PAUL STRECKFUSS VS. SAGER DESAI, M.D. (L-3612-14, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1838-18
    PAUL STRECKFUSS and
    NANCY STRECKFUSS,
    husband and wife,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    SAGER DESAI, M.D.,
    EDISON EMERGI MED,
    "JOHN" LAKHLANI,
    M.D. (first name fictitious),
    "JOHN" MEHTA, M.D. (first
    name fictitious) and RARITAN
    BAY MEDICAL CENTER,
    Defendants,
    and
    KUMAR DASMAHAPATRA,
    M.D.,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    __________________________
    Argued December 2, 2020 - Decided November 15, 2021
    Before Judges Ostrer, Accurso and Vernoia.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Middlesex County, Docket No. L-3612-14.
    Craig M. Rothenberg argued the cause for appellants
    (Rothenberg, Rubenstein, Berliner & Shinrod, LLC,
    attorneys; Craig M. Rothenberg, of counsel and on the
    briefs; Susan V. Ferreira, on the briefs).
    Sam Rosenberg argued the cause for respondent
    (Rosenberg Jacobs Heller & Fleming, PC, attorneys;
    Sam Rosenberg, of counsel and on the brief; Fred J.
    Hughes, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    ACCURSO, J.A.D.
    Plaintiffs Paul and Nancy Streckfuss appeal from the jury's no-cause
    verdict and the denial of their motion for a new trial in the medical negligence
    action they filed against defendant Kumar Dasmahapatra, M.D., the surgeon
    who performed Paul Streckfuss's inguinal hernia repair.         They allege the
    following eight errors over the course of the nearly three-week trial:
    I. THE COURT ERRED IN ALLOWING THE
    TESTIMONY OF DEFENSE WITNESS, DR.
    MICHAEL CIENCEWICKI.
    II. THE COURT ERRED IN PERMITTING
    REFERENCES TO SCIP STANDARDS AND THE
    STANDARDS OF THE JOINT COMMISSION.
    III. THE COURT ERRED IN PERMITTING THE
    DEFENDANT TO ARGUE, AND IN INSTRUCTING
    THE JURY, THAT THE JURY COULD CONSIDER
    A-1838-18
    2
    WHETHER THE DEFENDANT'S MANAGEMENT
    OF PLAINTIFF'S CARE WAS WITHIN HIS
    "MEDICAL JUDGMENT."
    A.  DEFENDANT'S  "JUDGMENT"   TO
    WITHHOLD              PHARMACEUTICAL
    ANTICOAGULANTS WAS NOT PREMISED UPON
    DR. BONANNI'S FOUNDATIONAL CRITERION:
    RISK OF BLEEDING.
    B.  DEFENDANT'S   "JUDGMENT"   TO
    WITHHOLD              PHARMACEUTICAL
    ANTICOAGULANTS WAS NOT PREMISED UPON
    DR. BONANNI'S FOUNDATIONAL CRITERION:
    "WHAT THE PATIENT WANTS."
    C.  DEFENDANT'S    "JUDGMENT"     TO
    WITHHOLD               PHARMACEUTICAL
    ANTICOAGULANTS WAS NOT PREMISED UPON
    DR. BONANNI'S FOUNDATIONAL CRITERION:
    CONSIDERATION OF THE PATIENT'S RISKS.
    D.   DEFENDANT'S "JUDGMENT"  TO
    WITHHOLD ANTICOAGULANTS WAS BASED
    UPON ONLY ONE OF DR. BONANNI'S FOUR
    FOUNDATIONAL CRITERIA: THE TYPE OF
    SURGERY.
    E. DR. BONANNI CONCEDED THAT THE
    DEFENDANT'S DECISION WAS NOT HIS
    "MEDICAL JUDGMENT" AS CONTEMPLATED BY
    LAW.
    IV. THE MEDICAL JUDGMENT CHARGE WAS
    NOT TAILORED TO THE EVIDENCE IN THE
    CASE.
    A-1838-18
    3
    V. PLAINTIFFS WERE PREJUDICED BY THE
    DEFENSE OPENING STATEMENT, TESTIMONY,
    AND CLOSING ARGUMENTS CONCERNING THE
    ABSENCE FROM THE TRIAL OF DR. DESAI,
    PLAINTIFF'S PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIAN.
    A. DEFENSE COUNSEL IMPROPERLY
    INVITED THE JURY TO SPECULATE.
    B. DEFENSE COUNSEL MADE AN
    IMPROPER MISSING WITNESS INSINUATION.
    C.   DEFENSE   COUNSEL               MISSTATED
    PLAINTIFFS' BURDEN OF PROOF.
    D. THE COURT'S CURATIVE INSTRUCTION
    WAS INSUFFICIENT TO OVERCOME THE
    PREJUDICE.
    VI. THE DEFENDANT'S WITNESS AND COUNSEL
    MADE IMPROPER REFERENCES TO THREE
    OTHER "SURGERIES" FOR WHICH THE
    PLAINTIFF WAS "CLEARED."
    VII. THE DEFENSE CLOSING ARGUMENT
    COMPOUNDED THE PREJUDICE BY IMPROPER
    CHARACTERIZATION OF WITNESSES AND
    TESTIMONY.
    VIII. THE VERDICT WAS AGAINST THE WEIGHT
    OF THE EVIDENCE AND THE RESULT OF
    CUMULATIVE ERROR.
    Having reviewed the trial record, we conclude the case was fairly tried
    and find no error that would warrant overturning the jury's verdict. Accordingly,
    we affirm.
    A-1838-18
    4
    The case was tried before Judge McCloskey. The evidence the jury heard
    was extensive and often very technical. We summarize the salient points. After
    plaintiff Paul Streckfuss complained to his primary care doctor, Sager Desai,
    M.D., about pain and swelling in his groin in 2012, Dr. Desai suggested he
    immediately see a surgeon, recommending defendant Dasmahapatra as well as
    two others. Dr. Desai was aware when he recommended plaintiff see a surgeon
    of plaintiff's history of health problems.
    Specifically, in December 2009, plaintiff suffered superficial phlebitis of
    his right leg, resulting in prescription of an anticoagulant, Coumadin. Plaintiff
    took Coumadin for about six months, except for brief periods relating to two eye
    surgeries for which he was medically cleared.          Plaintiff stopped taking
    Coumadin after he experienced life-threatening, gastrointestinal bleeding in late
    May 2010, necessitating a stay in the ICU where he received nine units of blood
    and four units of fresh frozen plasma to replace necessary clotting factors.
    Plaintiff's hospital records note gastroenterologists attributed the bleeding to
    diverticulosis. In June 2010, plaintiff suffered a recurrence of phlebitis. The
    following month, Dr. Desai cleared him for insertion of an IVC filter, which
    plaintiffs' expert explained was inserted via a peripheral vein into the inferior
    A-1838-18
    5
    vena cava and "set like an umbrella," in order to prevent blood clots from
    migrating from the leg to the lungs.
    When plaintiff went to see defendant two years later in May 2012,
    defendant's nurse took a medical history during which plaintiff informed her of
    the placement of the IVC filter, the blood clots in his right leg, and the near-
    fatal intestinal bleeding incident he experienced while on Coumadin. Defendant
    reviewed that history with plaintiff, testifying he specifically recalled asking
    plaintiff why he wasn't taking a blood-thinner, because defendant thought it
    "unusual" for someone with an IVC filter not to be taking anticoagulant
    medication.    Defendant claimed plaintiff seemed "very anxious" about
    anticoagulants given his history and would not "even think about" going on
    anticoagulation. Plaintiff denied ever talking with defendant about it.
    Defendant's office sent plaintiff a "surgery appointment letter," a pre-
    printed form advising plaintiff through a series of checkboxes, blanks and some
    handwritten information when and where he was scheduled for surgery to repair
    a right inguinal hernia and of the pre-admission testing that would be required.
    Defendant's office staff checked "yes" next to the statement "Medical Clearance
    is required from Primary Care Physician or Cardiologist before surgery."
    Plaintiff testified he had the pre-admission testing done, bloodwork and an EKG,
    A-1838-18
    6
    but did not visit Dr. Desai, or advise him the surgery had been scheduled, and
    that no one from defendant's office ever discussed the medical clearance issue
    with him.
    Defendant testified that "medical clearance" meant assessing the patient
    for any potential cardiac or respiratory contraindications for surgery, and there
    was no requirement that he obtain medical clearance from any other physician
    before operating on plaintiff. He testified he routinely determined a patient's
    suitability for surgery by relying on the medical history supplied by the patient
    and the pre-operative test results, as he did with plaintiff. Defendant explained
    he would only seek additional records or consult with a patient's primary doctor
    if the patient was unclear as to why he had been referred, or was unable to
    provide a full history, or if defendant had concerns about the patient's fitness for
    surgery. Defendant, who estimated he had performed 5,000 to 6,000 inguinal
    hernia repair surgeries over the course of his career, testified he did not seek out
    any additional records or consult with Dr. Desai about plaintiff because
    defendant believed he had "all the relevant information that [he] needed to . . .
    make a clinical decision as to what [was] best for [his] patient."
    Defendant performed plaintiff's hernia repair surgery in June 2012. In the
    hospital record, defendant noted plaintiff's past medical history was
    A-1838-18
    7
    "[s]ignificant for a DVT [deep vein thrombosis] in the right leg in 2011 for
    which he required placement of an IVC filter."            In order to prevent DVT,
    according to the experts who testified at trial, this inguinal hernia repair surgery
    can be performed using mechanical prophylaxis, i.e., compression stockings, or
    pharmacologic prophylaxis, i.e., anticoagulation medication, or a combination
    of the two.
    Defendant testified he considers the risks and benefits of using
    anticoagulation medication to prevent DVT going into any surgery. But because
    the risk of developing DVT is very low in inguinal hernia repairs, but bleeding
    complications are common, he always uses mechanical prophylaxis. Defendant
    performed plaintiff's surgery using compression stockings, i.e., mechanical
    prophylaxis. Plaintiff was discharged from the hospital the same day of his
    surgery and instructed to walk and keep his legs elevated, which he did.
    Plaintiff nevertheless suffered a rare, extreme clotting situation a few days
    after the surgery, with multiple blood clots occurring above and below the IVC
    filter.     Unable to mechanically remove the clots, doctors used a tissue
    plasminogen activator (tPA) to dissolve them. Use of the tPA resulted in
    plaintiff      suffering   extensive     bleeding,   leading    to    a   three-month
    hospital/rehabilitation facility stay and his loss of a testicle. The blood clots
    A-1838-18
    8
    also caused phlebitis and post-phlebitic syndrome, causing plaintiff to suffer
    swelling, discoloration and ulceration of his legs, limiting his ability to engage
    in daily life activities.   Finally, plaintiff also suffered erectile dysfunction,
    although the experts disagreed as to whether it was the result of complications
    from the surgery, and whether plaintiff should avoid the use of Cialis to remedy
    the problem. In July 2012, plaintiff resumed the use of Coumadin and has since
    that time not suffered any significant bleeding.
    The main disputes at trial were over whether the standard of care included
    defendant obtaining medical clearance from Dr. Desai before surgical repair of
    plaintiff's inguinal hernia and whether failure to obtain that clearance was a
    proximate cause of plaintiff's injuries — although neither of those issues were
    ultimately included on the verdict sheet; whether defendant breached the
    standard of care by failing to employ anticoagulant medicines as a
    pharmacologic prophylaxis in addition to his use of mechanical prophylaxis
    during plaintiff's surgery; and whether defendant was entitled to a medical
    judgment charge in his choice of prophylaxis.
    Underlying all those disputes was a disagreement over the risks this out-
    patient inguinal hernia repair, which the experts agreed is properly characterized
    as minor surgery, posed to plaintiff. The experts all agreed the formation of
    A-1838-18
    9
    blood clots and bleeding are risks associated with any surgery. They also agreed
    that surgeons employ different methods for reducing the risk of blood clots
    through use of mechanical interventions, such as compression stockings, and
    pharmacologic interventions, meaning anticoagulants, such as Heparin or
    Lovenox. The experts agreed that use of either method reduces a patient's risk
    of clots, although neither will eliminate it entirely. They also agreed that use of
    anticoagulants carries the potential risk of bleeding.
    Plaintiff's experts relied on a study pegging the risk of developing DVT
    in major surgeries, which all concede this surgery was not, at 1.9 percent with
    Lovenox and 3.4 percent with only mechanical prophylaxis. The same study
    puts the risk of bleeding on Lovenox at 4.5 percent, and the risk of bleeding
    using only mechanical prophylaxis at 2.3 percent. A surgeon's decision to use
    one or the other prophylaxis, or both, will depend on the surgeon's assessment
    of the risks and benefits of each method based on patient- and procedure-specific
    risk factors.
    Plaintiffs' experts, a general surgeon, Dr. Michael Drew, and an internist
    and hematologist, Dr. Lionel Grossbard, relied on the Caprini risk assessment
    model for quantifying a surgical patient's risk for venous thromboembolism,
    including both pulmonary embolism and deep vein thrombosis. The Caprini
    A-1838-18
    10
    model assigns points to various risk factors, which when summed, places the
    patient in a risk category with recommended prophylaxis. Dr. Drew conceded,
    however, the Caprini model was not the only risk assessment model available,
    and that the standard of care required only that a surgeon assess the patient's
    risks and employ an appropriate intervention.
    Dr. Drew testified plaintiff had several risk factors for developing DVT,
    including his age, his weight, his varicose veins, implantation of an IVC filter,
    and that he was undergoing surgery, putting him at high risk for developing DVT
    under the Caprini model. He acknowledged on cross-examination, however,
    that plaintiff had had a prior hypercoagulability workup that was negative for
    clotting problems, which defendant was aware of before performing plaintiff's
    surgery. Dr. Drew acknowledged there was never a time — either before or
    after the surgery — when plaintiff was determined to be at other than a normal
    risk of blood clots. In Dr. Drew's opinion, plaintiff had an approximately six
    percent chance of developing DVT post-procedure without any prophylaxis,
    notwithstanding that same-day inguinal hernia surgery generally has a very low
    frequency for the development of DVT.
    For patients at high risk of developing DVT, who are not at high risk of
    bleeding, the Caprini model recommends surgeons employ a combination of
    A-1838-18
    11
    pharmacologic and mechanical prophylaxis. But for patients at high risk of
    developing DVT, who are also at high risk of major bleeding complications or
    for whom the consequences of bleeding may be particularly severe, the model
    recommends mechanical prophylaxis until the risk of bleeding diminishes and
    pharmacologic prophylaxis may be initiated. Dr. Drew testified that in addition
    to assessing plaintiff's risk for developing DVT, it was "extremely important"
    for defendant to have taken into consideration plaintiff's near-fatal bleed in
    determining an appropriate prophylaxis.
    Both Dr. Drew and plaintiffs' hematology expert, Dr. Grossbard, testified
    that plaintiff was not at high risk of bleeding complications, despite his near -
    fatal gastrointestinal bleed two years earlier, and there were no contraindications
    for the use of anticoagulants during his inguinal hernia surgery.          Having
    reviewed plaintiff's medical records, both were of the opinion that plaintiff's
    2010 bleeding incident was caused by an overdose of Coumadin and did not
    reflect an underlying risk of bleeding. They based their opinions on a review of
    plaintiff's Coumadin prescription over several months and an INR1 reading of
    1
    The INR (international normalized ratio) is a laboratory measurement of "the
    risk of bleeding or the coagulation status of the patient." See
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK507707/ (last visited October 22,
    2021).
    A-1838-18
    12
    4.7 in plaintiff's hospital records at the time of his gastrointestinal bleed. A
    normal INR reading is less than 1.1; a therapeutic INR for a person on Coumadin
    to prevent blood clots, would be about 2.5.
    On cross-examination, Dr. Drew conceded that the gastroenterologists
    who examined plaintiff at that time concluded his bleed was likely due to
    diverticulosis, and clarified his own opinion was that plaintiff bled from
    diverticulosis as a result of an overdose of Coumadin. He further admitted
    diverticulosis is a chronic condition that can re-bleed even when the patient is
    not on an anticoagulant, and that plaintiff's physicians did not prescribe an
    anticoagulant after plaintiff's bleed because they were concerned about his risk
    of bleeding.    Dr. Drew also conceded on cross-examination that chemical
    prophylaxis for patients at high risk of developing DVT is only "automatically
    required" "if the patient has no significant indication that he'll bleed."
    Dr. Drew testified defendant breached his duty of care by not using an
    anticoagulant drug, in addition to compression stockings, during plaintiff's
    surgery to prevent clotting. He also testified defendant deviated by "not . . .
    obtain[ing] the medical clearance" and not "try[ing to] speak with any of
    [plaintiff's] treating physicians" about plaintiff's "ten unit bleed, [and] being on
    Coumadin," because that would have allowed defendant to accurately assess the
    A-1838-18
    13
    risks the surgery posed to plaintiff. Dr. Drew admitted, however, that plaintiff
    was an appropriate candidate for the surgery, and that he did not know what Dr.
    Desai would have said or recommended had he seen plaintiff for clearance
    before the surgery.    He maintained, nevertheless, that Dr. Desai possessed
    relevant information and there was no indication he would have refused to share
    it with defendant.
    Dr. Drew testified plaintiff suffered blood clots because defendant
    breached the standard of care by failing to use anticoagulant drugs in addition
    to the compression stockings during plaintiff's surgery. In his "opinion to a
    reasonable degree of medical certainty" "had [plaintiff] received the chemical
    prophylaxis" his clotting problems could have been avoided. Dr. Grossbard
    opined it was more likely than not that plaintiff would not have suffered the
    massive blood clots he did had he received anticoagulants during surgery, and
    thus would not have suffered the injuries consequent to the clots and their
    treatment.
    Defendant's general surgery expert, Dr. Fernando Bonanni, testified the
    Caprini model is only a guideline for surgeons to consider in light of a patient's
    circumstances, and it did not represent the standard of care. He noted the
    professional article about the Caprini model, on which plaintiffs' experts relied,
    A-1838-18
    14
    focused on major surgeries, whereas inguinal hernia repair surgery is a minor
    procedure in which patients are immobilized for only a brief period and are
    ambulatory shortly afterwards, thereby reducing their risks of developing blood
    clots. He estimated that probably fifty percent of surgeons use only mechanical
    prophylaxis in performing the surgery.
    Although Dr. Bonanni agreed plaintiff would be considered at high risk
    for clots under the Caprini model, the doctor also believed plaintiff presented a
    bleeding risk based on his near-fatal gastrointestinal bleed, resulting in
    implantation of the IVC filter and plaintiff's noted wariness of anticoagulant
    medicines. He testified that employing an anticoagulant in plaintiff's case could
    have resulted in another life-threatening bleed.
    Dr. Bonanni testified that because plaintiff presented risks for both blood
    clots and bleeding, defendant needed to weigh those risks and make a judgment
    call as to the appropriate prophylaxis for plaintiff. In Dr. Bonanni's opinion,
    defendant made the right call in not using an anticoagulant, particularly because
    the surgery was a minor, same-day procedure, and plaintiff's IVC filter reduced
    the risk that any clot would travel to his heart. Dr. Bonanni noted defendant's
    treatment of plaintiff was consistent with the Caprini model's recommendations
    for patients who are at risk for both blood clots and bleeding.
    A-1838-18
    15
    Dr. Bonanni rejected plaintiffs' experts' contention that plaintiff's elevated
    INR in the hospital record at the time of his near-fatal gastrointestinal bleed
    reflected a supertherapeutic dose of Coumadin and that his risk of bleeding was
    otherwise normal. In Dr. Bonanni's view, that INR was unreliable because
    plaintiff had "bled out all his coagulation factors." Dr. Bonanni testified he
    didn't think doctors "can really tell exactly what was going on with his
    Coumadin or his INR because all your testing is not valuable in a patient who's
    bled nine units of blood," or more than two-thirds of all the blood in his body.
    In those circumstances, "you can't really depend on that INR to tell you anything
    about the Coumadin that was given to the patient."2 He also testified there was
    nothing in plaintiff's medical records evidencing an overdose of Coumadin.
    Dr. Bonanni believed plaintiff's gastrointestinal bleed happened because
    "he was on a blood thinner, and he had diverticulosis."          He testified that
    diverticulosis can re-bleed, and a patient is more susceptible to bleeding while
    on an anticoagulant. Dr. Bonanni noted that after plaintiff's near-fatal bleed, his
    2
    Defendant likewise testified that knowing what plaintiff's INR had been would
    not have impelled him to add an anticoagulant for plaintiff's surgery. Defendant
    testified, "It didn't matter to me whether the INR was high or low. He bled,"
    likely because of his diverticulosis. Defendant testified, "Patients with
    diverticulosis will bleed and [when] they're on Coumadin are almost
    uncontrollable."
    A-1838-18
    16
    doctors took him off Coumadin out of concern for another bleed and implanted
    an IVC filter to protect him from a blood clot traveling to his heart.
    Dr. Bonanni also disagreed with Dr. Drew that defendant was negligent in
    not obtaining medical clearance from another doctor before taking plaintiff into
    surgery. In Dr. Bonanni's opinion, Dr. Desai would not have recommended that
    plaintiff immediately see a surgeon to repair an inguinal hernia unless he
    believed plaintiff was an appropriate candidate for the procedure. Dr. Bonanni
    also testified the form completed by defendant's staff, checking the box
    indicating the need for medical clearance, did not have anything to do with the
    standard of care. Dr. Bonanni opined defendant could assess plaintiff's risks and
    determine his fitness for surgery based upon defendant's knowledge of plaintiff's
    medical history and his pre-admission testing. As to causation, Dr. Bonanni
    testified it was impossible to know, within a reasonable degree of medical
    certainty, whether plaintiff would have developed DVT if Lovenox had been
    administered.
    On the issue of medical clearance, defendant also presented a fact witness,
    Dr. Michael Ciencewicki, the chief medical officer at Raritan Bay Medical
    Center where plaintiff's hernia repair surgery was performed, who testified the
    hospital did not require a patient be cleared for surgery by anyone other than the
    A-1838-18
    17
    surgeon. Dr. Ciencewicki testified defendant did not violate the hospital's
    policies by clearing plaintiff for surgery himself.         On cross-examination,
    plaintiffs' counsel got the witness to confirm that all he was "saying was
    [defendant] was in compliance [with the hospital's rules], not whether what he
    did was or was not negligent."
    Plaintiffs objected to Dr. Ciencewicki's testimony before he testified,
    arguing the proffered testimony was not probative of anything and would be
    tantamount to standard of care testimony from someone not qualified to give it.
    Judge McCloskey disagreed, ruling plaintiffs "squarely placed" the issue of
    medical clearance in the case, and there had already been "a lot of [differing]
    testimony" about what medical clearance means. The judge found the proffered
    testimony "clarifies . . . the concept of medical clearance" from the perspective
    of the hospital where the surgery was performed and was, thus, probative and
    helpful to the trier of fact. After the jury's verdict, plaintiffs argued the court's
    "error" in admitting Dr. Ciencewicki's testimony warranted a new trial. Judge
    McCloskey again disagreed, repeating his earlier point that plaintiffs "placed the
    issue of medical clearance into issue in this case," and that defendant had "a
    right to defend against what medical clearance was or wasn't," as a fact issue.
    The judge found the testimony was relevant to an issue in dispute, the meaning
    A-1838-18
    18
    of medical clearance, and was neither prejudicial nor confusing to the jury. He
    found the witness was plainly not proffered as an expert, but as a fact witness
    providing factual support for Dr. Bonanni's opinion on standard of care.
    We begin our analysis by addressing plaintiffs' claims that the court erred
    in permitting Dr. Ciencewicki's testimony. As is well-established, we review
    evidentiary rulings only for abuse of discretion. Rowe v. Bell & Gossett Co.,
    
    239 N.J. 531
    , 551 (2019). A trial judge's decision to admit or exclude evidence
    is entitled to deference absent "a clear error of judgment." 
    Ibid.
     (quoting Griffin
    v. City of East Orange, 
    225 N.J. 400
    , 413 (2016)). Thus, a reviewing court "will
    reverse an evidentiary ruling only if it 'was so wide [of] the mark that a manifest
    denial of justice resulted.'" 
    Id. at 551-52
     (quoting Griffin, 225 N.J. at 413). We
    review decisions on new trial motions using the same standard as the trial court,
    meaning we will not overturn the jury's verdict unless clearly convinced there
    was a miscarriage of justice. Hayes v. Delamotte, 
    231 N.J. 373
    , 386 (2018).
    Applying those standards here, we find no error in the admission of Dr.
    Ciencewicki's testimony or his fleeting references to the Joint Accreditation and
    Commission of Hospitals (JACOH) and the Surgical Care Improvement
    Program (SCIP) standards, which plaintiffs maintain "absolved" defendant from
    obtaining medical clearance and "conjured a 'super expert' to relieve [him] from
    A-1838-18
    19
    compliance with the standard of care." As already noted, Dr. Drew asserted on
    behalf of plaintiffs that defendant violated the standard of care by not obtaining
    medical clearance from Dr. Desai or another of plaintiff's treating physicians
    before performing plaintiff's surgery. Dr. Bonanni opined defendant didn't
    require medical clearance from anyone before clearing plaintiff for the surgery .
    In addition to not agreeing on who had to medically clear the patient for surgery,
    the parties disputed the meaning of the phrase "medical clearance" itself:
    plaintiffs argued it meant defendant would communicate with plaintiff's treating
    physicians about plaintiff's present and past medical issues, whereas defendant
    maintained it related only to defendant's determination as to whether plaintiff
    was an appropriate candidate for surgery, particularly with respect to any cardiac
    or pulmonary issues.
    Those disputes were a constant throughout this trial, and the parties
    continue to argue them in their appellate briefs.          Plaintiffs assert Dr.
    Ciencewicki's testimony permitted defendant to assert that although he told
    plaintiff in the surgery appointment letter that medical clearance from his
    primary physician or cardiologist was required before surgery, defendant went
    ahead with the surgery when plaintiff "showed up" without it "because he was
    empowered by the hospital to 'clear' [plaintiff] himself — using the term in a
    A-1838-18
    20
    way completely inconsistent" with how he'd used the term in his letter to
    plaintiff and "in an entirely different way than it was meant by plaintiffs'
    experts."
    Plaintiffs' argument only underscores for us that Dr. Ciencewicki's
    testimony about the meaning of the phrase medical clearance from the
    perspective of the hospital where defendant practiced and performed the surgery
    was relevant to an obviously contested issue and therefore admissible. See
    N.J.R.E. 401-402; State v. Williams, 
    240 N.J. 225
    , 235 (2019); Verdicchio v.
    Ricca, 
    179 N.J. 1
    , 33-34 (2004). We agree with Judge McCloskey the testimony
    presented no risk of confusing the jury, N.J.R.E. 403, because Dr. Ciencewicki's
    testimony was unambiguously that of a fact witness and not an expert. The
    doctor's testimony was relatively brief, and he did not provide any testimony as
    to the standard of care, nor did he offer an opinion as to whether defendant was
    negligent in his treatment of plaintiff — points plaintiffs' counsel made
    repeatedly to the jury.
    Dr. Ciencewicki's testimony about what the hospital meant by the term
    medical clearance provided factual support for defendant's and his expert's
    understanding of the term and was thus entirely proper. Because defendant was
    not relying on the hospital's policy on medical clearance for surgery to establish
    A-1838-18
    21
    the standard of care for defendant, the testimony did not run afoul of our holding
    in Johnson v. Mountainside Hosp., 
    239 N.J. Super. 312
    , 323-24 (App. Div.
    1990), that a party may not use hospital protocols to establish the standard of
    care for physicians.
    Dr. Ciencewicki's testimony as to the JACOH and the SCIP standards
    consisted of him testifying that "[t]he Joint Commission does a triannual survey
    and [it] will select certain policies to review to make sure that they're in
    conformance with [its] standards," and that he recalled it had reviewed the
    hospital's policies relating to surgery as of June 2012. No one testified to what
    these standards were, and defense counsel did not refer to either the JACOH or
    the SCIP standards in his closing argument to the jury. Accordingly, even if Dr.
    Ciencewicki's testimony as to the JACOH or the SCIP standards was arguably
    improperly admitted, because irrelevant, the reference was so fleeting we could
    not find it capable of any prejudice to plaintiffs, much less of producing an
    unjust result. Thus, we find no error in the court's denial of plaintiffs' new trial
    motion on that basis.
    We also reject plaintiffs' claims that the trial court erred in giving a
    medical judgment charge regarding defendant's decision to perform plaintiff's
    surgery using only mechanical prophylaxis. Plaintiffs argue, as they did in the
    A-1838-18
    22
    trial court, that the charge was inappropriate based on defendant's testimony that
    he never employed prophylactic anticoagulation in performing surgery to repair
    an inguinal hernia. Plaintiffs contended defendant did not exercise any medical
    judgment in performing plaintiff's surgery using mechanical prophylaxis, but
    "simply did what he always does without consideration to any facts and
    circumstances attended to this specific patient."
    Defendant argued to the trial court, and repeats on appeal, that "[t]he
    medical judgment charge doesn't necessarily implicate judgment that is made at
    the exact time of the treatment," but is instead dependent on there being two
    acceptable options under the standard of care. Defense counsel contended that
    so long as there are two schools of thought, defendant could have "years before
    addressed the issue," and decided not to use chemical prophylaxis with "same
    day surgery hernia patients," noting Dr. Bonanni's testimony that fifty percent
    of surgeons performing the surgery use anticoagulants and fifty percent don't
    and that either is acceptable practice.
    Judge McCloskey agreed with defendant based on the testimony that there
    was "squarely an issue as to whether . . . [defendant] believed it was safer to
    administer and utilize mechanical prophylaxis to the patient during the surgery
    A-1838-18
    23
    as opposed to utilizing chemical prophylaxis because of a concern of his
    bleeding history and his propensity to develop DVTs. That's a judgment."
    We agree. A medical judgment charge is appropriate where the trial
    evidence reflects that a physician may choose between two generally accepted
    courses of treatment. Das v. Thani, 
    171 N.J. 518
    , 527 (2002). Care must be
    taken in such cases to ensure the evidence supports the course of treatment as a
    choice between two or more equally acceptable and medically reasonable
    approaches, lest the jury be misled into excusing a defendant's deviation from
    the standard of care as medical judgment. Velazquez v. Portadin, 
    163 N.J. 677
    ,
    688-90 (2000).
    Here, the parties' general surgery experts both testified inguinal hernia
    repair surgery was a minor procedure, generally presenting a very low frequency
    for the development of DVT. They also agreed there were risks and benefits
    associated with the use of both pharmacologic and mechanical prophylaxis. The
    experts disagreed about which was appropriate for plaintiff's surgery based on
    his medical history, specifically whether he was at elevated risk of bleeding as
    well as for DVT.
    There is no question but that defendant gave conflicting testimony on
    when and how he determined what prophylaxis to use during same-day inguinal
    A-1838-18
    24
    hernia repair — testifying both that he decided to use only mechanical
    prophylaxis for plaintiff in May 2012, shortly before his surgery, and that over
    the course of 5,000 to 6,000 inguinal hernia repairs he had never used
    pharmacologic prophylaxis for a same-day inguinal hernia surgery. A fair
    reading of defendant's testimony as a whole, however, suggests he made a
    conscious decision, based on his understanding of the low incidence of DVT in
    same-day inguinal hernia surgery and the higher risk of bleeding the procedure
    posed, that mechanical prophylaxis was sufficient for such surgeries as a general
    rule. And, presented with plaintiff's medical history and risk factors, defendant
    found no basis to alter that judgment with respect to plaintiff's June 2012
    surgery. Thus, defendant's judgment was to proceed with plaintiff's surgery
    using his normal procedures, that is, using only mechanical prophylaxis.
    Critically, the experts agreed the standard of care required a surgeon to
    employ some type of prophylaxis during this surgery based on his or her
    assessment of the risk of the procedure and any specific risks presented by the
    patient.   They also agreed the use of mechanical prophylaxis was not
    inappropriate. What they disagreed about was whether mechanical prophylaxis
    was sufficient given plaintiff's high risk of clots and whether adding an
    anticoagulant was warranted given plaintiff's history of diverticulosis and
    A-1838-18
    25
    bleeding, the low incidence of DVT reported for this same-day procedure and
    the hypercoagulability blood workup revealing plaintiff's risk of clots was
    normal.
    Relying on the Caprini risk assessment model, Dr. Drew testified
    defendant deviated from the standard of care by his failure to add an
    anticoagulant prophylaxis to the mechanical prophylaxis he employed,
    notwithstanding plaintiff's prior near-fatal bleed while on an anticoagulant,
    because, in the doctor's view, that bleed was caused by an overdose of Coumadin
    in combination with his diverticulosis. Because Dr. Drew contended plaintiff
    was not at high risk of bleeding, he contended the standard of care, again relying
    on the Caprini model, mandated a combination of mechanical and
    pharmacological prophylaxis.     Dr. Bonanni, on the other hand, opined that
    adding the anticoagulant was a judgment call and, in his opinion, not worth the
    risk given plaintiff's history of near-fatal bleed while taking an anticoagulant
    and the low frequency of DVTs following same-day inguinal hernia repair.
    Our courts have long recognized that "the distinction between the 'exercise
    of judgment' and a deviation from accepted practice" can be complicated.
    Velazquez, 
    163 N.J. at 686
    . In our view, the court was correct to give the
    medical judgment charge on this record for two reasons. First, plaintiffs' general
    A-1838-18
    26
    surgery expert testified the Caprini model did not represent the standard of care ,
    and that the standard required only that a surgeon assess the patient's risk and
    use an appropriate intervention.      The scholarly article on which plaintiffs'
    experts relied discussing the Caprini model underscored that point as it was
    couched in recommendations and suggestions, suggesting the ultimate choice of
    prophylaxis to combat DVT, even in the model relied on by plaintiffs' expert,
    depended on the surgeon's judgment assessing both procedure- and patient-
    specific risks.
    Second, although a lot of the focus of the expert testimony was on the
    factual issue of whether plaintiff's gastrointestinal bleed was caused by an
    overdose of Coumadin, the standard of care did not rest on it. See Velazquez,
    
    163 N.J. at 689
     (explaining when standard of care required monitoring patient
    while on labor-inducing drug, the jury had to decide whether the defendants
    monitored the patient without reference to the medical judgment charge). Stated
    differently, the experts did not agree that if plaintiff's gastrointestinal bleed had
    been caused by an overdose of Coumadin, the standard of care would require
    both pharmacological and mechanical prophylaxis during the surgery.
    Plaintiffs' experts testified plaintiff was not at risk of bleeding during the
    surgery because he had only bled when overdosed on Coumadin. Defendant's
    A-1838-18
    27
    expert testified plaintiff's diverticulosis and the severity of the bleed when he
    was last on Coumadin put plaintiff at risk of bleeding again during the surgery.
    Thus, the experts did not simply disagree over why plaintiff experienced his
    near-fatal gastrointestinal bleed, they also disagreed over whether the bleed,
    regardless of cause, affected plaintiff's risk of bleeding during this surgery, and
    thus whether pharmacological prophylaxis was warranted. Because the expert
    testimony represented two schools of thought as to whether to employ an
    anticoagulant drug in addition to mechanical prophylaxis for plaintiff's inguinal
    hernia repair in light of his previous near-fatal bleed, the medical judgment
    charge was appropriate. See Schueler v. Strelinger, 
    43 N.J. 330
    , 346 (1964)
    (holding "when a surgeon selects one of two courses, . . . either one of which
    has substantial support as proper practice by the medical profession, a claim of
    malpractice cannot be predicated solely on the course pursued").
    We also reject plaintiffs' arguments that Dr. Bonanni's testimony about
    the factors a surgeon should consider in making a judgment as to which
    prophylaxis to employ in a given surgery, a number of which plaintiffs contend
    defendant did not consider, undermined the expert's opinion that the choice of
    prophylaxis in plaintiff's case was a judgment call, and that the judgment charge
    was not tailored to the facts in the case. As already discussed, the judgment
    A-1838-18
    28
    charge is given when the physician has a choice among medically acceptable
    courses of action, Velazquez, 
    163 N.J. at 687
    ; here, whether to employ
    pharmacologic prophylaxis.      Plaintiffs' arguments that defendant did not
    exercise any judgment, and that his choice did not comport with the standard of
    care are addressed in the model charge itself. See Model Jury Charge (Civil),
    5.50G, "Medical Judgment" (June 2014) ("your focus should be on whether
    accepted standards of medical practice allowed judgment to be exercised as to
    diagnosis and treatment alternatives and, if so, whether what the doctor actually
    did to diagnose or treat this patient was accepted as standard medical practice").
    Plaintiffs' argument that the judgment charge was not properly tailored to
    their theory of liability because it did not "identify for the jury what the two
    schools of thought were and how they were involved with the facts of this case"
    is without merit. Judge McCloskey charged the jury that:
    A doctor may have to exercise judgment when
    diagnosing and treating a patient. However, alternative
    diagnosis or treatment choices must be in accordance
    with accepted standards of medical practice. Therefore,
    your focus should be on whether accepted standards of
    medical practice allowed judgment to be exercised as
    to diagnosis and treatment alternatives, and, if so,
    whether what the doctor actually did to diagnose or
    treat this patient was accepted as standard medical
    practice.
    A-1838-18
    29
    If you determine that the accepted standards of
    medical practice with respect to whether to administer
    pharmacologic versus mechanical prophylaxis to the
    plaintiff, Paul Streckfuss, in connection with this
    inguinal hernia surgery, did not allow for the treatment
    alternatives the defendant doctor made here, then the
    doctor would be negligent.
    If, on the other hand, you determine that the
    accepted standards of medical practice for treatment or
    diagnosis with respect to whether to administer
    pharmacologic versus mechanical prophylaxis to the
    plaintiff, Paul Streckfuss, in connection with his
    inguinal hernia surgery, did allow for the treatment
    alternative the defendant doctor made here, then the
    doctor would not be negligent.
    If you find that the defendant has complied with
    the accepted standard of care, then he is not liable to
    the plaintiffs regardless of the result.
    On the other hand, if you find that the defendant
    has deviated from the standard of care resulting in
    injury or damage to plaintiff, then you should find
    defendant negligent, and return a verdict for plaintiff.
    The charge closely tracked the language of the model charge and focused the
    jury on the only judgment issue in the case: whether "the accepted standards of
    medical practice with respect to whether to administer pharmacologic versus
    mechanical prophylaxis to the plaintiff . . . in connection with this inguinal
    hernia surgery, did allow for the treatment alternative the defendant doctor made
    here." Because the charge "separate[d] out [that] aspect[] of the medical care
    A-1838-18
    30
    that involved judgment," Saks v. Ng, 
    383 N.J. Super. 76
    , 96 (App. Div. 2006)
    (quoting Velazquez, 
    163 N.J. at 688
    ), nothing more was required.
    We turn back to the issue of medical clearance to discuss plaintiffs' claims
    that they were prejudiced by defendant's opening statement, closing argument
    and certain testimony regarding Dr. Desai's absence at trial. As we have already
    related, the parties vigorously contested the meaning of medical clearance and
    whether the standard of care required defendant to obtain medical clearance
    from another of plaintiff's physicians, particularly Dr. Desai, before taking
    plaintiff into surgery, notwithstanding that the case went to the jury only on the
    issue of whether defendant was negligent by failing to use an anticoagulant
    during the surgery.
    In his opening statement, plaintiffs' counsel stated Dr. Grossbard would
    testify that had he been asked to medically clear plaintiff for surgery, "he would
    have said Caprini risk, high risk, got to anticoagulate[] him," and "if you're not
    comfortable, don't do the surgery." Defense counsel objected, arguing Dr.
    Grossbard, plaintiffs' internal medicine and hematology expert, could not give
    that testimony because it amounted to offering a standard of care opinion he was
    not qualified to give about the care provided by defendant, a general surgeon.
    See Nicholas v. Mynster, 
    213 N.J. 463
    , 468 (2013) (barring the plaintiffs' expert,
    A-1838-18
    31
    who did not practice in the same medical specialties as the defendant doctors,
    from testifying to the standard of care governing the defendants).
    In the course of that colloquy, defense counsel argued to the court that Dr.
    Grossbard should not testify on the subject of medical clearance because there
    was no testimony that defendant should have consulted a hematologist and "zero
    evidence that even if this clearance was followed up on, that Dr. Desai would
    not have cleared him," meaning that plaintiffs could not establish proximate
    cause on their medical clearance claim. For his part, plaintiffs' counsel objected
    to defense counsel arguing to the jury about the absence of evidence as to
    whether Dr. Desai would have cleared plaintiff for surgery. He argued it was
    impossible to know what Dr. Desai would have done because he wasn't asked
    for clearance.   Judge McCloskey sustained the objection and gave a brief
    curative instruction before defendant's opening that plaintiffs were proffering
    only one liability expert — and that expert was Dr. Drew, not Dr. Grossbard.
    Defense counsel in his opening statement explained what medical
    clearance meant from defendant's and the hospital's perspective, that plaintiff
    was an appropriate candidate for surgery, and said it was unclear why plaintiff
    never went back to Dr. Desai after being advised by defendant's office to do so.
    Counsel then asserted "there is absolutely no evidence — and I'll emphasize that
    A-1838-18
    32
    again — no evidence in this case that will demonstrate that Dr. Desai would not
    have cleared [plaintiff] for surgery had he returned. In fact, he had cleared him
    for prior surgical procedures that [plaintiff] underwent." Counsel went on to
    explain "the reason that's important" is because even if they found defendant
    "deviated as far as the medical clearance issue, there is no established cause
    connection between that and any injury because there's no evidence in this case
    that clearance would have been withheld." Although plaintiffs' counsel objected
    to those comments, he stated several times he did not want a curative instruction
    given at that time.
    The issue came up twice more during witness testimony. When plaintiffs'
    counsel attempted to cross-examine Dr. Bonanni on the issue of medical
    clearance with reference to Dr. Desai's deposition testimony, defense counsel
    objected, arguing the deposition testimony was inadmissible hearsay unless
    plaintiffs intended to call Dr. Desai. Judge McCloskey sustained the objection,
    barring plaintiffs' counsel from reading from Dr. Desai's deposition in his
    examination of Dr. Bonanni.
    The issue came up again in defense counsel's cross-examination of Dr.
    Drew3 when plaintiffs' counsel objected to defense counsel asking "[y]ou don't
    3
    These witnesses were taken out of turn to accommodate the doctors' schedules.
    A-1838-18
    33
    have any opinion as to whether Dr. Desai would or would not have
    recommended prophylaxis for this patient, even had he seen the patient before
    surgery." Defense counsel claimed the question was proper because Dr. Drew
    was asked at deposition whether he had an opinion as to whether Dr. Desai
    would have recommended perioperative anticoagulation had he been asked to
    clear plaintiff for the surgery, and responded that he did not know whether Dr.
    Desai would or would not have done so.
    Defense counsel argued the question pointed to a lack of evidence, that is,
    plaintiffs' inability to prove proximate cause in connection with their claimed
    medical clearance deviation. Judge McCloskey noted that neither side had
    chosen to call Dr. Desai, with the experts relying on what they reviewed in the
    record. The judge made clear he would not permit either side to speculate as to
    what Dr. Desai "would have done or should have done in the absence of him
    testifying" at trial. The judge, however, overruled the objection, noting one of
    plaintiffs' claims of deviation was defendant's failure to obtain medical
    clearance from Dr. Desai, and the question, which had been asked and answered
    without objection at Dr. Drew's deposition, went to the credibility of the doctor's
    opinion.
    A-1838-18
    34
    Before defense counsel made his closing argument, he made inquiry of
    the court as to what he was permitted to argue on the issue of medical clearance.
    In accordance with the court's directive, counsel did not argue that there was no
    evidence in the record that Dr. Desai would not have cleared plaintiff for the
    surgery as the court had made clear "[t]hat's out of bounds." Defense counsel
    argued the standard of care did not require defendant to obtain clearance from
    any physician, and that plaintiffs had not proven that the alleged failure to obtain
    medical clearance caused plaintiff's injuries.
    At plaintiffs' counsel's request and over objection by defendant, the judge
    incorporated the following curative instruction into his charge:
    Now, during the course of this trial, there have
    been many references made by counsel for both sides
    to a Dr. Desai, who was the plaintiff's primary care
    physician. There has been testimony that Dr. Desai had
    cleared the plaintiff for his eye surgeries, and a
    procedure to install an IVC filter in his leg, all prior to
    the inguinal hernia surgery, at issue, of June 27, 2012.
    A question has been raised as to whether Dr.
    Desai would or would not have cleared the plaintiff for
    his hernia repair surgery. Particular reference was
    made by defense counsel, in his opening statement, to
    the effect that there is no evidence that Dr. Desai would
    not have cleared the plaintiff for his hernia surgery.
    However, Dr. [Desai] has not testified. Despite
    the fact that it was within the right of each party to call
    Dr. Desai as a witness in this trial, neither side chose to
    A-1838-18
    35
    do so. As a result, what Dr. Desai would or would not
    have done in terms of clearing Mr. Streckfuss for his
    hernia surgery at issue here, is unknowable, and,
    therefore, speculative.
    As such, what Dr. Desai would or would not have
    done, in terms of clearance, is not something for you to
    consider in your deliberations, and you are to disregard
    any statement made that there is no evidence that he
    would not have cleared plaintiff for his hernia surgery.
    Among the issues in their motion for a new trial, plaintiffs argued it was
    prejudicial error for defense counsel to have implied in his opening that Dr.
    Desai would have cleared plaintiff for surgery with no recommendations for
    medical management had he been consulted and then compounded the error by
    making a "missing witness" argument and misstating plaintiffs' burden of proof .
    In an argument reprised on appeal, plaintiffs contended that after successfully
    blocking plaintiffs from allowing Dr. Grossbard to testify to what a primary care
    internist would do if asked to clear plaintiff for surgery, defense counsel
    immediately thereafter in his own opening improperly invited the jury to
    speculate as to what Dr. Desai would have done, that is cleared plaintiff for
    surgery, and to wonder why plaintiffs weren't calling him to say what he would
    have done.
    Plaintiffs claimed the errors were made worse when defense counsel
    argued plaintiffs could not prove proximate cause on their medical clearance
    A-1838-18
    36
    claim without establishing Dr. Desai would not have cleared plaintiff for
    surgery, when defendant's failure to consult Dr. Desai made it impossible to
    know what he would have recommended, and any testimony he offered at trial
    as to what he would have done if asked would have been barred as impermissibly
    speculative.   Plaintiffs further claimed the prejudice was compounded by
    permitting defense counsel to elicit from Dr. Drew on cross-examination that he
    did not know what Dr. Desai would have recommended, and the court's curative
    instruction was insufficient to overcome the prejudice.
    Defendant countered that medical clearance was a non-issue that plaintiffs
    injected into the case in the hope of capitalizing on defendant's office form in
    which a nurse checked a box stating medical clearance was required. Defendant
    contended that because Dr. Drew testified defendant deviated from the standard
    of care by not obtaining the necessary medical clearance, notwithstanding the
    only question they requested the jury decide was whether defendant was
    negligent by failing to use an anticoagulant during the surgery, defendant "was
    forced to play on the field that plaintiffs' built" and produce evidence that the
    absence of a medical clearance examination was not a deviation from the
    standard of care and not a proximate cause of plaintiff's injuries.
    A-1838-18
    37
    Defendant maintained the statement that there would be no evidence that
    Dr. Desai would have refused to clear plaintiff for the surgery was factually
    accurate and advanced a causation defense related to a standard of care claim
    plaintiffs were making at trial.     Defendant also denied making a "missing
    witness" argument with regard to Dr. Desai, noting defense counsel had not
    requested a missing witness adverse inference and didn't know whether Dr.
    Desai, whom plaintiffs had subpoenaed for trial, would testify. Defendant
    further maintained that any possible prejudice from either was neutralized by
    the court's strongly worded curative instruction.      Defendant maintained his
    anodyne statement that there would be "no established causal connection"
    between the lack of medical clearance and plaintiff's injuries did not misstate
    plaintiffs' burden of proof and is irrelevant in any event as the jury did not reach
    the issue of causation.
    In addressing those points on plaintiffs' new trial motion, Judge
    McCloskey noted the case was a contentious one, tried by experienced and
    exceptionally skilled lawyers, and those two facts made him consider plaintiffs'
    arguments carefully, canvassing the record and his trial notes to ensure the
    evidence was sufficient to support the verdict and no inadvertent error resulted
    in a miscarriage of justice. The judge again noted that plaintiffs interjected the
    A-1838-18
    38
    issue of medical clearance into the case, and that defendant had a right to counter
    that claim. Acknowledging his agreement with plaintiffs that defense counsel
    crossed the line by stating in his opening that there was no evidence that Dr.
    Desai would not have cleared plaintiff for surgery, he found the curative
    instruction he delivered, which was largely based on language plaintiffs
    suggested, was sufficient to cure any prejudice.
    As already noted, "[t]he standard of review on appeal from decisions on
    motions for a new trial is the same as that governing the trial judge — whether
    there was a miscarriage of justice under the law." Hayes, 231 N.J. at 386
    (quoting Risko v. Thompson Muller Auto. Grp., Inc., 
    206 N.J. 506
    , 522 (2011)).
    In reviewing the trial record, however, we accord considerable deference to the
    trial judge's feel of the case, and that judge's "first-hand opportunity" to see and
    hear the witnesses as well as the lawyers, "assess[ing] their believability and
    their effect on the jury." Jastram v. Kruse, 
    197 N.J. 216
    , 230 (2008).
    Having reviewed this record, we again find no reason to disturb the jury's
    verdict.   We have no quarrel with the judge's decision to give a curative
    instruction, as it was well within his considerable discretion. See Bender v.
    Adelson, 
    187 N.J. 411
    , 433 (2006). We note, however, that plaintiffs initially
    requested a curative instruction based largely on their contention that the
    A-1838-18
    39
    medical clearance issue was a Scafidi4 claim, and thus plaintiffs had no burden
    to prove whether medical clearance would have been given, but only that the
    failure to obtain the clearance increased the risk that plaintiff would develop
    DVT and was a substantial factor in the complications that ensued. The court
    and counsel ultimately determined that Scafidi did not apply, undermining
    plaintiffs' chief reason for requesting the curative instruction in the first
    instance.
    We do not find any abuse of discretion in the trial court's handling of the
    issues surrounding Dr. Desai, and plaintiffs have not clearly and convincingly
    established any miscarriage of justice under the law. Defense counsel's opening
    and closing arguments to the jury were accurate and did not misrepresent the
    evidence. See Morales-Hurtado v. Reinoso, 
    457 N.J. Super. 170
    , 191 (App. Div.
    2018), aff'd o.b., 
    241 N.J. 590
     (2020). Moreover, the testimony adduced from
    Dr. Drew was not inappropriate. As the judge noted several times, plaintiffs
    claimed defendant deviated from the standard of care by failure to insist on
    plaintiff obtaining clearance from Dr. Desai. Defense counsel was certainly
    permitted to argue against a finding of deviation and the absence of any
    connection between the alleged deviation and plaintiff's injuries. Any potential
    4
    Scafidi v. Seiler, 119 NJ. 93 (1990).
    A-1838-18
    40
    prejudice to plaintiffs was cured by the court's detailed curative instruction,
    which the jury is presumed to have followed. See Verdicchio, 
    179 N.J. at 36
    .
    As for plaintiffs' remaining arguments, defense counsel's referring to Dr.
    Drew in his closing argument as "the 99% man," a reference to the doctor's
    percentage of work for plaintiffs, was improper and unprofessional , although
    not sufficiently egregious to have denied plaintiffs a fair trial. See Rodd v.
    Raritan Radiologic Assocs., P.A., 
    373 N.J. Super. 154
    , 171 (App. Div. 2004)
    (noting "[a]lthough attorneys are given broad latitude in summation, they may
    not use disparaging language to discredit the opposing party, or witness").
    We find no impropriety in defense counsel's reference to the lottery in
    illustrating the use of statistics in measuring probabilities. Defense counsel used
    an example of how one could double their odds of winning the lottery by buying
    a second ticket but still have only a very small chance of winning, in order to
    assail plaintiffs' experts' argument about chemical prophylaxis making a
    difference in plaintiff's chances of developing DVT. The argument was fair
    comment on the evidence in the record, see Hayes, 231 N.J. at 387-88, and, in
    any event, related to the issue of causation that the jury never reached.
    In sum, we are convinced by our review of this extensive record that Judge
    McCloskey deftly handled the many difficult issues posed in this long and hard-
    A-1838-18
    41
    fought trial by very experienced and knowledgeable medical malpractice
    lawyers on both sides. We find no error, either singularly or in combination,
    that could have denied plaintiffs a fair trial. Plaintiffs' remaining arguments, to
    the extent we have not addressed them, lack sufficient merit to warrant
    discussion in a written opinion. See R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed.
    A-1838-18
    42