ANDREWS, Presiding Judge.
Janaly Aguilar appeals after the trial court granted Children's Healthcare's and Dr. Joseph Schultz's motions to dismiss this medical malpractice suit. Aguilar alleged that her ten-month-old son Jonathon died as a result of the improper insertion of an intubation tube. The trial court granted the motions to dismiss, holding that the doctor who submitted the expert affidavit was not qualified because he was not regularly engaged in the active practice of emergency pediatric medicine, the subject specialty, for three to five years prior to the alleged negligence. We agree and affirm.
The pleadings show that Jonathon was having difficulty breathing and was suffering with abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, contending that Dr. Chou, the doctor who submitted the expert affidavit,
In this case, Dr. Chou's curriculum vitae attached to his affidavit shows that he has been a licensed physician since 2003. The negligent act complained of in this case occurred on November 25, 2008. For four of the five years that Dr. Chou had practiced medicine, he was a resident in internal medicine and pediatrics. The trial court's order stated that because the residency was not in the subject specialty area of emergency pediatric medicine or emergency medicine, but instead consisted of a series of rotations in a variety of medical fields, Dr. Chou could not show that he was regularly engaged in the subject specialty for three of the five years prior to the alleged negligence. Specifically, the record shows that Dr. Chou spent only 30 days a year in a rotation through the department of emergency medicine. After his residency, Dr. Chou went to work in an urgent care clinic. Dr. Chou acknowledged that he has done no intubations at all since he started working at the urgent care clinic and that the clinic does not possess intubation equipment.
Aguilar argues that Dr. Chou does not have to practice in the same specialty area as Dr. Schultz in order to be qualified to submit an expert affidavit. That is true; however, as this Court stated in Cotten v. Phillips, 280 Ga.App. 280, 633 S.E.2d 655 (2006):
Id. at 283, 633 S.E.2d 655. Thus, in Cotten, this Court held that the trial court properly admitted testimony by a vascular surgeon concerning an orthopedist's failure to assess vascular issues incident to knee replacement surgery. Id. That is not the case here and does not alter the fact that Dr. Chou does not have the requisite experience in the area in which his opinion is given, either pediatric emergency medicine or the even broader area of emergency medicine.
Emory-Adventist v. Hunter, 301 Ga.App. 215, 687 S.E.2d 267 (2009), relied on by Aguilar, does not demand a different result. In that case, although the expert was a resident in training, the court found that the doctor had regularly engaged in the repeated performance of acts relevant to the acts or omissions alleged to constitute malpractice. Id. at 219, 687 S.E.2d 267.
Further, Aguilar's claims that Dr. Chou stated in his supplemental affidavit that he personally intubated numerous patients, including infants and that one third of his patients at the urgent care clinic are children are not persuasive.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Hope v. Kranc, 304 Ga.App. 367, 370(1)(b), 696 S.E.2d 128 (2010).
Further, "it is not sufficient that the expert have just a minimum level of knowledge in the area in which the opinion is to be given. Instead, the expert must have "regularly engaged in the active practice of the area of specialty in which the opinion is to be given" and must have done so with sufficient frequency to establish an appropriate level of knowledge." (Punctuation omitted.) Nathans v. Diamond, 282 Ga. 804, 806(1), 654 S.E.2d 121 (2007). See also Dawson v. Leder, 294 Ga.App. 717, 719-720, 669 S.E.2d 720 (2008) (doctor who taught medical students and residents in the areas of surgery and critical care asserted that she had "airway training" and that "managing airway compromise and looking at ways to prevent [it] fell within her area of expertise;" but, this did not establish "that she taught and/or practiced in the area of post-surgical airway management with sufficient frequency to establish an appropriate level of knowledge).
Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that Dr. Chou was not actively engaged in the subject specialty for three of the five years prior to the alleged negligence. See Nathans, supra; Hope, supra.
Judgment affirmed.
DOYLE, P.J., and BOGGS, J., concur.