Utah Supreme Court Rules That Alleged Sexual Assault by a Doctor Is Not "Health Care"
https://www.propublica.org/article/utah-supreme-court-sexual-assault-david-broadbent-ob-gyn
Utah Supreme Court Rules That Alleged Sexual Assault by a Doctor Is Not Health Care
The decision revives a lawsuit filed by 94 women who said their OB-GYN sexually abused them. Previously, a lower court determined that the actions they alleged had to be treated as medical malpractice.
by Jessica Miller, The Salt Lake Tribune
Aug. 9, 2 p.m. EDT
This article was produced by The Salt Lake Tribune, which was a member of ProPublicas Local Reporting Network in 2023. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published.
Sexual assault is not health care, and it isnt covered by Utahs medical malpractice law, the states Supreme Court ruled on Thursday. The decision revives a lawsuit filed by 94 women who allege their OB-GYN sexually abused them during exams or while he delivered their babies.
In 2022, the group of women sued Dr. David Broadbent and two hospitals where he had worked, wanting to seek civil damages. But a judge dismissed their case because he decided they had filed it incorrectly as a civil sexual assault claim rather than a medical malpractice case. The women had all been seeking health care, Judge Robert Lunnen wrote, and Broadbent was providing that when the alleged assaults happened.
The Salt Lake Tribune and ProPublica covered the decision, speaking with women about the lower court ruling that made it harder for them to sue the doctor for his alleged actions. After that story ran, the state Legislature voted to reform medical malpractice law to exclude sexual assault. But the new law didnt apply retroactively; the women still had no way to sue.
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