While most courtroom confrontations involving childbirth concern parents seeking damages for alleged physician and hospital negligence, a number of recent cases have involved parents seeking simply to have their babies with a minimum of medical intervention. Courts, however, have consistently deferred to “expert” medical opinion in this area.
The extreme reluctance of courts to substitute their judgment for that of hospital boards is nowhere better illustrated than in the cases involving fathers in the delivery room. While most hospitals with maternity wards currently permit “husband-coached' (Lamaze or psychoprophylactic being the most common method) childbirth, in which the father is with the mother throughout labor and delivery, supplying physical and emotional support, lawsuits to compel a change in the policies of those institutions that do not, have been universally unsuccessful to date.