SULLIVAN, J.
This is one of two cases we decide today involving the interaction of the statute of limitations provision of the Indiana Wrongful Death Act (“WDA”) and the statute of limitations provision for an underlying substantive tort claim. In this case, the limitations period for the underlying tort claim had expired before the lawsuit was filed, but the limitations period under the WDA had not. In Technisand, Inc. v. Estate of Melton ex rel. Melton, the other case we decide today, the sequence was reversed: the limitations period under the WDA had expired before the lawsuit was filed, but the limitations period for the underlying tort claim had not. — N.E.2d —, No. 30S01-0801-CV-28, slip op. (Ind. Dec. 24, 2008). Our decision in Ellenwine v. Fairley, 846 N.E.2d 657 (Ind. 2006), provides the answer in both cases, as explained below with respect to this case and in our separate opinion with respect to Melton.
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Ellenwine presented a question involving the interaction of Indiana’s Child Wrongful Death Act (“CWDA”), I.C. § 34-23-2-1, and the special limitations period of the MMA applicable to young children. In the course of resolving that question, it was necessary for us not only to discuss the CWDA and the MMA child limitations periods, but also the WDA limitations period, the MMA adult limitations period, and the tort of medical malpractice generally. In doing so, we discussed several scenarios, one of which resolves the issue presented in this case. See Ellenwine, 846 N.E.2d 657 (Ind. 2006).
In Ellenwine, the child victim’s personal representative filed a wrongful death claim based on the defendant’s medical malpractice within the limitations period under the CWDA. Id. at 659 . The issue in the case was whether the claim also had to have been filed within two years of the alleged malpractice. See id. To help resolve this issue, we examined the situation of an adult who dies as a result of medical malpractice. Id. at 664-65 . We said:
If the death was caused by the malpractice, (a) the malpractice claim (whether brought by the patient or another as the representative of the patient) terminates at the patient’s death, Ind. Code § 34-9-3-1 (a)(6) (2004); and (b) a wrongful death claim must be filed within two years of the occurrence of the malpractice, see Frady v. Hedgcock, 497 N.E.2d 620, 622 Ind. Ct. App. 1986), trans. denied.
Ellenwine, 846 N.E.2d at 665.
This quotation precisely describes this case: O’Neal’s death was caused by medical mal-practice; the malpractice claim terminated at her death; and the wrongful death claim was required to be filed by her personal representative within two years of the occurrence of the mal-practice.
The Ellenwine case spent some time explaining the policy behind its conclusion. We said in part:
One of the principal legislative purposes behind the MMA in general and the two-year occurrence-based statute of limitations in particular was to foster prompt litigation of medical malpractice claims. Because a patient who has been the victim of medical negligence could well live many more than two years beyond the occurrence of the malpractice only to ultimately die as a result of it, applying the two-years-after-death limitations period of the wrongful death statute where a patient dies from the malpractice seems to us totally inconsistent with this legislative goal. Furthermore, just as a fair reading of the MMA indicates that the medical review panel requirements of the MMA must be complied with in order to bring a wrongful death claim based on medical malpractice, so too for the limitations provision. Finally, to the extent that there is any question about our reading of the legislative intent, we believe that a sufficient period of time has passed since Frady was decided that there has been legislative acquiescence.
Id. at 664.
This policy discussion in Ellenwine speaks repeatedly of the MMA. The MMA, which is applicable to acts of malpractice occurring after June 30, 1975, set up a system under which health care providers meeting qualifications set forth in the act enjoy certain benefits. In re Stephens, 867 N.E.2d 148, 150 (Ind. 2007). We noted above that both the trial court and the Court of Appeals concluded – and we agree – that the malpractice claim in this case is not subject to the provisions of the MMA because Bethlehem does not meet the applicable qualifications. Rather, the trial court and the Court of Appeals concluded – and we again agree – that the malpractice claim in this case is subject to provisions of the PSS.1
The Court of Appeals found the fact that this case is governed by the PSS and not the MMA to be a sufficient distinction from Ellenwine to enable it to conclude that Ellenwine did not apply. It looked at the policy justifications set forth above and found them grounded in the “comprehensiveness” of the procedural requirements of the MMA. Estate of O’Neal ex rel. Newkirk, 878 N.E.2d at 314 (quoting Holmes v. AC and S, Inc., 709 N.E.2d 36, 44 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), aff’d on reh’g, 711 N.E.2d 1289 , trans. denied). That is, the Court of Appeals concluded, the limitations period of the WDA will apply unless the Legislature has imbued the underlying substantive tort claim with comprehensive procedural requirements. Where the MMA governs, the Court of Appeals says, the limitations period of the MMA will apply because the MMA is “comprehensive.” See Estate of O’Neal ex rel. Newkirk, 878 N.E.2d at 314. Here, where the PSS governs, it says that the limitations period of the PSS does not apply because the PSS is not “comprehensive.” See id.
Unlike our colleagues, we do not find the “comprehensiveness” of the procedural requirements that the Legislature attaches to an underlying substantive tort claim relevant to deciding the issue at hand. In Ellenwine, we:
emphasize[d] . . . that the substantive claim or cause of action at stake . . . [was] the common law claim of negligence by a health care provider proximately causing personal injury or death[,] . . . usually refer[red] to . . . as “medical malpractice” or just “malpractice.” The MMA did not create or establish the medical malpractice claim; it only imposed procedural requirements on the prosecution of them. Chamberlain v. Walpole, 822 N.E.2d 959, 961 (Ind. 2005).
846 N.E.2d at 660. In this case, the substantive tort claim underlying the wrongful death action is precisely the same as it was in the Ellenwine scenario: medical malpractice. The PSS did not create or establish the medical malpractice claim but the Legislature did establish a two-year limitations period for filing such claims. As we said in Ellenwine:
Because a patient who has been the victim of medical negligence could well live many more than two years beyond the occurrence of the malpractice only to ultimately die as a result of it, applying the two-years-after-death limitations period of the wrongful death statute where a patient dies from the malpractice seems to us totally inconsistent with this legislative goal.
846 N.E.2d at 664. We see no basis, including the lack of “comprehensiveness” of the PSS, for concluding that the legislative goal would be anything different on these facts.
The Estate filed its complaint on October 22, 2003, more than two years after the last date upon which Bethlehem’s alleged negligent conduct could have occurred, but less than two years from O’Neal’s death. As discussed above, if death is caused by the malpractice, the malpractice claim terminates at the patient’s death, and a wrongful death claim must be filed by the personal representative within two years of the occurrence of the malpractice. Id. at 665 . O’Neal’s death was alleged to have been caused by Bethlehem’s medical malpractice. As such, the wrongful death claim was required to have been filed by her personal representative within two years of the occurrence of the malpractice. The Estate did not do so and the trial court properly concluded that its claim was not timely filed.
We grant transfer, thereby vacating the decision of the Court of Appeals, App. R. 58(A), and affirm the judgment of the trial court with respect to its decision to grant summary judgment in favor of Bethlehem.
SHEPARD, C.J., and DICKSON, BOEHM, and RUCKER, JJ., concur.