Birth
Injuries – Responsible Parties
Medical malpractice liability arising from birth defects (or
injuries) is not limited to medical doctors/obstetricians. Such liability can
extend to nurses, health care facilities, and others providing health care services
to you or your baby. Following will provide you with some information about the
liability of potentially responsible parties in a claim for birth defects (or
injuries).
Hospitals
Hospitals are corporations that are either public or private
entities. In the context of medical malpractice actions, hospitals can be held
directly liable for their own negligence, and can also be held
"vicariously" liable for the negligence of their employees. Vicarious
liability means a party is held responsible not for its own negligence, but for
the negligence of another.
Hospital Negligence
A hospital's medical staff will consist of licensed
physicians and other licensed health care providers, such as nurses,
physician's assistants, and nurse practitioners. In hiring its medical staff, a
hospital must make reasonable inquiries into an applicant's education, training
and licensing. If a hospital fails to make reasonable inquiries regarding a
member of its medical staff, it might be held liable under the "corporate
negligence" doctrine for negligent supervision or retention, if the staff
member's negligent care injures a patient. A hospital might be held liable for
its own negligence where, for example, it fails to investigate the credentials
of an attending physician before granting him/her privileges at the hospital,
or where it allows a physician whom it knew (or should have known) was
incompetent to treat patients at the hospital.
Hospitals are also required to ensure that there is a
sufficient number of registered nurses on duty at all times, to maintain
quality patient care. A hospital that fails to do so may be held liable for
injuries to patients resulting from a nursing shortage. Another area of
potential liability arises when a hospital's employees fail to follow the
orders of a patient's private attending physician. Conversely, if a hospital
employee finds a private physician's treatment plan to be clearly not medically
recommended, but fails to make a reasonable inquiry of the physician as to the
treatment plan, the hospital could also be found liable.
Finally, hospitals may be held liable for failing to:
protect patients from harm; adequately perform clinical tests; keep accurate
medical records; and properly admit and discharge patients. In the area of admissions,
hospitals are generally required to treat seriously injured or ill people on an
emergency basis, and the refusal to do so may result in hospital liability.
Additionally, federal and state statutes prohibit hospitals from refusing to
treat or admit people based on their race, color, religion or national origin,
or on their inability to pay for treatment.
Vicarious Liability
When a hospital employee's malpractice injures a patient,
the hospital itself may be held vicariously liable under the legal doctrine of
"respondeat superior." Under this doctrine,
an employer may be held liable for the negligent acts of its employee, if the
employee was acting within the scope of his or her employment when the
negligent act or omission occurred. This doctrine is very important to
plaintiffs in medical malpractice cases, because it helps ensure there will be
a financially responsible party to compensate an injured plaintiff.
In some situations, health care providers such as physicians
are considered independent contractors rather than hospital employees, and the
doctrine of "respondeat superior" will not
be applicable. What this means is, if a doctor or other health care
professional is an independent contractor, and commits malpractice while
treating a patient in a hospital, the hospital cannot be held liable for the
doctor's negligence. However, the hospital can be held liable for its own
negligence, for example, in granting attending privileges to an unlicensed or
incompetent physician.
Finally, in certain situations, a hospital may be
vicariously or directly liable for the acts or omissions of contractors it
retains to operate emergency rooms and outpatient facilities.
In some states, there are statutes that protect state-run
health facilities. Throughout the country, there are hospitals that are
teaching facilities and employ physicians who are actually considered employees
of the state. These physicians, including residents and interns, are sometimes
accorded sovereign immunity, which limits their liability by shortening the
time period in which suit can be filed, and placing maximum limits on the
amount of damages and attorneys' fees that can be recovered.
Pharmaceutical Companies
In some cases, a pharmaceutical manufacturer may be liable
where a drug caused a patient injuries, but only if the manufacturer failed to
warn physicians of the drug's potential side effects or dangers. This liability
also arises when a drug caused birth defect (or injury) in an unborn child, due
to a mother’s use of the drug during pregnancy.
A pharmaceutical manufacturer's primary duty is to
physicians. Thus, a manufacturer generally will not be liable for a patient's
injuries, as long as it adequately informed the physician of all risks
associated with a particular drug. As to the ultimate consumer, a
pharmaceutical company only owes a duty to ensure that the medication it
manufactures will be reasonably safe when used as intended. To ensure a drug's
safety, the manufacturer must research the drug's possible side effects and
risks before putting it on the market. If the pharmaceutical manufacturer fails
to adequately warn a physician of a drug's dangers, however, the drug becomes
what is known under product liability law as "unreasonably
dangerous," and the manufacturer might be held liable for the failure to
provide proper warnings.
In most cases, the prescribing physician is considered a
"learned intermediary," which means that because of his or her
superior medical knowledge, and assuming he or she has been given adequate
information from the manufacturer, he or she is in the best position to
determine whether a particular drug or device is appropriate for a patient.
Thus, the physician has the primary duty of advising the patient of the risks
and side effects of a medication or medical device he or she prescribes.
FindLaw, Inc.
Copyright 2003