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- NATION, Page 28American NotesMALPRACTICEJustice for Johnathan
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- In 1982 a physician at Alaska's Elmendorf Air Force Base
- hospital told Karen Scott, then almost eight months pregnant
- with her second child, that she needed her cervix sewn shut to
- prevent premature birth. The diagnosis was faulty, and the
- operation resulted in an infection that destroyed some of the
- unborn child's brain cells. Born six weeks prematurely,
- Johnathan Scott is afflicted with a form of cerebral palsy
- known as spastic quadriplegia. Although he is mentally alert,
- Johnathan, now eight years old, will never walk or develop
- normally.
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- Two years later, Scott filed a $35 million damage suit
- against the Federal Government. In 1986 her lawyers offered to
- settle the case for $3.5 million. But the Reagan Justice
- Department balked at the settlement because of an ongoing
- effort to hold down the Government's costs in liability suits.
- That year a federal judge awarded the Scotts $11.1 million in
- damages. The Government appealed, but last week, fearful that
- the court would not reduce the award much if at all, the Bush
- Administration decided to settle the case for $8.5 million.
- That was "the most efficient way" of settling the dispute,
- explained a Justice Department spokesman. Said Karen Scott: "I
- don't think I'll ever get over my anger. Johnathan should be
- out in the yard playing with his eleven-year-old brother."
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