A state law that hasn’t changed since 1975 caps compensation for families harmed by medical negligence. The limits apply to lost quality of life, even if a patient loses a leg, a child, or is disabled for life. Click on the picture of the map to find patients by the State Senate Districts they live in.
Kimberly Turbin
Reseda, CA
Assembly District 45, PatientsForFairness, Senate District 27
Assembly District 45, PatientsForFairness, Senate District 27
With regular prenatal visits and no morning sickness, weight gain, or complications, Kimberly had no reason to expect any issues during the delivery of her highly anticipated baby boy.
She was attending college at the time, finishing classes in preparation for dental school and a career as a dental hygienist. She was always eager to try new things and was even training to run her first marathon. When Kimberly found out she was pregnant, she radiated happiness. Her glow was even more perceptible when she found out her close friend was also pregnant – they were going to share the joy of the experience with each other.
A two-time rape survivor, Kimberly was extremely diligent in educating her birth providers on her trauma and the simple things she would require from them: transparency and clear communication during each step of the birth process.
However, only several pushes into delivery and with scissors in hand, the doctor announced that he was going to perform an episiotomy.
Episiotomies – a surgical incision between the anus and vulva during childbirth – were common in the late 70s. But by the 80s, episiotomies were no longer recommended and only used if the baby were in distress and needed to be delivered quickly. Medical professionals concluded that mothers recovered much faster from a natural tear than a forced incision.
Kimberly had not planned for an episiotomy. She continually and calmly asked her doctor why it was necessary to cut her. Her labor was progressing normally, she was healthy, and she had only just begun to push.
Her doctor’s responses were hostile and defensive. He asked why she was questioning his authority as a doctor. He asserted that if she didn’t like it, she could have the baby on the floor and told her, “You can go home and do it. You go to Kentucky.”
While she pleaded with him to let her try naturally, he proceeded to make 12 nonconsensual incisions in her body.
After the delivery of her beautiful son, Kimberly was physically and emotionally traumatized. The wound her doctor had created would not heal. She endured extreme pain when sitting down and had to completely change her diet. Her life and her pain revolved around those 12 incisions..
“I have full blown PTSD, I have anxiety, and I’m paranoid all the time. It’s all because of the injury,” explains Kimberly. The unwanted episiotomy built on a history of assault and reinforced a fearful protectiveness over her body: “I couldn’t trust anybody ever again with my body. Like for anything simple, even getting glasses.”
Kimberly decided she had to fight. Not just for herself but for all mothers and people whose pain is not believed and whose choices are not honored.
When she tried to hold her providers accountable, she was turned away by 80 lawyers. It was during that search that she learned about California’s 45-year old law that caps compensation for women harmed in childbirth. The law limits compensation for all the pain and trauma Kimberly endures because of the assault to a maximum $250,000. The amount has not changed since 1975. Attorneys don’t take these cases because they cost as much to bring as can possibly be recovered.
Kimberly believes that “the cap is holding back the help. It is really limiting people who are injured, people who get harmed.”
She was forced to proceed down a different route to justice. With the help of a women’s advocacy group, Improving Birth, she successfully mounted a battery and assault case against her doctor, bolstered by video evidence of the delivery that her mother had recorded.
Her case has been essential in raising awareness surrounding obstetric violence and has been inspiring to other mothers whose stories of assault and trauma have been brushed aside.
“We have consent over our bodies. No means no. You shouldn’t be assaulted during childbirth, or in any case and you should be believed when you go to the doctor.”
Kimberly supports updating the cap on compensation for patients harmed by medical negligence. She believes that it shouldn’t take a search through 80 lawyers to pursue justice and validate a woman’s story of assault, pain, and suffering.
Californians will have the chance to vote on the Fairness for Injured Patients Act on the November 2022 ballot. The Fairness Act would update California’s medical malpractice damage cap for nearly 50 years of inflation, and allow judges and juries to decide fair compensation in cases involving catastrophic injury or death. Learn more about this campaign for patient safety.
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