A Utah judge awarded a family nearly $1 billion dollars following a botched delivery of a baby,that will likely lead to the infant suffering a lifetime of disabilities.
Judge Patrick Corum awarded Anyssa Zancanella, Danniel McMicheal, and their 5-year-old daughter Azaylee $951 million earlier this month after finding Steward Health Care liable for the newborn's failed delivery in West Valley City, Utah on October 14, 2019.
The nurses assigned to Zancanella at Jordan Valley Medical Center, which was then owned by Steward, had just concluded their training when they administered unsafe quantities of a labor-inducing medicine to the mother while the on-call doctor slept in an adjacent room, according to the family's lawsuit filed in 2021.
Azaylee wasn’t delivered until more than a day later — and after a long-overdue C-section, the suit claimed.
Zancanella ‘would have been better off delivering this baby at the bathroom of a gas station, or in a hut somewhere in Africa, than in this hospital,’ Corum said in an early August ruling. ‘Literally, this was the most dangerous place on the planet for her to have given birth.’
‘The person [Azaylee] was to be, the person she deserved to be, is trapped inside a brain-damaged child,’ Corum said. ‘I cannot think of anything more profound, total or complete than that loss.’
Utah billion dollar payout is the largest in the state’s history
The one billion award is the largest in Utah’s history, the Salt Lake Tribune reported.
The challenge now remains collecting on their award from the embattled hospital chain which is currently in bankruptcy as it owes billions to various creditors.
Zancanella’s lawyers hope they will be able to collect at least the punitive damages against Steward — or half of the total award. It remains unclear what the hospital insurance policy will allow for and the possibility of future litigation to have the amount lowered, further delaying any potential payout.
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But the nurses, who’d only finished their training the day Zancanella was admitted, pushed ‘excessive’ amounts of the labor-inducing drug Pitocin for hours — despite the baby’s blood pressure rising and the fact the drug wasn’t working to dilate Zancanella, the suit alleged.
When the nurses finally told the on-call doctor about the baby’s alarming blood pressure and the mom’s fever, the doctor simply went back to sleep in a room mere feet from where the labor was underway, the suit claimed.
‘[The obstetrician] abandoned mother and fetus/infant when she was fully aware of significant and dangerous issues with the ongoing labor process and the ongoing health and well-being of the fetus,’ the lawsuit said.
Azaylee botched baby delivery at Utah hospital leads to girl robbed of normal life
When Azaylee was delivered via C-section she had a ‘misshapen head,’ a ‘swollen’ face and bruising and bulging on the front of her scalp, the suit claimed.
The baby had to be airlifted to Primary Children’s Hospital’s intensive care unit in Salt Lake City for a slew of complications, including having been without sufficient oxygen during the labor, the suit alleged.
The botched labor resulted in the baby girl sustaining permanent neurological and cognitive damages, physical damages, emotional damages, as well as limitation in physical, cognitive and mental function. The mother alleged that Azaylee remained healthy her entire pregnancy, up until the moment she was delivered.
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Azaylee now needs 24/7 care because of regular seizures.
She is mostly non-verbal and lacks the cognitive and executive functioning of others her age. Doctors think she’ll never be able to carry out normal activities like driving a car, attending college or working. Azaylee according to her mother needs constant round the clock care.
The parents say they plan to get Azaylee a service dog to help with seizure detection.
The young girl receives physical and occupational therapy and can only attend kindergarten for a few hours every day.
Azaylee ‘had her life stolen. We all did. We had her taken from us,’ Zancanella said during a three-day bench trial, according to Corum’s ruling.
‘She is trapped. I know that my daughter is in there, but she can’t come out and I think of that every day.’
Steward denied the allegations and any liability in May 2024 court papers but later that year its lawyers asked to withdraw from the case on the grounds they were no longer getting paid and were having trouble getting into contact with the company. The judge approved their withdrawal but the company never appointed new lawyers.
The hospital was renamed Holy Cross Hospital-West Valley after it was acquired by CommonSpirit Health two years ago.


