Pennsylvania Mother Wins $21.6M over Botched Birth
A Pennsylvania jury says the hospital now known as UPMC Hamot must pay $21.6 million in a malpractice case in which a botched birth left a boy profoundly disabled for life.
Last month’s verdict includes $19.6 million to provide for Ja’Kareon Graham’s future medical expenses.
The payments would also provide money to cover the 4-year-old boy’s past medical expenses and his lost lifetime earning capacity.
The attorney for what was then Hamot Medical Center argued that the hospital staff “met all applicable standards of care” but declined to comment on the verdict or whether the hospital will appeal.
The Erie Times-News says the jury agreed with the boy’s mother that the hospital’s nursing staff was unprepared for complications arising from the breach birth and didn’t do enough to prevent oxygen deprivation that left the boy being unable to speak and being fed through a tube.
- United Jet Hits Truck and Light Pole on Turnpike in Landing at Newark Airport
- Upstate New York Agent Pleads Guilty to Stealing More Than $50M From Neighbors
- Florida Woman Drives Elevated Pickup Over Lamborghini Sports Car in Parking Lot
- Plane Crashes in Texas Hill Country, Killing 5 Pickleball Players