Disabled
Children Want To Sue Doctors For Being Born
By Patrick Goodenough
CNSNews.com Pacific Rim Bureau Chief
March 13, 2002
Pacific Rim
Bureau (CNSNews.com) - An Australian court is hearing a test case that
seeks to establish whether children born disabled as a result of medical
negligence can sue doctors for "wrongful life."
A lawyer
representing doctors in the case has warned that if the court rules
in favor of the children's right to sue for damages, then children born
with disabilities could eventually end up suing their mothers for not
aborting them.
Moreover,
Peter Garling warned, successful "wrongful life" cases could
prompt doctors to recommend abortions even in cases of minor disability,
to safeguard against future lawsuits.
Doctors and
parents could be encouraged to practice eugenics, or selective breeding,
in their decisions.
Bringing
the case in the New South Wales Supreme Court are three children described
as "profoundly disabled" since birth.
Medical negligence
has not been proven in each case, but the court agreed to go ahead with
the landmark case to establish whether -- if negligence is legally established
-- the children have a right to damages in their own right.
Alexia Harriton,
who is now 20, was born blind, deaf and mentally retarded after her
mother was not diagnosed with rubella in the early stages of pregnancy.
Seventeen-month-old
baby Keeden Waller, who was conceived through in-vitro fertilization
treatment, inherited a clotting disorder from his father. Lawyers say
the IVF clinic should have screened the embryos to ensure the one used
did not carry the disorder, which has left the baby with cerebral palsy
and uncontrolled epilepsy.
The third
child, two-year-old Chelsea Edwards, was born -- after a failed vasectomy
-- with a rare syndrome whose sufferers can only communicate with a
sound like the mewing of a kitten.
Lawyers representing
the children argue that had doctors not been negligent, in the first
case, the mother would have known she was carrying a retarded child
and would have had an abortion; and in the other two cases, the children
would not have been conceived in the first place.
The children's
lawyers say the complaint is not about the children having been born,
but having to suffer disabilities resulting from having been born.
Lawyer Graham
Segal, representing Alexia Harriton, said extraordinary care was required
as a result of the disabilities.
"If
the [doctor's] advice had been accurate, there would have been no economic
loss."
Parents are
in certain circumstances, such as a case of a failed vasectomy, able
to mount "wrongful birth" claims, arguing that their child
was born as a result of medical negligence.
But children
born disabled in Australia have until now not been able to claim for
damages in their own right, despite facing costs of care and treatment
throughout their lives.
David Hirsch,
lawyer for the Edwards family, acknowledged the court was navigating
in unchartered legal waters for Australia, saying a judge had previously
dismissed court action on the grounds that "to allow a claim like
this one would be saying in effect there would be some lives not worth
living."
In 2000,
France's highest court awarded damages to a teenager born with severe
mental and physical disabilities after his mother contracted rubella
during pregnancy.
The case
and two other similar ones caused an uproar, and prompted specialists
who carry out neo-natal scans to go on strike in protest. French lawmakers
early this year voted to overturn the legal ruling which established
the "right not to be born."
A "wrongful
life" case in Britain in the 1980s was thrown out, with the court
ruling that it was impossible to assess damages because that would involve
comparing a life with disabilities on one hand, with non-existence on
the other.
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