If not yet dead, the medical monitoring claim itself is hooked up to monitors and the prognosis is not good. It's dying from a self-inflicted injury, which paradoxically is its lack of injury. Class action plaintiffs' lawyers, the lawyers who have largely filed these claims, despise physical injuries. Physical injuries come with differences, and differences defeat class certification. On the other hand, they love financial damages, like those needed to implement a medical monitoring program. Financial damages come with sameness, and sameness increases the chances of class certification. This is the conundrum for medical-monitoring class action plaintiffs' lawyers. They have struggled mightily to allege the financial damages that they so want while trying not to allege the physical injury that will kill their chances of certifying a class.

Cure v. Intuitive Surgical Inc., 2017 WL 3381848 (11th Cir. 2017), illustrates how this struggle is killing medical monitoring claims. In Cure, the plaintiffs claimed that, during heart surgery, instruments manufactured by the defendants shed small metallic particles that were later found in plaintiffs' brains. Plaintiffs' lawyers brought a medical monitoring claim, asking the court to set aside funds for monitoring plaintiffs, and those similarly situated, so that doctors could identify anything bad that might happen in the future.

But that's where things go wrong. Plaintiffs could not allege that anything had actually gone bad. Not yet. So they hoped that the presence of small metal particles in their bodies would qualify. It doesn't. The mere "presence of metal shavings in the plaintiffs' brains does not, under Georgia law [applicable here], constitute a legally recognizable injury in itself." Id. at *2. The metal particles had to have "caused or would eventually cause actual disease, pain, or impairment of some kind to support a finding that they suffered an injury." Id. (quoting Boyd v. Orkin Exterminating Co., 381 S.E.2d 295 (Ga. Ct. App. 1989) (applying Georgia law), overruled on other grounds by Hanna v. McWilliams, 446 S.E.2d 741 (Ga. Ct. App. 1994)).

But the plaintiffs' lawyers didn't want to allege anything of the sort. Once they allege a disease, pain or impairment, they have entered the world of physical injury, which brings with it issues of causation, alternative causes, risk factors, predisposition and so many other things that wreck sameness and defeat class certification.

And so plaintiffs struggled mightily to avoid these class-killing problems by piecing together purported injuries that weren't really injuries. They claimed that they "suffered and will continue to suffer physical, neurological, and mental effects." Id. But those "vague, conclusory statements" weren't nearly enough to satisfy the TwIqbal pleading standard. Id. They alleged that they would suffer future medical costs and lost wages. But, again, they were unable to tether these allegations to any explicit symptoms or conditions or how they would interfere with the plaintiffs' work. Id.

In effect, plaintiffs' claims had achieved sameness. They all had the same lack of injury. And, for that very reason, the district court dismissed plaintiffs' medical monitoring claims, as had so many courts before it.  And, with its decision in Cure, the Eleventh Circuit upheld that dismissal. Id. at *3.

This article is presented for informational purposes only and is not intended to constitute legal advice.