On the June 2007 day their daughter was born, Ariel and
Deborah Levy were overcome with excitement, then shock when hospital staff told
them their daughter looked like she had Down syndrome.
A doctor asked Deborah Levy if she'd had a prenatal test
— a chorionic villus sampling, or CVS for short — and Levy said
yes, the results showed they'd have a normal, healthy child.
Within days of her birth, however, a blood test confirmed
that the little girl, Kalanit, had Down syndrome.
The Levys filed suit against Legacy Health, claiming that
Deborah Levy would have aborted her pregnancy had she known her daughter had
the chromosomal abnormality. The lawsuit blames Legacy's Center for
Maternal-Fetal Medicine in North Portland and a Legacy lab for allegedly
botching the test. The Levys — who say they dearly love their daughter, now 4 — want Legacy to pay for the extra life-time costs of caring for her. That is
estimated at about $3 million.
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