Earlier this month I noted that French gynecologists were refusing to do ultrasound scans for new patients after a French judge ruled in favor of a child who sued on the grounds that he never should have been born. An ultrasound scan failed to catch the boy’s birth defect, and he argued successfully in court that since his mother would have aborted him had she known about the birth defect, he was due compensation from the gynecologist who performed the scan.
France’s parliament passed a bill just a few days after the announced strike that affirms that “nobody can claim to have been harmed simply by being born.” The bill will still allow parents to seek damages, but only if they can prove that a doctor made a “blatant error” in interpreting the ultrasound scan.
Source:
France rejects ‘right not to be born.’ The BBC, January 10, 2002.