First, the loss of a baby, then the loss of legal rights

After enduring a stillbirth, a Navy chaplain discovers she can’t sue a military hospital for medical malpractice

September 14, 2023 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
Navy chaplain Mercedes Petitfrere has accused Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune of substandard medical care that she believes cost her son’s life and resulted in his stillbirth. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post)
22 min

The pain surged throughout her lower body.

Navy chaplain Mercedes Petitfrere, 20 weeks pregnant with her first child, rushed to the emergency room at her military hospital in Jacksonville, N.C. Her abdomen throbbed. She could hardly walk. It hurt to pee. A midwife at Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune attributed her pain to fibroids. But Petitfrere — a 35-year-old Black lieutenant whose pregnancy was considered high-risk because of her age — explained that she’d had the benign growths in her uterus for a long time, and that they had never caused any pain.