Olivia never regained consciousness, and two weeks later she died after her parents gave the hospital permission to remove her breathing tube.
An autopsy determined Olivia suffered brain damage as a result of a heart attack she had at the end of catheterization. An investigation by the state Department of Public Health found a postdoctoral fellow who treated Olivia removed her catheters without a doctor’s supervision and a second fellow who treated Olivia had not been cleared to treat patients.
But since MICRA determines the value of the life of a child at just $250,000, that was all the compensation her parents could receive for her death-and only then after they found a law firm that took the vase essentially on a pro-bono basis basis of the hefty costs of preparing for medical malpractice trials, including fees of expert witnesses and other professionals to make the case.
More importantly, Olivia’s parents felt if the hospital had been at risk of greater financial liability they would have been forced to do more to reveal errors and improve procedures.

