A year after the overturning of Roe v. Wade, many physicians and hospitals in the states that have restricted abortion reportedly of women facing health-threatening complications out of fear they might face criminal prosecution or loss of their medical license.
Some experts predict those providers could soon face a new legal threat: medical malpractice lawsuits alleging they harmed patients by failing to provide timely, necessary abortion care.
鈥淲e will absolutely see medical malpractice cases emerge,鈥 said Diana Nordlund, an emergency physician in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and former malpractice defense attorney, who chairs the Medical-Legal Committee of the American College of Emergency Physicians. When physicians decide not to provide treatments widely accepted as the standard of care because of these new laws, 鈥渢hat鈥檚 perceived as substandard care and there is increased civil liability.鈥
To some physicians and malpractice attorneys, the question is when 鈥 not if 鈥 a pregnant patient will die from lack of care and set the stage for a big-dollar wrongful death claim. Abortion rights supporters said such a case could pressure doctors and hospitals to provide appropriate abortion care, counterbalancing their fears of running afoul of state abortion bans, many of which call for criminal prosecution and revocation of medical licenses as punishment for violations.
鈥淚f we want to encourage proper care, there has to be some sort of counter-risk to physicians and hospitals for refusing to provide care that should be legal,鈥 said Greer Donley, an associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law who studies the impact of abortion bans. 鈥淏ut most rational people would be more afraid of going to jail.鈥
Some supporters of abortion bans said they would welcome malpractice lawsuits. Providers are refusing to use the exceptions in some state laws that allow them to perform abortions to save a patient鈥檚 life or health, they said.
鈥淚t could help achieve our goal if it clarifies that the law did not contradict standard medical practice,鈥 said John Seago, president of Texas Right to Life, referring to the state鈥檚 abortion ban.
A new KFF poll found that 59% of OB-GYNs practicing in states with gestational limits on abortion, and 61% of those in states with bans, are somewhat or very concerned about their legal risk when making decisions about the necessity of an abortion.
Some attorneys are exploring lawsuits on behalf of women who they said have been harmed by a state abortion ban. An attorney for Mylissa Farmer, a Missouri woman who was refused an abortion at two hospitals in August after her water broke about 18 weeks into her pregnancy, said she may sue for malpractice. Missouri鈥檚 abortion ban, which took effect last year, makes an exception for medical emergencies.
The federal government that the two hospitals violated a federal emergency care law in denying Farmer an abortion, which experts said could strengthen a malpractice claim. One of the hospitals, Freeman Health System in Joplin, Missouri, did not respond to a request for comment. The other, the University of Kansas Health System in Kansas City, said the care provided 鈥渨as reviewed by the hospital and found to be in accordance with hospital policy,鈥 according to a spokesperson, Jill Chadwick.
Farmer 鈥渆xperienced permanent physical and emotional damage,鈥 said Michelle Banker, one of her lawyers at the National Women鈥檚 Law Center, who added that Farmer and her attorneys are 鈥渃onsidering all our legal options.鈥
and show that some women with pregnancy complications have suffered serious health consequences when doctors and hospitals did not provide once-routine abortion care.
Last month, researchers released a study identifying in 14 states in which physicians said deficiencies in care due to abortion restrictions led to preventable complications and hospitalizations, with some patients nearly dying.
鈥淭he patients were sent home and told to come back when they had signs of infection,鈥 said Daniel Grossman, an OB-GYN at the University of California-San Francisco, who led the study. 鈥淢any developed serious infections. And it鈥檚 clear many of these cases were very emotionally traumatic.鈥
He said though the researchers did not track patient outcomes, the lack of timely abortion care in such cases could result in severe health harms including loss of fertility, stroke, or heart attack.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just a matter of time before there will be a death that comes to light,鈥 Grossman said.
Still, considering the conflict for doctors between medical ethics and personal risk, some stakeholders said patients may be reluctant to sue doctors and juries may balk at finding them liable.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a terrible position that providers are being put into, and I don鈥檛 think juries will blame the doctor unless it鈥檚 a super clear case,鈥 said Morgan Murphy, a malpractice plaintiff鈥檚 attorney in Missouri.
She said her firm will not pursue malpractice cases based on abortion denials except in 鈥減retty extreme鈥 situations, such as when a patient dies. 鈥淯nless a mother is on her deathbed, it鈥檚 pretty hard to fault a provider who thinks if they provide treatment they鈥檙e going to be criminally liable or will lose their medical license.鈥
Another hurdle for malpractice cases is that state abortion bans could undermine the argument that abortion is the legal 鈥渟tandard of care,鈥 meaning that it is a widely accepted and prescribed treatment for pregnancy complications such as miscarriage and for fatal fetal abnormalities.
鈥淚 absolutely see a breach of the standard of care in these cases,鈥 said Maria A. Phillis, an OB-GYN and former lawyer in Cleveland. 鈥淏ut if someone goes to trial in a malpractice case, it will come down to a battle of medical experts about whether it鈥檚 no longer the standard of care, and the jury would have to decide.鈥
An additional justification for physicians not to provide abortions is that medical liability insurers generally do not cover damages from criminal acts, which 鈥減uts the finger on the scales even more to not do anything,鈥 Phillis said.
Stuart Grossman, a prominent malpractice plaintiff鈥檚 attorney in Florida, said he would be eager to take an abortion-denial case in which the woman suffered serious health or emotional injuries.
Unlike other states with abortion bans, Florida does not cap damage amounts for pain and suffering in malpractice cases, making it more financially viable to sue there.
Grossman cited the case of Deborah Dorbert, a Florida woman who despite being told by her physicians at 24 weeks of pregnancy that her fetus, with no kidneys and underdeveloped lungs, had a fatal condition called Potter syndrome.
Her doctors and the hospital refused to end the pregnancy even though the for fatal fetal abnormalities. Months later, her baby shortly after birth.
鈥淵ou can see how she鈥檚 been devastated mentally,鈥 Grossman said. 鈥淪he has a wrongful death case that I鈥檇 take in a minute.鈥 He said the couple could file a malpractice suit for Dorbert鈥檚 physical and emotional damages and a separate malpractice and wrongful death suit for the couple鈥檚 suffering over the infant鈥檚 death.
Failing to counsel patients about their options and connect them with providers willing to terminate a pregnancy is also possible grounds for a malpractice suit, attorneys said. Katie Watson, an associate professor at Northwestern University鈥檚 Feinberg School of Medicine who has , said counseling and referral are not prohibited under these laws and that physicians have an ethical obligation to offer those services.
鈥淚 think breaching the obligation for counseling would make a strong malpractice lawsuit,鈥 she said.
Nancy Davis said she received no counseling or referral assistance last July after her doctors at Woman鈥檚 Hospital in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, told her 10 weeks into her pregnancy that her fetus would not survive because it was missing the top of its skull, a fatal condition called acrania. She said they recommended that she terminate the pregnancy and she agreed.
Davis said her doctors then told her a hospital executive had denied permission for the procedure because of Louisiana鈥檚 abortion ban, even though the law has an exception for fatal fetal abnormalities. A hospital spokesperson declined to comment.
Davis, who has three children, contacted Planned Parenthood of Greater New York, which arranged for child care and a flight to New York City. She had an abortion performed there in September.
鈥淭he whole situation has been mentally and physically draining, and my family and I are receiving counseling,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淚鈥檓 still very angry at the hospital and the doctors. I feel like I鈥檓 owed compensation for the trauma and the heartbreak.鈥
She sought the counsel of Benjamin Crump, a prominent attorney known for pursuing high-profile cases like wrongful death lawsuits on behalf of the families of Trayvon Martin and George Floyd.
But Crump said that after studying Davis鈥 legal options, he decided a judge would likely dismiss a malpractice suit and that Davis could end up paying the defendants鈥 legal fees and costs.
鈥淭he doctor鈥檚 lawyers will say, 鈥榊ou can鈥檛 expect my client to break the law and go to prison for up to 25 years,鈥欌 Crump said. 鈥淯nless you change the law, there is no option for her to receive compensation.鈥
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