This is a medical malpractice case in which a jury returned a verdict in the amount of $40,000 against all of the appellants after an eight-day trial.1 In a thorough and scholarly unreported opinion, Judge McDevitt denied appellants’ motions for judgment n. o. v. or for a new trial. We affirm.
The evidence, which is fully summarized in the trial judge’s opinion, showed that appellee2 was admitted to the Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia on August 16, 1962, to give birth to her fourth child. At the time of her admission, she was under the care of appellants Wapner, Brownstein, and Arno, physicians associated in a medical partnership. The evidence was conflicting concerning whether appellant Brownstein, who was in charge of appellee’s case, was present at the time appellee entered the hospital. The hospital records, however, do not indicate that any of appellant doctors were present before the delivery of appellee’s child at 8:30 a.1 m. on August 17. The entries on appellee’s labor room chart were made either by a nurse or by Eugene Shuster, a physician who had recently begun his gynecological residency at appellant hospital. Dr. Shuster’s alleged negligence formed the basis on which the hospital was made a defendant.
*282Appellee’s hospital chart indicates that at 2:45 a. m. she began to receive the drug Pitocin intravenously. Pitocin, the generic name of which is Oxytocin, is a drug employed by obstetricians to induce labor by causing contractions of the uterus. The labor room chart contains no notation that the administration of Pitocin was monitored, even though accepted medical practice calls for constant monitoring. Indeed, the chart is devoid of any indication that any check at all on appellee’s condition was made between 2:30 a. m. and 5:15 a. m.; the latter entry is followed by one made at 7:05 a. m. The first reference on the chart to the presence of appellant Brownstein is as of 8:00 a. m., when he is noted as performing part of the delivery procedure.
Following the delivery, appellee began heavy intrauterine bleeding. When the attempted repair of a tear in appellee’s uterus failed to stop the bleeding, appellant Arno was obliged to perform a total hysterectomy on appellee. In the course of the hysterectomy, appellee received a transfusion of six and one-half pints of blood.
Appellee was released from the hospital at the end of August, 1962, but was readmitted shortly thereafter suffering from severe infectious hepatitis. During her second hospitalization, appellee received medication that allegedly caused her to suffer partial hearing loss in both ears.
The theory of appellee’s case was that the ruptured uterus, the hysterectomy, and all the ensuing medical misfortunes experienced by appellee, were caused by appellants’ failure to monitor the administration of the Pitocin. This theory was supported by the expert testimony of Arthur Weinberg, a New York obstetrician and gynecologist. Dr. Weinberg testified that based on the absence of entries on appellee’s labor room record, he was of the opinion that the medical care rendered appellee was not in conformity with accepted medical practice in Philadelphia in 1962. Appellants produced experts *283who testified that the governing medical standards had been complied with. In addition, appellant Brownstein, called by appellee as on cross-examination, testified that he was present during the relevant period and checked on the administration of the Pitocin throughout the night. This testimony was corroborated by Dr. Shuster, who testified that “as certain as I can be,” either appellant Brownstein or he watched the Pitocin drip throughout the night (Record 307-308a). In other parts of his testimony, however, Dr. Shuster testified that he had no independent recollection of what had happened (Record 285a-287a).
I
Appellants contend that there was insufficient evidence to support a finding of negligence on their part. In support of this contention, they argue that appellee was bound by the testimony of appellant Brownstein and Dr. Shuster that appellant Brownstein had monitored the administration of Pitocin, and that even if appellee was not so bound, the “positive” evidence provided by the testimony of these two doctors could not be overcome by the “negative” evidence of the absence of entries on appellee’s labor room chart.
A
Appellant Brownstein, called by appellee as on cross-examination, testified that he had been present at the hospital and had monitored the administration of Pitocin to appellee. The conclusiveness vel non of this testimony is governed by the Act of May 23, 1887, P.L. 158, § 7, 28 P.S. § 381, which provides, in part, as follows:
In any civil proceeding, whether or not it be brought or defended by a person representing the interests of a deceased or lunatic assignor of any thing or contract in action, a party to the record, or a person for whose immediate benefit such proceeding is prosecuted or de*284fended ... or any other person whose interest is adverse to the party calling him as a witness, may be compelled by the adverse party to testify as if under cross-examination, subject to the rules of evidence applicable to witnesses under cross-examination, and the adverse party calling such witnesses shall not be concluded by his testimony, but such person so cross-examined shall become thereby a fully competent witness for the other party as to all relevant matters whether or not these matters were touched upon in his cross-examination . . .
Under this statute, appellant Brownstein’s testimony concerning monitoring of the administration of Pitocin would be binding upon appellee unless contradicted by other testimony. The applicable rule was summarized in Piwoz v. Iannocone, 406 Pa. 588, 594-95, 178 A.2d 707, 710 (1962):
It is well established that where a litigant calls his adversary as for cross-examination pursuant to [28 P. S. § 381], that the testimony thus obtained is conclusively taken to be true if it is not rebutted by other evidence [citation omitted]. It may always be contradicted by other testimony and if this is accomplished all of the testimony and the truth thereof is for the jury’s consideration . . . Again, this general rule that a party calling his opponent as for cross-examination is concluded by this testimony is subject to the exceptions that there may be such a degree of improbability in the statements themselves as to deprive them of credit, or that the circumstances themselves may constitute sufficient contradiction [citations omitted]. In short, it is not necessary that the contradiction be in the form of direct testimony [citations omitted]. (Emphasis in original)
Unlike appellant Brownstein, Dr. Shuster was neither a party defendant nor affiliated with appellant hospital at the time of trial. Consequently, Dr. Shuster testified *285as a witness for appellee without restriction. In support of the proposition that his testimony was therefore binding upon appellee, appellants cite Lott v. Peoples Natural Gas Co., 324 Pa. 517, 188 A. 582 (1936).
Lott, however, involved the doctrine of incontrovertible facts, and the doctrine that one is bound by one’s own witnesses was long ago repudiated. The correct rule was stated by Mr. Justice MERCUR in Pennsylvania R.R. Co. v. Fortney, 90 Pa. 323, 328 (1879), and was repeated in Duffy v. National Janitorial Services, Inc., 429 Pa. 334, 336 n. 2, 240 A.2d 527, 528 n. 2 (1968):
It is true, as a general rule, a party cannot be permitted to impeach the veracity of his own witness, yet he may disprove the facts to which his witness has testified.
See also 3A J. Wigmore, Evidence § 907 (Chadbourn rev. 1970). Indeed, recent cases have articulated the even more expansive rule that a party may impeach the credibility of his own witness. See, e. g., Commonwealth v. Hill, 237 Pa.Super. 543, 553, 353 A.2d 870, 877 (1975), quoting Commonwealth v. Gomino, 200 Pa.Super. 160, 173, 188 A.2d 784, 791, cert. denied, 375 U.S. 865, 84 S.Ct. 136, 11 L.Ed.2d 92 (1963) (collecting cases); see also F.R.Evid. 607 (“[t]he credibility of a witness may be attacked by any party, including the party calling him”). The old rule that a party vouched for the credibility of a witness called by him has historical roots that are anachronistic in light of the realities of contemporary litigation. 3A J. Wigmore, Evidence § 896, at 658-659 (Chadbourn rev. 1970); McCormick on Evidence § 38 (2d ed. 1972). As the late Judge GOODRICH observed in Johnson v. Baltimore & O. R.R., 208 F.2d 633, 635 (3d Cir. 1953), cert. denied, 347 U.S. 943, 74 S.Ct. 639, 98 L.Ed. 1091 (1954),
[b]ut when witnesses are called, in some stranger’s lawsuit, to tell about things they saw, heard, or did, there is no reason in logic or common sense or fairness *286why the party who calls them should have to vouch for everything they say.
B
Since appellee was not bound by the testimony either of appellant Brownstein or of Dr. Shuster in that she could contradict it, the question is whether she did contradict it by presenting sufficient evidence of the failure to monitor the administration of Pitocin.
Appellants contend, and the dissenting opinion agrees, that the hospital records constituted “negative evidence” that could not overcome the “positive evidence” provided by the testimony of appellant Brownstein and Dr. Shuster. This asserted principle of law finds its origins in railroad accident cases involving testimony that a railroad bell or whistle was not heard. Illustrative is Grimes v. Pennsylvania Ry. Co., 289 Pa. 320, 324, 137 A. 451, 452 (1927):
The legal rule stated has been frequently recognized and applied in this State, and it has been uniformly held that where the evidence to establish lack of proper care is negative only, it is overcome by the positive evidence to the contrary, though the latter comes from the mouths of defendant’s witnesses, and, under such circumstances, the question is not one for the jury to pass upon, where the physical facts corroborate their testimony . . . [T]he negative testimony, being controverted, does not amount to more than a scintilla, and therefore cannot prevail to establish an essential fact.
The cases enunciating this principle, however, are no longer good law. It is now recognized that their reasoning depended on form, not substance. Thus, in Costack v. Penna. Ry. Co., 376 Pa. 341, 348, 102 A.2d 127, 131 (1954), the Supreme Court, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice STERN, said: “The question is not one merely of *287form of expression — whether, for example, the witness says that ‘no warning was given’ as distinguished from his saying that ‘he heard no warning’ [citation omitted]. Rather it is whether he had acuteness of hearing, sufficient opportunity for hearing, and occasion for listening, and whether all the other circumstances tended to show that if a warning signal had been given he would probably have heard it, and therefore, not having heard it, he could fairly assert that no warning was given.” In Feerruzza v. Pittsburgh, 394 Pa. 70, 77, 145 A.2d 706, 709 (1958), the Supreme Court stated that “[t]he earlier cases . . . [were] subsequently modified (expressly or by implication) and the statement that he did not hear a bell rung or that it was not rung was interpreted to have the same meaning and amount to positive testimony —positive in character and substance — if the witness was in a position to hear and was consciously listening for a sound or warning.” (Citations omitted; emphasis in original.) Finally, in Fallon v. Penn. Cent. Transp. Co., 444 Pa. 148, 155, 279 A.2d 164, 168 (1971), the Supreme Court, citing and quoting from Costack and Ferruzza, held that “a witness does not have to say that he was listening for his testimony to be considered positive evidence. Although Fallon had his radio on and window open only a quarter of an inch, we think that the jury could properly infer that he was consciously listening from the fact that he had ‘occasion for listening’ — he was approaching a railroad crossing.” Thus, if not before, at least with Fallon, the positive versus negative evidence issue was laid to rest.
Here, as the trial judge points out in his opinion, “there was evidence of an official hospital policy mandating patient chart entries.” (Opinion of Lower Court at Record 1396a). Specifically, the Assistant General Director and Administrator of the hospital testified that “[p]atients’ charts must provide information which justifies the diagnosis, treatment and end results.” The administrator also read from a paper prescribing the duties *288of the resident physicians on obstetrics. This stated that “ [attending obstetricians must be present throughout this entire procedure due to the danger of excessive uterine contractions with resultant fetal distress or threatened uterine rupture.” When this evidence is taken with the evidence that there were no entries on the chart, the jury had ample basis for inferring that there had been no monitoring. Similarly, appellee’s expert, Dr. Weinberg, in formulating and testifying as to his opinion, could assume no monitoring.
II
Appellants also contend that the trial judge erred in not striking the expert opinion testified to by Dr. Weinberg. Specifically, they contend that Dr. Weinberg’s opinion was incompetent because of his refusal to assume the truth of the testimony of appellant Brown-stein and Dr. Shuster concerning the monitoring of the administration of Pitocin. Appellants reason that since Dr. Weinberg repeatedly said he did not believe the testimony that there had been monitoring, his opinion was without proper foundation, and that since the trial judge’s charge was insufficient to cure this defect, a new trial must be awarded.
It is true that a hypothetical question should contain all the “significant facts which should be taken into consideration, having regard to the real issue.” McGarity v. New York Life Ins. Co., 359 Pa. 308, 313, 59 A.2d 47, 49 (1948). Dr. Weinberg’s task, however, was complicated by the conflicting evidence concerning the monitoring of the administration of Pitocin. The issue that this case presents, therefore, is, What is the expert to do if one fact set forth in the hypothetical (that there was no monitoring) is contradicted by another fact (that there was monitoring) ? The trial judge so thoroughly re*289solved this issue that it is necessary only to quote from his opinion:
Defendants next argue that the testimony of Dr. Weinberg should have been stricken from the record because the Doctor had declined to accept some of the evidence included in the hypothetical question posed to him by plaintiff’s counsel. In particular, defendants contend that the jury should not have considered Dr. Weinberg’s opinion because he admitted that in first answering the hypothetical he had chosen to disregard the testimony of Drs. Brownstein and Shuster that they had continuously mointored the patient. (N.T. 804) We find no cause for complaint here, for on cross-examination Dr. Weinberg also testified as to what his opinion would have been assuming that Drs. Brownstein and Shuster had been telling the truth. Under this changed set of hypothetical facts, he testified that there would have been compliance with reasonable medical standards. (N.T. 792) Our appellate courts have long recognized that the opinion of an expert need not, cannot, be based upon all the evidence in the case where there exists conflicting testimony between the parties. It is sufficient that an opinion be premised on only part of the evidence, provided, of course, that the particular facts assumed be made known to the jury. Battistone v. Benedette, 385 Pa. 163, 169-70 [, 122 A.2d 536] (1956); Gillman v. Media, 224 Pa. 267, 274 [, 73 A. 342] (1909).
Defendants attempt to make an issue of the fact that the hypothetical question posed by plaintiff’s counsel contained contradictory statements regarding the presence of Drs. Brownstein and Shuster. It is, of course, well established that a hypothetical question should contain all material facts. Murray v. Siegal, 413 Pa. 23, 30 [, 195 A.2d 790] (1963). It is also the law that where an issue is in dispute, counsel propounding the hypothetical may include the disputed *290fact in the question as testified to by his witnesses. Battistone v. Benedette, supra,; Pennsylvania Trial Guide § 7.79 (Feldman Revision). In this case, contradictory evidence had been presented by plaintiff’s own evidence, i. e., the testimony of Dr. Brownstein and Dr. Shuster vs. the inferences arising from the labor room record. Therefore, in keeping with the applicable rule, plaintiff’s counsel was obliged to include references to both sides of this question in the hypothetical. Indeed, it was defendant’s position at the time of trial that the hypothetical had to refer to the doctors’ testimony, thereby making unavoidable the ensuing contradiction in the question (N.T. 588). The practical difficulty created by this situation was resolved on cross-examination during which Dr. Weinberg made clear that his opinion would vary depending on which conflicting piece of evidence was relied upon. It was, of course, up to the jury which side should be accepted. Dr. Weinberg’s testimony in no way removed that function from them; he expressed opinions assuming both sides of the factual dispute, and the basis for his alternative opinions were made known to the jury for their consideration. Opinion of Lower Court, at Record 1403a-1404a.
It is also true that it is not the role of an expert witness selectively to determine the facts upon which his opinion will rest; the opinion must rather be “based upon personal examination, or upon the assumed truth of the testimony of other witnesses adduced in court, or upon a combination of these two sources.” Hussey v. May Department Stores, Inc., 238 Pa.Super. 431, 357 A.2d 635 (1976). See also Yardley v. Cuthbertson, 108 Pa. 395, 450-451 (1885). The trial judge, however, was fully aware of these propositions, and, as he states in his opinion, “went to great lengths to insure that the jury would not be bound by the factual determinations of Dr. Weinberg or any other witnesses.” (Opinion of Lower Court, at Record 1404a).
*291The issue was really very simple, and the jury certainly understood it. The trial had been long and hard. On appellee’s side was evidence that tíre medicine used might cause “excessive uterine contractions with resultant fetal distress or threatened uterine rupture” (Record 1395a); that because of this danger the “[attending obstetrician must be present throughout the entire procedure” (id.); but that according to the hospital records, the obstetrician had not been present. On appellants’ side was evidence that the doctor had been present. Obviously, the case was going to turn upon whether the jury accepted the testimony that the doctor had been present, or whether it found that this testimony was from an interested witness and was overcome by the documentary evidence that if the doctor had been present, that fact would have been noted, not temporarily, on a blackboard but in the hospital records.
No doubt it would have been better for Dr. Weinberg not to have said that he himself disbelieved the interested witness and was persuaded by the documentary evidence. However, to some extent, at least, he could hardly say otherwise, lest his opinion be unintelligible. The trial judge summarized this neatly: “it is his position that he did not see the blackboard, he does see the chart, and based on the chart, he has the opinions which he has given you” (Record 1300a).
Concededly, during the testimony, and before the charge, the jury might have been impressed by Dr. Weinberg’s appraisal, that is, it might have said to itself, “Well, if this expert believes the hospital record over the witness, so will we.” The charge, however, removed this danger. As the dissenting opinion itself observes, the charge instructed the jury that
A doctor, even though a specialist or an expert, does not determine questions of credibility or believability. He must accept as true the information which is given to him in the hypothetical question.
*292Any questions of credibility, who you believe are for you and not for the Court and not for the attorneys and certainly not for a doctor.
We have added the emphasis^ in this passage because the phrase emphasized seems most significant, and one that the jury could not have overlooked; nor do we see how the parts of the charge emphasized by the dissenting opinion in any way diminish the force of this phrase.
In addition, it is, in our view, noteworthy that the judge’s charge put the expert testimony in proper perspective:
Experts of this type, as I have indicated, are not witnesses to an occurrence, but, because of their special training, they are entitled to express an opinion.
You weigh the opinion and accept it or disregard it. An opinion is only an opinion, it creates no fact. Because of this, opinion evidence is considered of a low grade.
While expert testimony based upon theory must be considered of low grade and should be afforded little weight against positive testimony of actual facts, this does not mean it must be disregarded.
As I said, both Dr. Weinberg and Dr. Lewis are in this expert category, they are brought in here to give expert testimony. You give that testimony the consideration you believe it merits, but bear in mind the difference between the testimony of a treating doctor and the testimony of an expert based upon a hypothetical question. (Emphasis added) (Record 1302a).
Indeed, the language of the following part of the trial judge’s comparison of the expert testimony of Dr. Weinberg with the testimony of appellant Brownstein and Dr. Shuster led to an objection by appellee’s counsel:
Give some consideration to probabilities. Is it likely that this lady, in labor and receiving Pitocin, was ignored for four to five hours, as that is what it *293amounts to? Is it likely that Dr. Brownstein was there at no time up until just about the time that she went to the delivery room around 8 o’clock? Of course, it could be, but it is well within your job of determining credibility. (Record 1306a) .3
If any doubt remained in the jury’s mind about how it was to appraise the testimony of Dr. Weinberg, surely it was removed by both of the foregoing parts of the charge (neither of which is cited by the dissenting opinion).
Ordinarily when we review a charge, the question is whether despite some confusing language, the charge was clear enough, or whether despite some error, the charge was when taken as a whole correct enough. In approaching such cases, the general rule to be applied is that no new trial will be ordered unless the confusion or the error were such as to have misled the jury to the prejudice of the losing party. Keba v. Pickett, 434 Pa. 148, 252 A.2d 675 (1969); Miller v. Montgomery, 397 Pa. 94, 152 A.2d 757 (1959); Stack v. Tizer, 204 Pa.Super. 203, 203 A.2d 403 (1964). Here, the charge was impeccable. It would be unwarranted and incongruous for us to hold that the jury was nevertheless not cautioned by the charge regarding its duties.
We have considered appellants’ other contentions but are of the opinion that they are completely disposed of in the trial judge’s opinion.
Affirmed.
VAN der VOORT, J., files a dissenting opinion in which WATKINS, President Judge, joins. PRICE, J., notes his dissent.. The jury found in favor of appellees David Stack and Rita Stack in the respective amounts of $15,000 and $25,000.
. For the sake of convenience, we shall use the designation “appellee” to refer solely to Mrs. Stack.
. After counsel for appellee objected (Record 1344a), the trial, judge, in essentially the same language as that quoted, attempted' to explain this portion of the charge to the jury (Record 1362a-1363a).