelvis. Dr. Fields also testified that the

death of the baby could have been avoided if an earlier cesarean section had been performed. Dr.

Fields explained that it would have been highly unlikely that the baby would have contracted

GBS had a cesarean section delivery been performed because the baby would never have gotten

into the vagina and birth canal, where the exposure to the bacteria took place. Dr. Seguin also


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testified that an earlier delivery by either route would have improved the baby’s chances of

survival in this case.

        Defendants’ experts all testified that Dr. Kelsey complied with the standard of care and

that the baby’s death was not foreseeable. Dr. Shulman testified that in some instances, such as

in this case, no amount of antibiotics would overcome a devastating infection to the baby. Dr.

Schulman testified that the baby’s death was unpredictable and unknowable. Dr. Shulman

testified that there would be no way at all to know or anticipate this virulent strain of GBS and

the kind of outcome in this case. Dr. Wendel testified that the standard of care did not require

Dr. Kelsey to perform a cesarean section any sooner than he did at approximately 4:30 a.m., on

April 6, 1999. Dr. Wendel also testified that the standard of care did not require Dr. Kelsey to

offer a cesarean section based on the fact that the baby’s estimated fetal weight was 4,000 grams.

Dr. Wendel testified that the baby was macrosomic at birth, but he did not think that anyone

knew the baby was macrosomic at the time plaintiff went into labor.

        While defendants disputed the testimony of Dr. Fields and Dr. Seguin regarding the

standard of care and proximate cause of injury, such disputes are the type that juries are expected

to resolve through weighing the relative merit of the experts and their positions. Knauerhaze,

361 Ill. App. 3d at 550. Therefore, it was within the jury’s purview to give greater weight to

plaintiff’s experts' opinions than to those of defendants expert's. Keeping in mind the standard

applicable to expert testimony, and the standard of review applicable to an appeal of the denial of

judgment n.o.v., we cannot say that the jury’s determination on the issue of cause in fact was

unfounded.

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            4. Testimony Regarding Fetal Heart Tracings to Show Hostile Environment

       Defendants next argue that there was no basis for plaintiff’s claim that Dr. Kelsey should

have performed a cesarean section earlier because the fetus was in a hostile environment, where

the opinions of Dr. Fields and Dr. Seguin were based on speculation regarding fetal heart tracings

that they never actually saw.

       As the circuit court noted in its order denying defendants’ posttrial motion, this argument

is identical to the one raised in defendants’ motion in limine number five, which sought to bar

expert testimony about the fetal monitor strips. The basis of that motion was the fact that the

fetal monitor strips had been lost before any experts were able to review them, thereby rendering

any expert opinion about them “glorified guesswork.” After a hearing on defendants’ motion, the

circuit court denied the motion as it related to Dr. Fields, but took the matter under advisement as

to Dr. Seguin pending review of his deposition testimony. The record shows that when the

circuit court raised the matter on the following day to address the portion of the matter taken

under advisement, defense counsel declared that the motion was withdrawn. The following

colloquy occurred:

       “THE COURT: All right. I also took a portion of defendants’ motion in limine

       number five under advisement –

       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Your Honor, we’re going to withdraw all that.

       THE COURT: Okay.

       [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I might as well get him to testify based on that so we’ll


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       withdraw that.

       THE COURT: Okay. So motion in limine number five is withdrawn.”

       Defendants waived this issue by not only withdrawing their motion in limine, but by

failing to renew their objection when the evidence was offered at trial. "Timeliness requires that

objections to evidence be made at the time the evidence is offered or as soon as grounds for the

objection become apparent." Spurgeon v. Mruz, 358 Ill. App. 3d 358, 360 (2005). "A party who,

prior to trial, unsuccessfully moves to bar certain evidence, must object again to the evidence

when it is offered." Spurgeon, 358 Ill. App. 3d at 360-61. Although defendants initially filed a

motion in limine to bar expert testimony relating to the fetal heart monitor strips, defendants

withdrew their motion and failed to voice a contemporaneous object when the issue was

addressed at trial. The record shows that defendants failed to object when the fetal heart monitor

strips were addressed in plaintiff’s opening statement or when plaintiff elicited testimony on the

subject from Dr. Fields and Dr. Seguin. The record also shows that defendants also failed to

object when defendants’ own experts, Dr. Wendel and Dr. Marks, were cross-examined about the

fetal heart monitor strips.

       Waiver aside, the record also shows that defendants injected evidence regarding the fetal

heart monitor strips into the trial during the cross-examination of Dr. Fields and Dr. Seguin, as

well as during the direct testimony of their own expert, Dr. Wendel. Because defendants

participated in the line of questioning and did not object to the questions relating to the fetal heart

monitor strips now complained of, defendants are prohibited from challenging the alleged error

on appeal. See Rub v. Consolidated Rail Corp., 331 Ill. App. 3d 692, 706 (2002).

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       Furthermore, we find that defendants’ basis for objecting to the testimony is without

merit. While the actual fetal heart rate monitor strips were unavailable, there was reliable

foundation from the expert testimony about the status of the baby in utero. Several witnesses,

including Haskins, Dr. Fields, and Dr. Seguin, testified that the nurses’ notes and plaintiff’s chart

contained numerous entries which documented the fetal heart rates and provided descriptive

language about the heart patterns on the actual strips. This documentation was created at the

time the actual fetal heart monitor strips were generated. Dr. Fields’ opinion was based on the

nurses’ notes and he concluded that the fetal heart tracings as documented in the nurses’ notes

showed abnormalities that should have caused a cesarean section to be performed sooner. Dr.

Fields also testified that the death of the baby could have been avoided if an earlier cesarean

section had been performed. Dr. Seguin testified that based on the information in the baby’s

chart, the nursing notes and information about the baby at birth, he believed that there was a

deteriorating condition that would most likely have been reflected in abnormal fetal heart rate

tracings, as many as four or five hours before birth. We cannot say that the circuit court erred by

denying defendants’ motion for judgment n.o.v. on this basis.

                            B. Defendants’ Request for a New Trial

                               1. Manifest Weight of the Evidence

       Defendants next contends that this court should grant a new trial where the jury verdict

was against the manifest weight of the evidence, “consisting almost entirely of Dr. Fields’ far-

fetched testimony and fanciful theories.”



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       "A new trial should be granted only when the verdict is contrary to the manifest weight of

the evidence." York v. Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center, 222 Ill. 2d 147, 178

(2006). "A verdict is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence when the opposite

conclusion is clearly evident or when the jury’s findings prove to be unreasonable, arbitrary and

not based upon any of the evidence." York, 222 Ill. 2d at 179. Defendants do not suggest that

the findings of the jury were unreasonable or arbitrary, but request a new trial because they argue

that Dr. Fields’ testimony was less than credible. However, "credibility determinations and the

resolution of inconsistencies and conflicts in testimony are for the jury." York, 222 Ill. 2d at 179.

After carefully considering the evidence, the jury chose to accept plaintiff’s position. We find

that a review of the evidence at trial establishes that the jury’s verdict is not against the manifest

weight of the evidence.

       This court previously set forth the evidence in support of the jury’s verdict in addressing

defendants’ request for judgment n.o.v. and need not repeat that evidence here. The record

reveals that Dr. Fields’ testimony was based in part on the 1996 ACOG bulletin, which defendant

Dr. Kelsey admitted established the standard of care in this case. Dr. Fields was also not

plaintiff’s only expert witness to testify regarding the standard of care and defendants’ alleged

breach thereof. In addition, defendants’ own experts offered standard of care testimony that in

some instances did not significantly differ from the opinions offered by Dr. Fields. It was the

jury’s function to resolve any conflicts in the evidence and after careful consideration, we cannot

say that the jury’s verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence.

                                       2. Evidentiary Rulings

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                          a. Testimony Regarding Fetal Heart Monitoring

        Defendants next contends that they are entitled to a new trial because the circuit court

erred in allowing Dr. Fields and Dr. Seguin to speculate regarding what the missing fetal heart

monitor strips would have shown. As previously discussed, defendants waived this contention

by withdrawing their motion in limine and failing to object when the evidence was offered at trial

(Spurgeon, 358 Ill. App. 3d 358); defendants are prohibited from challenging this alleged error

where they participated in the line of questioning and did not object to the questions relating to

the fetal heart monitor strips now complained of (Rub, 331 Ill. App. 3d at 706); and despite the

absence of the fetal heart monitor strips, there was sufficient evidence for the expert testimony

about the status of the baby in utero to permit such testimony. Thus, defendants are not entitled

to a new trial on this basis.

                                      b. Postevent Literature

        Defendants next contend that the circuit court erred by permitting plaintiff to use post-

event medical literature. Defendants claim error over the use of two medical textbooks published

in 2001 and 2004, as well as a technical bulletin published by ACOG. Defendants argue that use

of these materials violated the rule prohibiting the introduction of postevent evidence in order to

prove negligence. See Smith v. South Shore Hospital, 187 Ill. App. 3d 847 (1989).

        This court will not reverse a decision concerning the admissibility of evidence unless the

circuit court abused its discretion and the decision had prejudicial effect. Nelson v. Upadhyaya,

361 Ill. App. 3d 415, 422 (2005). In general, “ ‘standards *** not in effect on the date of the



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[medical treatment] *** are inapplicable to establish a standard of care’ ” for that treatment.

Nelson, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 422, quoting Smith, 187 Ill. App. 3d at 856.

       The 2002 ACOG opinion discussed studies that evaluated the effectiveness of prenatal

cultures in identifying the GBS organism. Based on these studies, ACOG concluded that “the

culture-based approach is superior to the risk-based approach” and “the risk of having an infant

with early onset GBS was significantly lower in the culture group.” Although the ACOG

document was not published until 2002, the study upon which these conclusions were based

analyzed data generated by births that occurred in 1998 and 1999. The 2001 text by Remington

& Klein concluded that prenatal cultures were effective in identifying and preventing 85 % to

90 % of GBS infections and the 2004 text by Feign & Cherry discussed the statistical probability

of preventing GBS infection by instituting earlier antibiotic therapy.

       After reviewing the record, it is clear that plaintiff was attempting to use the post-1999

medical literature to show the diagnostic capability and statistical probability of detecting and

avoiding GBS infection with use of prenatal cultures and early administration of antibiotics, not

to show the standard of care. In Granberry v. Carbondale Clinic, S.C., 285 Ill. App. 3d 54

(1996), this court approved such limited use of postevent medical literature.

       In Granberry, plaintiffs filed suit against several physicians, alleging negligent treatment

of the plaintiff mother’s preeclampsia, resulting in the birth of a premature child who suffered

from multiple health problems, including a brain lesion. An essential part of plaintiffs’ burden of

proof, therefore, was the need to demonstrate that the brain lesion developed in utero as a result



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of the mother’s preeclampsia. Granberry, 285 Ill. App. 3d at 56. Defendants responded to

plaintiffs’ theory with testimony by one of the defendants that the equipment used to obtain an

ultrasound of the baby’s brain two days after birth was capable of detecting such a brain lesion

and that the ultrasound actually obtained showed no abnormalities. When plaintiffs’ counsel

challenged the defendant about his testimony regarding the diagnostic capabilities of the

ultrasound, the defendant cited medical literature to support his assertions. This testimony

refuted plaintiffs’ theory, but the circuit court held that plaintiffs’ counsel was not permitted to

rebut the defendant’s testimony with postoccurrence literature, even though the literature directly

contradicted the defendant’s testimony about ultrasound capabilities. This court found this to be

reversible error. Granberry, 285 Ill. App. 3d at 64-66.

       In Granberry, we reasserted the general rule that the circuit court should disallow use of

“literature containing medical knowledge not available at the time of the alleged malpractice as

evidence of deviation from the standard of care at the time of the alleged malpractice.”

Granberry, 285 Ill. App. 3d at 65. Even though the literature in that case was published after the

alleged negligence, this court found that the general rule did not apply because plaintiffs were not

attempting to use the literature as proof of malpractice, but rather to show the diagnostic

capabilities of the equipment. We held that the failure to allow this use warranted reversal

because defendants’ position on causation made it “essential to allow cross-examination to

attempt to impeach the [defendant] with contrary literature, whether that literature was published

during, before, or after [the alleged malpractice].” Granberry, 285 Ill. App. 3d at 65-66.

       Here, as in Granberry, the circuit court allowed plaintiff to use the medical literature to

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show the diagnostic capabilities of detecting and avoiding GBS infection, rather than to show the

standard of care. Plaintiff’s causation theory was that the failure to obtain a prenatal culture

prevented detection of GBS in plaintiff and allowed transmission of the organism to the fetus,

ultimately causing its demise due to the lack of timely antibiotic treatment. Defendants disputed

this theory and advanced the position that the adverse outcome was unpredictable and

unpreventable because prenatal culture had limited effectiveness in identifying GBS, there was

no way to determine whether plaintiff would have tested positive if cultured during the prenatal

course and earlier administration of antibiotics would not have saved the baby.

       Defendants presented testimony from Dr. Schulman that there would be no way at all to

know or anticipate this virulent strain of GBS and the kind of outcome in this case. Dr. Wendel

testified that the chance of culturing women is variable because some women shed the bacteria

all of the time, and most women shed it intermittently. Dr. Wendel specifically testified that

based on studies, data would support a determination that if plaintiff had been GBS-positive

when she gave birth at 41 weeks, if she had been cultured at 35 weeks, 6 weeks before, and if she

were a typical patient, she would have cultured negative. Dr. Marks testified that the baby died

because of overwhelming GBS infection, which is an infection that is so large that the baby is

unable to fight it despite antibiotics and has a high likelihood of death. Dr. Marks concluded that

the baby’s death was not preventable. Dr. Kelsey testified that because plaintiff had such a

virulent strain of GBS, the prophylactic administration of antibiotics would not have prevented

the baby’s death. Dr. Kelsey also disputed that 90 % of mothers who delivered a baby infected

with GBS tested positive for the organism when a prenatal culture was obtained. Dr. Kelsey


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testified that “there is plenty of literature showing limitations of culture” and “there [are] a

number of problems with the culture approach in particular.” When defendants presented this

testimony challenging plaintiff’s theory of causation, it was essential to allow cross-examination

to attempt to impeach defendant Dr. Kelsey and defendants’ expert witnesses with contrary

literature relating to the diagnostic capabilities and probabilities of detecting GBS with the use of

prenatal cultures, as well as the efficacy of earlier antibiotic treatment. See Granberry, 285 Ill.

App. 3d at 66.

       Further, the record shows that each expert witness agreed that the standard of care in

1999 permitted physicians to choose one of two different options for managing possible GBS

infections. The jury was never advised that the postevent literature discussed the standard of care

and there is no dispute that the jury was ever advised that the standard of care changed. The jury

also received separate written instructions that advised it of the distinction between standard of

care and causation, and the jury was instructed that the only standard of care issue related to

detection of GBS was whether defendant “[f]ailed to inform the plaintiff of the two acceptable

approaches for the possible [detection] of [GBS] and allow her to choose the screening approach

to be used.” Thus, defendants’ suggestion that “causation was inextricable from the standard of

care” is unconvincing and defendants have failed to show that they suffered any prejudice

attributable to the limited use of postevent literature. Nelson, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 422.

Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in permitting plaintiff to elicit evidence related to

postevent medical literature.

       Defendants also contend that the circuit court erred by ruling that the introduction of

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evidence that the risk-factor approach was equal to or more effective than the culture approach

would open the door to the use of postevent literature.

       Defendants' first motion in limine sought to exclude discussion of the standard of care

after 1999 and references to the culture approach as the standard of care in 2002. In ruling on

that motion, the circuit court held:

               “Defendants’ motion in limine number one is granted with the limitations I

       expressed. No defense witness will be offering testimony that one method yielded

       better results than another. If they do the door is opened. If they claim they are

       equal in terms of identifying an organism, that constitutes opening the door such

       that it would be relevant. If those things don’t occur, the testimony is prohibited.”

The record shows that Dr. Kelsey’s testimony disputed that 90 % of mothers who delivered a

baby infected with GBS tested positive for the organism when a prenatal culture was obtained.

His testimony also included statements that “I think they are equal approaches. Both seem to be

equally effective at reducing the risk of early onset GBS.” Dr. Kelsey also stated “there is no

scientific data to support one strategy over the other.” Defendants’ expert Dr. Wendel repeatedly

denied the effectiveness of the culture approach and testified that there was no data suggesting

the culture approach was more effective than the risk-factor approach, “because no one has ever

done a comparative trial of the two of them.” Based on this testimony with present tense

language, the jury could have had the mistaken notion that no data existed to support one strategy

over the other. The circuit court provided an adequate remedy by permitting limited questions



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about the literature during cross-examination. When defendant and Dr. Wendel made these

statements, it was essential to allow the cross-examination to rebut this testimony since the 2002

ACOG opinion unequivocally stated that the scientific data did find the culture approach more

effective than the risk-factor approach. We therefore find no error where the medical literature

was used for the limited purpose to impeach defendants’ position on causation. Granberry, 285

Ill. App. 3d at 66.

                        c. Foundation for 2002 Postevent Literature

        Defendants next contend that the 2002 ACOG opinion should have been disallowed

because no expert deemed it authoritative. It is the function of the trial court, in its discretion, to

determine whether the foundational requirements have been met. See City of Chicago v.

Anthony, 136 Ill. 2d 169, 186 (1990). Here, Dr. Fields offered testimony that the ACOG “is an

educational forum that produces educational material that translate in their definition as

guidelines. Many of these guidelines translate to the standard of care.” Defendant Dr. Kelsey

described ACOG as “the main organization” for obstetricians and gynecologists and testified that

he relied on ACOG opinions. Dr. Kelsey testified that ACOG opinions are “educational

materials” provided to physicians “so we can keep current. They summarize the current

understanding, the current literature.” We find no abuse of discretion where the circuit court

determined that there was a proper foundation for the use of the 2002 ACOG opinion.

                      d. Evidence of Hospital and Physician Personal Practices

        Defendants next contend that they should have been allowed to introduce evidence



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regarding the practice for GBS detection at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago,

Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, Texas, and the defendant Ollendorf and Kelsey, Ltd.

Defendants’ argument is based on the fact that the circuit court allowed defendants to impeach

plaintiff’s expert Dr. Fields with written guidelines from Detroit hospitals and to elicit testimony

about these guidelines from their own expert, Dr. Schwartz, in order to perfect impeachment of

Dr. Fields. Defendants maintain that they should have been allowed to use evidence of personal

practice in order to establish the standard of care because similar evidence was permitted for

impeachment purposes.

       Our supreme court has determined that the personal practices used by a testifying expert

are not relevant and are insufficient to establish the applicable medical standard of care. Schmitz

v. Binette, 368 Ill. App. 3d 447, 455-56 (2006), citing Walski v. Tiesenga, 72 Ill. 2d 249 (1978).

However, a medical expert’s personal practices may well be relevant to that expert’s credibility,

particularly when those practices do not entirely conform to the expert’s opinion as to the

standard of care. Schmitz, 368 Ill. App. 3d at 461.

       In this case, during the course of defendants’ cross-examination of Dr. Fields, defendants

successfully advocated that Dr. Fields opened the door to impeachment with the guidelines for

GBS detection from certain Detroit hospitals because he testified that his opinions about the

standard of care relating to informing the patient about the two approaches to GBS were based, in

part, on the practices of those hospitals. Since the guidelines seemed to refute Dr. Fields’

testimony about the standard of care, we find that defendants were properly allowed to impeach

him with the guidelines since it impacted his credibility and affected the persuasive value of his

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opinions. See Gallina v. Watson, 354 Ill. App. 3d 515, 521-22 (2004), appeal denied, 215 Ill. 2d

596 (2005).

        However, this does not mean that defendants should have been allowed to introduce other

evidence of physician personal practice for the substantive purpose of establishing the standard

of care or defendants’ compliance with it. Defendants cite no legal authority in support of their

argument that because evidence was properly submitted for impeachment purposes, similar

evidence should also be admitted for the substantive purpose of establishing the standard of care.

We therefore find no error in excluding evidence as to the personal practices used by physicians

at certain hospitals.

                        e. Evidence of Plaintiff’s Subsequent Pregnancies

        Defendants lastly contend that the circuit court erred in barring defendants from

introducing evidence about plaintiff’s two subsequent pregnancies. Following the death of her

baby from GBS, plaintiff became pregnant on two other occasions and received prenatal care for

at least one of those pregnancies from a different physician at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

In plaintiff’s motion in limine number four, plaintiff sought to bar reference to her subsequent

pregnancies, arguing it was irrelevant to the issue of damages. In response, defendants denied

that they intended to use the information in connection with plaintiff’s claim of damages, but

asserted that the information would be used to show plaintiff’s “state of mind.” When asked to

identify the issue for which state of mind might be relevant, defense counsel argued:

        “[Plaintiff] went to Northwestern Memorial Hospital to another doctor who



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       followed the risk-factor approach, and I think the discussions that she had with

       that doctor and the doctor’s practices are relevant especially if plaintiff is claiming

       she would have opted for the culture. I think it is very critical and relevant to her

       decision-making processes. ***. I think her conduct and subsequent pregnancies

       and her relationship with that doctor bears on her veracity and her credibility and

       it is probative and relevant.”

The circuit court granted plaintiff’s motion in limine over defense counsel’s objection.

       "Whether granted or denied, a motion in limine itself does not preserve the issue for

appellate review." Sullivan-Coughlin v. Palos Country Club, Inc., 349 Ill. App. 3d 553, 561

(2004). "Rather, to preserve an error in the exclusion of evidence, the proponent of the evidence

must make an adequate offer of proof in the [circuit] court." Sullivan-Coughlin, 349 Ill. App. 3d

at 561. "Failure to make such offer of proof results in waiver of the issue on appeal." Sullivan-

Coughlin, 349 Ill. App. 3d at 561. Here, defendants failed to make a specific offer of proof

regarding the testimony at issue and the issue is therefore waived.

       Waiver aside, we find no abuse of discretion by the circuit court in barring testimony

about plaintiff’s two subsequent pregnancies where the court found the evidence was not relevant

to any issue in this case. "The relevance and admissibility of evidence are committed to the

sound discretion of the circuit court and its decisions will not be reversed absent a clear abuse of

discretion." Clayton, 346 Ill. App. 3d at 384. "Evidence is considered to be relevant when it has

' "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of



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the action more or less probable than it would be without the evidence." ' " Clayton, 346 Ill.

App. 3d at 384, quoting Smith v. Silver Cross Hospital, 339 Ill. App. 3d 67, 73-74 (2003),

quoting Wojcik v. City of Chicago, 299 Ill. App. 3d 964, 971 (1998).

       Defendants sought to introduce evidence of plaintiff’s relationship and discussions with a

nonparty physician, as well as evidence of that physician’s practices. As previously discussed,

the personal practices of a nonparty physician were not relevant in this case. Schmitz, 368 Ill.

App. 3d at 455-56. In addition, plaintiff’s conversations which occurred during subsequent

pregnancies were not relevant to the issue in this case of whether defendants should have advised

plaintiff of the two different approaches to GBS detection in 1999. The information provided to

plaintiff by her subsequent treating physician during later pregnancies would not have made any

issue of consequence more or less probable. Finally, plaintiff did not follow the risk-factor

approach in those subsequent pregnancies as she underwent cesarean section deliveries. Thus,

we find no error in excluding this evidence.

                                      III. CONCLUSION

       For the above reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court

       Affirmed.

       CAMPBELL and MURPHY, JJ., concur.




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