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After passing 41 weeks’ gestation, a 30-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital and given oxytocin to induce labor. The fetal heart rate tracing was not reassuring and there was a deceleration to 45 beats per minute, which prompted nursing staff to urge the Ob/Gyn to conduct a cesarean section.
When the physician chose not to proceed with a cesarean, the nurses contacted a supervisor, who also recommended cesarean delivery. The doctor ordered an immediate cesarean, but changed the order from “stat” to “ASAP” when the child’s heart rate improved.
At delivery a nuchal cord was discovered. The infant, born with brain damage, was never able to walk, talk, or blink. He died of pneumonia at age 2.
The family claimed the doctor was negligent in not initiating cesarean sooner.
The defendant argued that the child suffered chronic hypoxia throughout pregnancy, and noted that placental pathology revealed significant abnormalities, including profound chorangiosis.
- The jury awarded the plaintiffs $2.4 million.
After passing 41 weeks’ gestation, a 30-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital and given oxytocin to induce labor. The fetal heart rate tracing was not reassuring and there was a deceleration to 45 beats per minute, which prompted nursing staff to urge the Ob/Gyn to conduct a cesarean section.
When the physician chose not to proceed with a cesarean, the nurses contacted a supervisor, who also recommended cesarean delivery. The doctor ordered an immediate cesarean, but changed the order from “stat” to “ASAP” when the child’s heart rate improved.
At delivery a nuchal cord was discovered. The infant, born with brain damage, was never able to walk, talk, or blink. He died of pneumonia at age 2.
The family claimed the doctor was negligent in not initiating cesarean sooner.
The defendant argued that the child suffered chronic hypoxia throughout pregnancy, and noted that placental pathology revealed significant abnormalities, including profound chorangiosis.
- The jury awarded the plaintiffs $2.4 million.
After passing 41 weeks’ gestation, a 30-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital and given oxytocin to induce labor. The fetal heart rate tracing was not reassuring and there was a deceleration to 45 beats per minute, which prompted nursing staff to urge the Ob/Gyn to conduct a cesarean section.
When the physician chose not to proceed with a cesarean, the nurses contacted a supervisor, who also recommended cesarean delivery. The doctor ordered an immediate cesarean, but changed the order from “stat” to “ASAP” when the child’s heart rate improved.
At delivery a nuchal cord was discovered. The infant, born with brain damage, was never able to walk, talk, or blink. He died of pneumonia at age 2.
The family claimed the doctor was negligent in not initiating cesarean sooner.
The defendant argued that the child suffered chronic hypoxia throughout pregnancy, and noted that placental pathology revealed significant abnormalities, including profound chorangiosis.
- The jury awarded the plaintiffs $2.4 million.