Publication | Closed Access
Prophylactic Cesarean Section at Term?
121
Citations
14
References
1985
Year
Cesarean HealthMedical Malpractice LawMalpractice ChargeGynecologySurgeryProphylactic Cesarean SectionMalpracticeCaesarean SectionObstetricsPublic HealthEmergency Cesarean SectionObstetric SurgeryMaternal HealthClinical NegligenceMidwiferyMalpractice Suit.this PatientMedical EthicsMedical MalpracticePatient SafetyPediatricsFetal ComplicationMedicineEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
A 40‑year‑old nulliparous woman at 41 weeks spontaneously entered labor, and the family later sued for malpractice after an unexpected placental abruption and ineffective medical response. Placental abruption during early labor led to an emergency cesarean, resulting in a depressed infant with permanent neurologic damage, and the subsequent malpractice trial ended with dismissal. No additional metadata provided.
A 40-year-old nullipara with an uncomplicated antepartum course entered labor spontaneously at 41 weeks' gestation. During early labor, the placenta suddenly detached. An emergency cesarean section was started less than 10 minutes after the onset of fetal bradycardia, but the baby's condition was depressed at birth, and eventually there was profound, permanent neurologic damage. The family initiated a malpractice suit.This patient and her baby experienced an unpredictable disaster. The medical response her physicians initiated was appropriate but ineffective. After a lengthy trial, the court concurred in this assessment of events, and the malpractice charge was dismissed.During the course . . .
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