Thompson v. LaSpisa , 2023 IL App (1st) 211448 ( 2023 )


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    2023 IL App (1st) 211448
    SECOND DIVISION
    August 29, 2023
    No. 1-21-1448
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    NICOLE THOMPSON,                                )     Appeal from the
    )     Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                )     Cook County
    )
    v.                                        )     17 L 3490
    )
    JOSEPH LaSPISA, D.D.S,                          )     Honorable
    )     Bridget Mitchell,
    Defendant-Appellee.                 )     Judge Presiding
    _____________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment and
    opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     Plaintiff, Nicole Thompson, appeals the entry of summary judgment in favor of
    defendant, Dr. Joseph LaSpisa, on her medical negligence claim. The circuit court entered
    summary judgment on the sole basis that Thompson failed to present expert testimony on the
    element of proximate cause. We disagree that Thompson’s claims are subject to a per se bar
    simply because she lacked expert testimony on proximate cause. We hold, instead, that some of
    her claimed damages require expert testimony to establish a proximate causal link and some do
    not. We thus affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
    ¶2                                       BACKGROUND
    ¶3     In spring 2015, Thompson’s usual dentist referred her to Dr. LaSpisa, an oral surgeon.
    After an initial consultation, a procedure was scheduled for April 9 to extract several of her teeth.
    No. 1-21-1448
    On that day, Dr. LaSpisa informed Thompson of the risks, including infection, and extracted the
    teeth. (There is no claim that Dr. LaSpisa failed to obtain informed consent or that he negligently
    performed the procedure.) After the extractions, Dr. LaSpisa provided Thompson with the
    standard prescription for antibiotics, pain medication, and an oral rinse. Because the procedure
    ended in the evening, Thompson was not able to get the prescriptions filled that night.
    ¶4     When Thompson awoke the next morning, April 10, she was experiencing significant
    pain and swelling in her face. These symptoms only intensified throughout the day. Concerned,
    at about 4:30 p.m., she called 34th Street Dental—the office where Dr. LaSpisa performed the
    extractions. Thompson spoke with Marcela Corona, the office manager. According to
    Thompson, she relayed a few symptoms: pain, swelling, bruising, and difficulty breathing. Ms.
    Corona testified that she did not recall hearing that last complaint, which would have prompted
    her to immediately direct Thompson to the hospital. And Corona’s handwritten notes
    memorializing this conversation in detail make no mention of breathing difficulties.
    ¶5      In an affidavit dated March 14, 2020, Corona testified that, after speaking with
    Thompson on April 10, 2015, Corona “called Dr. LaSpisa a[t] his Elmhurst office on that day to
    tell him of Nicole Thompson’s phone call” and “relayed the same information that is in my note”
    quoted above. At her deposition on June 23, 2020, Corona clarified that it would have been her
    custom and practice to have contacted Dr. LaSpisa, but she did not specifically recall, five years
    later, whether she talked to him on that day. Dr. LaSpisa testified that he and Ms. Corona did not
    speak that day; he was unaware of Thompson’s complaints.
    ¶6     Throughout the night of April 10, Thompson’s condition worsened. By Saturday
    morning, April 11, the pain was intolerable. At about 8:30 a.m., she called 34th Street Dental and
    left a distressed voicemail. Since she could not contact anyone, she decided to head to the
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    No. 1-21-1448
    emergency room (ER). She arrived at the ER at a little after 9 a.m., was viewed only by a nurse
    who thought she might have an abscess, and was discharged without treatment.
    ¶7     Thompson felt she still needed help and decided to go to her normal dentist. At about
    1:30 p.m. that day, she was examined by Dr. Cheethirala. Dr. Cheethirala quickly recognized that
    Thompson needed treatment for a likely post-operative infection. He told her to immediately
    head to the hospital because he believed she needed IV antibiotics. In addition, Dr. Cheethirala
    faxed a handwritten note with his findings to Advocate Sherman Hospital (Sherman).
    ¶8     Thompson arrived at Sherman’s ER around 2 p.m. She was diagnosed with facial
    cellulitis and hospitalized for IV antibiotic treatment. Thompson said that, once she arrived at the
    hospital and was given pain medication, the pain started to go down. In her words, “[a]fter only a
    few hours on the IV[,], I start[ed] to feel improvement. The pain was still bad, but improving.
    The swelling had already started to go down a bit. Improvement continued steadily while I was
    on the IV.” After five days of treatment and observation, she was discharged.
    ¶9     In April 2017, Thompson filed suit against Dr. LaSpisa and 34th Street Dental, claiming
    negligence and medical battery. 34th Street Dental eventually settled and is no longer a party to
    the case. What ultimately survived was a claim of negligence against Dr. LaSpisa. In essence,
    Thompson claimed that Dr. LaSpisa was negligent in “fail[ing] to respond to Plaintiff’s calls and
    provide follow up care” and “[n]egligently abandon[ing] the health and wellbeing of his patient.”
    ¶ 10   Dr. LaSpisa moved for summary judgment, arguing that Thompson could not establish
    that he “refused” to treat her, nor could she meet the element of proximate cause. On the issue of
    proximate cause, Dr. LaSpisa raised one and only one argument—that even had plaintiff been
    able to reach him on April 10, 2015, he would have given her the same advice that Corona gave
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    No. 1-21-1448
    her. Thus, Thompson could not establish that any negligence Dr. LaSpisa committed could be
    the proximate cause of any damages suffered.
    ¶ 11   After briefing and an oral argument (of which we lack a transcript), the circuit court
    entered summary judgment in favor of Dr. LaSpisa. In its written order, the circuit court relied
    on a ground not raised in Dr. LaSpisa’s papers but apparently raised for the first time at oral
    argument by Dr. LaSpisa. The court ruled that plaintiff could not establish proximate cause
    because plaintiff did not have expert testimony on that element, and “a party cannot maintain a
    medical negligence action without expert testimony on proximate cause.” The circuit court
    quoted Ayala v. Murad, 
    367 Ill. App. 3d 591
    , 601 (2006), for the proposition that “[p]roximate
    cause in a medical malpractice case must be established by expert testimony to a reasonable
    degree of medical certainty.” As plaintiff did not retain an expert on proximate causation, her
    claim failed as a matter of law. Thompson timely appealed.
    ¶ 12                                        ANALYSIS
    ¶ 13   Several questions are raised before us, procedural and substantive. On matters of
    procedure, Thompson says that she was treated unfairly because the court based its entry of
    summary judgment on an issue not raised by LaSpisa in his motion, as LaSpisa ambushed
    Thompson at the oral argument with a new argument that ultimately carried the day with the trial
    court. (She has another claim that the circuit court improperly shifted the burden of proof, which
    will be unnecessary for us to reach and is meritless in any event.)
    ¶ 14   On the substance, we must consider whether the argument raised by LaSpisa in his
    motion for summary judgment is meritorious; whether the same is true of the new argument
    raised by LaSpisa at the oral argument on which the trial court based its ruling; and whether an
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    No. 1-21-1448
    additional argument raised by LaSpisa below, on which the trial court did not rule, would be an
    alternative basis for us to affirm summary judgment.
    ¶ 15   We review the court’s entry of summary judgment de novo. Davis v. Pace Suburban Bus
    Division of the Regional Transportation Authority, 
    2021 IL App (1st) 200519
    , ¶ 24. Summary
    judgment is appropriate if there are no contested issues of material fact, and the movant is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 
    Id.
    ¶ 16                                              I
    ¶ 17   We start with the basis for the court’s decision below that Thompson’s medical
    negligence claim fails because she did not present expert testimony on the question of proximate
    cause. Plaintiff’s complaints on this issue are both procedural and substantive.
    ¶ 18                                             A
    ¶ 19   The procedural complaint, again, is that LaSpisa never claimed in his motion for
    summary judgment that Thompson’s claims were barred due to lack of expert testimony on the
    element of proximate cause. Rather, the issue was sprung on Thompson at oral argument.
    ¶ 20   We can verify from the record that Dr. LaSpisa never raised this argument in his
    summary judgment pleadings. He argued a lack of proximate cause but on a very different
    ground than the absence of expert testimony. And though we lack a transcript of the oral
    argument, it seems clear that it was LaSpisa, not the court, who first raised the argument at the
    hearing. The trial court indicated in its written order that LaSpisa raised this argument, and
    LaSpisa acknowledges on appeal that he did so.
    ¶ 21   We understand that issues will sometimes arise in the moment, raised by one of the
    parties or by the court sua sponte. There is nothing inherently wrong with that, especially when
    experienced and able judges, like the one here, flag an issue not raised by the parties.
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    No. 1-21-1448
    ¶ 22    But regardless of whether the issue is raised spontaneously by the court or a party, best
    practices and procedural fairness dictate that, before that issue is resolved, all parties have a
    meaningful opportunity to weigh in. In a situation like this one, where a new argument in support
    of summary judgment is raised at oral argument after the briefing is completed, the opposing
    party should be given an opportunity to respond. A lawyer who shows up for an oral argument
    prepared to argue “Issue A” might be unable to effectively address “Issue B” on the spot. And
    everything we have just said is all the more critical if “Issue B” is one that, if accepted by the
    trial court, results in the termination of the party’s case, as here.
    ¶ 23    Indeed, on several occasions, this court has overturned grants of summary judgment
    when an issue raised for the first time post-briefing became the basis for summary judgment. See
    Miwel, Inc. v. Kanzler, 
    2019 IL App (2d) 180931
    , ¶¶ 11-12 (trial court erred in granting
    defendant summary judgment based on invalid assignment, when defendant sought summary
    judgment on various other grounds; “plaintiff was not given sufficient notice and opportunity to
    argue that its assignment did not run afoul of the UCC”); Tyler Enterprises of Elwood, Inc. v.
    Skiver, 
    260 Ill. App. 3d 742
    , 753 (1994) (trial court improperly entered summary judgment based
    on proximate cause, though defendant only sought summary judgment as to validity of
    exculpatory clause and claims of willful and wanton misconduct); Johnson v. Decatur Park
    District, 
    301 Ill. App. 3d 798
    , 811-12 (1998) (grant of summary judgment improper, as trial
    court sua sponte raised issue of vicarious liability, when defendant sought summary judgment
    only on issues of duty and statutory immunity; “[p]laintiffs had no notice that this issue would be
    raised,” and “[t]he short break given counsel *** during the motion hearing to review discovery
    materials on the issue was no substitute for proper notice and an opportunity to prepare for
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    No. 1-21-1448
    argument”), abrogated on other grounds by Murray v. Chicago Youth Center, 
    224 Ill. 2d 213
    ,
    232 (2007).
    ¶ 24   True, in each of those cases, the trial court raised the issue sua sponte, unlike here, but
    the point remains the same—the trial court ruled dispositively against the plaintiff, Thompson,
    on an issue that had not been briefed and which Thompson could not possibly have expected
    would be a topic of debate at the oral argument. We join those other decisions in expressing our
    concern that a party was blindsided by an argument that she had no meaningful opportunity to
    address and that resulted in the termination of her lawsuit.
    ¶ 25   But we depart with those decisions in terms of the appropriate disposition on appeal. We
    do not think the proper course here is to vacate and remand for a new hearing, for three reasons.
    ¶ 26   First, we do not know what happened at the oral argument, as we lack a transcript. We do
    not know, for example, whether the court gave Thompson an opportunity to brief the new issue
    and she declined—resulting in forfeiture (if not waiver) of her procedural objection on appeal.
    We have our doubts that this is what happened; Dr. LaSpisa does not so claim; and the written
    judgment order gave no hint of any such thing, or even that this argument was raised for the first
    time at oral argument; but we cannot truly know. And it is Thompson’s burden as the appellant
    to provide us this information. Foutch v. O’Bryant, 
    99 Ill. 2d 389
    , 391-92 (1984).
    ¶ 27   Far more important are two other interrelated reasons. The first is that, as noted, our
    review is de novo, meaning we sit in exactly the same position as the trial judge, without any
    deference to the trial court’s judgment. Beauchamp v. Dart, 
    2022 IL App (1st) 210091
    , ¶ 8. For
    all practical purposes, the parties are litigating the summary judgment motion anew before three
    judges of the appellate court. And this time, Thompson faces no ambush; she can and did argue
    the substance of the ruling on its merits.
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    No. 1-21-1448
    ¶ 28   The other is that we may affirm summary judgment on any basis in the record, even if it
    was not the basis on which the trial court ruled, and even if we disagree with the trial court’s
    reasons. Trigsted v. Chicago Transit Authority, 
    2013 IL App (1st) 122468
    , ¶ 50. We are
    concerned with the court’s judgment, not its reasoning. 
    Id.
     So we could consider this issue,
    anyway, and would be particularly inclined to do so given that the parties have fully briefed it.
    ¶ 29   It thus makes little sense to remand the case for a new hearing on the summary judgment
    motion—one which we quite possibly will find ourselves reviewing de novo at some point in the
    future, anyway. That is especially true were we to affirm the grant of summary judgment—why
    not say so now, as opposed to making the parties spend additional time, resources, and money on
    the case? The question is before us now, and the parties have fully briefed it. Judicial economy
    dictates that we decide this question now.
    ¶ 30                                             B
    ¶ 31   To the merits. It is undisputed that, while Thompson has presented expert testimony on
    the standard of care for oral surgeons like Dr. LaSpisa, she presented no expert testimony that the
    delay in her treatment proximately caused her damages. The circuit court found this absence
    fatal, writing that “a party cannot maintain a medical negligence action without expert testimony
    on proximate cause.” The circuit court noted Dr. LaSpisa’s citations to two cases, Snelson v.
    Kamm, 
    204 Ill. 2d 1
     (2003), and Wiedenbeck v. Searle, 
    385 Ill. App. 3d 289
     (2008), for that
    proposition. And the court quoted one of its own, Ayala, 367 Ill. App. 3d at 601 (“[p]roximate
    cause in a medical malpractice case must be established by expert testimony to a reasonable
    degree of medical certainty.”). Before this court, Dr. LaSpisa cites those cases and adds another,
    Ruffin v. Boler, 
    384 Ill. App. 3d 7
    , 20 (2008) (“the plaintiff’s burden as to proximate cause must
    be established by medical expert testimony”).
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    ¶ 32   To set this straight: It is incorrect to state, full stop, that expert testimony is necessary to
    prove the elements of a medical negligence action. It is certainly true that usually, expert
    testimony will be necessary to prove the elements of standard of care (duty) and proximate
    cause—but to state it as a universal rule is incorrect. Expert testimony is usually required in a
    medical negligence action because in the typical case, the proof consists of specialized medical
    knowledge beyond the ken of the ordinary juror, thus requiring testimony from an expert in the
    field. As our supreme court recently put it:
    “Generally speaking, expert testimony is required to establish what an ordinarily careful
    professional would do in a given situation ‘because jurors are not skilled in the practice
    of medicine and would find it difficult without the help of medical evidence to determine
    any lack of necessary scientific skill on the part of the physician.’ [Citation.] However,
    where defendant’s conduct is so grossly negligent or the treatment so common that a
    layman could readily appraise it, no expert testimony is necessary.” (Emphases added.)
    Johnson v. Armstrong, 
    2022 IL 127942
    , ¶ 52.
    ¶ 33   Indeed, one of the cases cited by Dr. LaSpisa, on which the circuit court relied, said much
    the same thing. In Snelson, 
    204 Ill. 2d at 43-44
    , our supreme court referred to the “general rule”
    that, “except in very simple cases, expert testimony is necessary in professional negligence cases
    to establish the standard of care and that its breach was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s
    injury.” Note the qualifier—“except in very simple cases.” 
    Id. at 43
    . The court there was saying
    in shorthand precisely what we are saying: if the proof regarding standard of care or proximate
    cause is “very simple”—that is, if specialized knowledge is not required—then expert testimony
    is not needed. If specialized knowledge is necessary, so is expert testimony.
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    ¶ 34    That is really nothing more than a restatement of the rules of evidence regarding expert
    testimony in any case in Illinois. See Ill. R. Evid. 701 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011) (lay witness may not
    testify to opinion “based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope
    of Rule 702.”); Ill. R. Evid. 702 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011) (“If scientific, technical, or other specialized
    knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a
    witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify
    thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise.”). It merely plays a more outsized role in cases of
    medical negligence because “laypersons normally are not qualified to evaluate professional
    medical conduct.” Addison v. Whittenberg, 
    124 Ill. 2d 287
    , 297 (1988).
    ¶ 35    But sometimes “the common knowledge of laymen is sufficient.” Walski v. Tiesenga, 
    72 Ill. 2d 249
    , 257 (1978). For example, we would not need an expert in the field to tell us that a
    surgeon should not leave sponges or medical instruments inside a patient’s body before stitching
    them up. See Willaby v. Bendersky, 
    383 Ill. App. 3d 853
    , 865-66 (2008); Jones v. Chicago HMO
    Ltd. of Illinois, 
    191 Ill. 2d 278
    , 296 (2000) (citing Walski, 
    72 Ill. 2d at 257
    ). And “common sense
    dictates” that, before restraining a patient who is a danger to himself and others, medical
    personnel should search the individual for weapons or dangerous implements; no expert
    testimony is necessary because “[o]ne need not be a doctor, a nurse, or any other kind of health
    provider to appreciate these risks.” Heastie v. Roberts, 
    226 Ill. 2d 515
    , 554-55 (2007).
    ¶ 36    As for the element of proximate cause, there may be situations where it is obvious to the
    lay juror that a certain condition would result from a breach of the standard of care. That seems
    especially true when it comes to pain and suffering, a fairly common element of damages in a
    negligence case. If an oral surgeon negligently removes a tooth, it might require an expert to
    explain that the resulting infection could spread to internal organs or the brain, but would an
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    No. 1-21-1448
    expert be needed to explain to the jury that a mouth infection causes pain? If a plaintiff’s arm is
    severed in a construction accident, we might need an expert to explain how that injury led to a
    secondary stroke or kidney infection, but would we need an expert to explain that it hurt a lot?
    One would think lay testimony on the pain’s severity and duration would suffice.
    ¶ 37   To be fair to the circuit court, some of the cases on which it relied did contain language
    stating, as a hard-and-fast rule, that expert testimony is required—without qualification—to
    prove proximate cause in medical negligence cases. See Ruffin, 384 Ill. App. 3d at 20; Ayala,
    367 Ill. App. 3d at 601; Wiedenbeck, 385 Ill. App. 3d at 293 (“Proximate cause must be
    established by expert testimony to a reasonable degree of medical certainty.”).
    ¶ 38   They are not the only decisions to so state; they are too numerous to list here. Our
    research suggests that dozens, if not over a hundred, decisions have misstated the rule. See, e.g.,
    Walton v. Dirkes, 
    388 Ill. App. 3d 58
    , 60 (2009) (“Proximate cause must be established by expert
    testimony to a reasonable degree of medical certainty.”); Krivanec v. Abramowitz, 
    366 Ill. App. 3d 350
    , 356-57 (2006) (“The proximate cause element of a medical malpractice case must be
    established by expert testimony to a reasonable degree of medical certainty.”); Susnis v. Radfar,
    
    317 Ill. App. 3d 817
    , 826-27 (2000) (“Proximate cause in a medical malpractice case must be
    established by expert testimony to a reasonable degree of medical certainty.”). Those decisions
    overstate the rule on the requirement of expert testimony and should not be followed for that
    proposition.
    ¶ 39   We acknowledge, as well, that the supreme court stated the rule this way on one
    occasion. See Simmons v. Garces, 
    198 Ill. 2d 541
    , 556 (2002) (“In a medical malpractice case,
    proximate cause must be established by expert testimony to a reasonable degree of medical
    certainty.”). But while our appellate courts have since quoted Simmons for this proposition, our
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    supreme court has not. And that statement in Simmons is at odds with other supreme court
    precedent pre- and postdating Simmons, including most notably Snelson, 
    204 Ill. 2d at 43-44
    ,
    decided the year after Simmons, which stated the principle as a “general rule” applicable “except
    in very simple cases.”
    ¶ 40   The weight of supreme court authority to the contrary convinces us that the formulation
    of this rule in Simmons is an outlier and not the law of Illinois. Expert testimony is not
    automatically required to prove the elements of a medical negligence action but, rather, is
    required when the proof requires specialized knowledge beyond the ken of the average lay juror,
    as it usually will. See, e.g., Johnson, 
    2022 IL 127942
    , ¶ 52; Heastie, 
    226 Ill. 2d at 554-55
    ; Jones,
    
    191 Ill. 2d at 296
    ; Addison, 
    124 Ill. 2d at 297
    ; Purtill v. Hess, 
    111 Ill. 2d 229
    , 242 (1986);
    Walski, 
    72 Ill. 2d at 257
    .
    ¶ 41   It is well and good for reviewing courts to state the “general rule” regarding expert
    testimony in medical negligence cases. But circuit judges, considering individual cases with their
    own unique facts, should not simply default to general rules. They would be better served not to
    start with a thumb down on one side of the scale but rather to simply ask this question: does the
    proof that the plaintiff is offering on standard of care or proximate cause require scientific,
    technical, or other specialized knowledge beyond the ken of the ordinary layperson? If the
    answer is yes, as it usually will be, then lay testimony will not suffice, and expert testimony is
    required. See Ill. R. Evid. 701 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011).
    ¶ 42   Sympathetic as we are with the trial court, which was following binding appellate case
    law, we must disagree with its conclusion that summary judgment was proper here for no other
    reason than Thompson’s failure to offer expert testimony on the question of proximate cause.
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    The question is not subject to a bright-line rule but requires an evaluation of the circumstances of
    the individual case to determine whether expert testimony is necessary.
    ¶ 43   Indeed, the reason we have elaborated on this discussion at length is not only to clarify
    the law but because the facts of this case present a fine illustration of this dichotomy at work. In
    our view, some of the damages claimed here did, indeed, require expert testimony to show a
    causal link with the (alleged) deviation from the standard of care, while some did not.
    ¶ 44   Recall that Thompson claims (among other things) that, by his failure to make himself
    available, Dr. LaSpisa failed to give her the correct advice—to go to the hospital, the ER,
    immediately—when he should have, and the delay in her doing so for some 18 hours led to two
    distinct injuries. The first injury is that her condition worsened to an extent that it would not
    have, had she gone to the hospital immediately. That led, in turn, to a longer hospital stay than
    would have been necessary had she immediately gone to the hospital.
    ¶ 45   In our view, expert testimony would be necessary to establish a proximate causal
    relationship for this injury. The difference between how much Thompson’s facial cellulitis
    would have progressed had she immediately received emergent hospital care, versus how much it
    did progress with those additional 18 hours lacking such care, requires knowledge beyond the
    ken of the layperson. We know there was a delay in her treatment, and we know from her
    testimony, the medical records, and the grisly photos that her condition worsened over those 18
    hours. We also know that her swelling improved quite soon after she was hospitalized.
    ¶ 46   We do not know, however, whether earlier treatment would have prevented that
    additional swelling or whether this particular infection would have reached its full potential,
    anyway, even if immediately treated. We do not know whether or to what extent her hospital stay
    would have been shortened, either. To answer these questions would require a firm knowledge of
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    No. 1-21-1448
    the finer points of facial cellulitis. The average person knows nothing of that affliction, its
    treatment, and its course of progression; expert testimony was necessary to explain it.
    ¶ 47   Thompson’s other claim of damages, however, is the pain and suffering she endured
    during those 18 hours. We know from her testimony and the record that she suffered pain
    throughout these 18 hours; that it persisted and even worsened during that time; and that, once
    she was hospitalized and given stronger medication, the pain began (and continued) to subside.
    ¶ 48   The layperson may not know about the minutiae of facial cellulitis, but everyone
    understands the basics of pain relief. The stronger hospital medication relieved Thompson’s pain
    once she took it; had she started taking it 18 hours earlier, her pain would have begun to subside
    18 hours sooner. Specialized knowledge is not required for a juror to make that connection.
    ¶ 49   That is not to say that Dr. LaSpisa could not challenge this notion; our only point is that
    expert testimony is not required. So it was error to enter summary judgment in Dr. LaSpisa’s
    favor on the issue of proximate cause insofar (and only insofar) as it concerns Thompson’s claim
    of pain and suffering. She has established a colorable causal connection between the alleged
    deviation from the standard of care and her pain and suffering. In all other respects, the grant of
    summary judgment, based on the lack of expert testimony to prove proximate cause, was proper.
    ¶ 50                                              II
    ¶ 51   We now turn to the actual basis for summary judgment that Dr. LaSpisa asserted below,
    though the circuit court did not reach it. Though we have already upheld much of the circuit
    court’s ruling, if Dr. LaSpisa is correct on his original argument, he will prevail as to the claims
    of pain and suffering that have thus far survived our analysis, as well.
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    ¶ 52   Dr. LaSpisa’s argument is straightforward: Though Thompson may have been unable to
    contact him, the advice she received from Ms. Corona was exactly the same advice he would
    have given her had they connected by phone—and thus she cannot show proximate cause.
    ¶ 53   Whatever else may be said about this argument, the most glaring problem is that
    Thompson swears that she told the person who answered her call, Ms. Corona, that in addition to
    pain and swelling, she was having trouble breathing. And every doctor in this case—the experts
    and even Dr. LaSpisa himself—states categorically that, if a patient says she is having trouble
    breathing, she should be told to go straight to a hospital’s ER.
    ¶ 54   Dr. LaSpisa goes to great lengths to downplay that (contested) fact. He is correct that Ms.
    Corona did not document breathing difficulty as a complaint from Thompson, does not
    remember Thompson mentioning it, and typically would tell a patient with difficulty breathing to
    go to the ER immediately. At trial, Thompson will have her work cut out for her. But we are at
    summary judgment, where we take the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant,
    Thompson. See Jones, 
    191 Ill. 2d at 291
    .
    ¶ 55   So for our purposes, we must assume that Thompson told Ms. Corona that she was
    having trouble breathing. And that takes the legs out from under this argument. If, as we assume,
    Thompson told Corona that she was having breathing problems, and Ms. Corona did not tell her
    to go straight to the ER, then by his own sworn testimony, Dr. LaSpisa would not have given
    Thompson the same advice that Corona gave her. Or conversely, had he given her that same
    advice, by his own testimony, that advice would have been faulty. Either way, his argument fails.
    ¶ 56                                             III
    ¶ 57   We finally consider the alternative argument below, on which we could affirm summary
    judgment if we found it meritorious. We do not.
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    ¶ 58   Dr. LaSpisa’s final argument goes like this: this case is one of “patient abandonment;”
    the definition of patient abandonment under Illinois law is when a doctor “refuses” to care for the
    patient, and because Dr. LaSpisa did not even know Thompson was trying to reach him, he could
    not have “refused” to treat her. But every prong of this “gotcha” syllogism has its problems.
    ¶ 59   Dr. LaSpisa treats the phrase “patient abandonment” as if it is a cause of action of its
    own, complete with its own elements—one of which includes the doctor “refusing” to care for
    his or her patient. Thus, if there is no evidence of “refusal,” there is no claim. But “patient
    abandonment” is just shorthand, a description of one way a medical professional could be liable
    for negligence. Whatever theory one might pursue, the cause of action is negligence, requiring
    the plaintiff to prove duty (standard of care), breach of duty (deviation from standard), and
    damages proximately caused by the breach. Johnson, 
    2022 IL 127942
    , ¶ 51.
    ¶ 60   To be sure, one duty a physician owes is to use reasonable care in continuing treatment
    for follow-up complications, or at least provide the patient a reasonable time to find substitute
    care. See Mayer v. Baisier, 
    147 Ill. App. 3d 150
    , 160 (1986); Magana v. Elie, 
    108 Ill. App. 3d 1028
    , 1034 (1982). But before we cram all of Thompson’s claims into one box of “patient
    abandonment,” the least we can do is review what duty or duties—what standards of care—
    Thompson claims that Dr. LaSpisa owed.
    ¶ 61   Thompson’s expert opined that (1) an oral surgeon must provide his patient a means to
    reach him post-surgery if complications arise; (2) the person who answers the patient’s call, if
    not the surgeon, must be able to get in touch with the surgeon; (3) at a bare minimum, the person
    to whom this responsibility is delegated must be qualified to confer with patients—“it should
    never be delegated to a receptionist or any other layperson;” (4) if a patient complains that her
    medication is not working, the surgeon should meet with the patient; and finally, (5) if the patient
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    No. 1-21-1448
    complains of difficulty breathing, that patient should be directed immediately to the ER. We
    would note that Dr. LaSpisa does not dispute—at least here, on summary judgment—that those
    standards of care are valid and accurate. So we accept them as valid, viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to Thompson.
    ¶ 62   Thompson claims that these duties were breached in that Dr. LaSpisa did not provide a
    means for direct contact, did not provide for the person receiving Thompson’s call to make
    contact with him, and did not delegate responsibilities for patient conversations to someone
    qualified to dispense advice. She further claims that the person who took her call that day, Ms.
    Corona, did not send her directly to the ER, even though she complained of difficulty breathing
    (a fact, again, that we must accept at this stage).
    ¶ 63   If a jury were to accept that these standards of care are as Thompson’s expert claims, then
    it would be ironic, to say the least, if Dr. LaSpisa could brush all this away by simply claiming
    that he never knew Thompson was trying to reach him. That is Thompson’s very point—he was
    supposed to put in a place a system so he would know of her call—or at least, if he could not be
    reached, someone qualified to respond to her concerns would give her the appropriate advice. Dr.
    LaSpisa’s obliviousness to her call, in other words, is one of the breaches of the standard of care
    she is alleging. It would stand the law on its head to allow a doctor to escape liability at summary
    judgment for breach of duty via an argument that is premised on the fact that he breached that
    very duty. At the summary judge, accepting Thompson’s position as to the standard of care and
    accepting that Dr. LaSpisa breached it, Dr. LaSpisa’s argument is untenable.
    ¶ 64   Even if we indulged Dr. LaSpisa’s insistence on framing this case strictly as “patient
    abandonment,” we still would not see things as he does. True, the case law has referred to a
    doctor’s “refusal” to treat the patient when discussing the theory of “patient abandonment.” See
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    No. 1-21-1448
    Mayer, 147 Ill. App. 3d at 160; Magana, 108 Ill. App. 3d at 1034. But the theory of “patient
    abandonment” comes in many flavors, depending on the facts of the case. It could consist of a
    doctor failing to promptly act on a possible problem and delegating the matter to another doctor
    who likewise fails to promptly act. See Karsten v. McCray, 
    157 Ill. App. 3d 1
    , 11 (1987)
    (discussing Casey v. Penn, 
    45 Ill. App. 3d 573
    , 581 (1977)).
    ¶ 65   Another example, hitting much closer to home, is Longman v. Jasiek, 
    91 Ill. App. 3d 83
    ,
    84-85 (1980), where the plaintiff repeatedly contacted her oral surgeon regarding post-surgery
    complications, and the surgeon’s staff repeatedly directed the plaintiff to her family doctor, even
    though the family doctor himself told the plaintiff to return to the oral surgeon. We upheld the
    jury’s verdict “that the defendant’s conduct in abandoning and refusing to treat the plaintiff
    during postoperative complications was wrongful.” Id. at 88. What the oral surgeon’s staff did in
    Longman is not materially different than what the person answering Thompson’s call, Ms.
    Corona, did. If the oral surgeon there was liable, then it is hard to imagine how, at the summary
    judgment stage, Dr. LaSpisa can avoid liability.
    ¶ 66   In any event, we do not feel compelled to shoehorn Thompson’s negligence claim into
    one solely of “patient abandonment,” impose a requirement that Dr. LaSpisa must have
    knowingly refused to treat her, and thus affirm judgment in his favor, rewarding him for the very
    breach of duty that, at the summary judgment stage, we must assume he breached.
    ¶ 67                                     CONCLUSION
    ¶ 68   The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed in part and reversed in part. Plaintiff’s
    negligence action survives summary judgment only to the extent that she seeks damages of pain
    and suffering as indicated in this opinion. We affirm summary judgment in all other respects and
    remand this cause for further proceedings.
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    No. 1-21-1448
    ¶ 69   Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.
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    No. 1-21-1448
    Thompson v. LaSpisa, 
    2023 IL App (1st) 211448
    Decision Under Review:    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 17-L-3490;
    the Hon. Bridget Mitchell, Judge, presiding.
    Attorneys                 Gregory X. Gorman, of Chicago, for appellant.
    for
    Appellant:
    Attorneys                 Jeremiah P. Connolly, Jeffrey J. Escher, and Brett S.
    for                       Shimanovsky, of Connolly Krause LLC, of Chicago, for appellee.
    Appellee:
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