Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Candidate Lyerly once reprimande­d for complex C-section

- Daniel Bice

Democratic congressio­nal candidate Kristin Lyerly is holding up her medical credential­s front and center in her bid for the seat soon to be vacated by U.S. Rep. Mike Gallagher.

Lyerly, an obstetrici­an and gynecologi­st, is the only Democrat currently running for the state’s 8th Congressio­nal District. Democrats fielded no candidate in the 2022 election.

“My platform will be health carebased because I’m a physician,” she said. “But I think it’s important to consider all of the different aspects that affect our own individual health.”

But there is one aspect of her medical record that she isn’t focusing on and would prefer stay out of the race.

In March 2020, Lyerly was reprimande­d by the Minnesota Board of Medical Practice, the agency that regulates doctors in Minnesota. The fourpage report said an investigat­ion by the board found that she “failed to timely deliver an infant in December 2018.”

“Respondent acknowledg­ed that late decelerati­ons were present on the fetal heart rate tracing for about 30 minutes before respondent decided to perform a caesarian section delivery,” the report concluded.

Republican­s have been quick to jump on the infraction in the race to replace Gallagher, who is retiring later this month.

Three GOP candidates have entered the race in the solidly red district. They are Tony Wied, a former Green Baybased gas station chain owner who has the backing of former President Donald Trump; state Sen. Andre Jacque, a De Pere conservati­ve; and former state Sen. Roger Roth, who ran for lieutenant governor in 2022.

“The Minnesota Board of Medical Practice found that Kristin Lyerly’s negligence was directly responsibl­e for putting the life of an unborn child at risk and requiring the pregnant mother to undergo an emergent C-section to save her baby,” said Matt Fisher, a spokesman for the state Republican Party.

But Lyerly, 54, disputed that characteri­zation.

She said she has delivered thousands of babies during her 15 years as an obstetrici­an. Most of her practice has focused on providing care for women in rural Minnesota and Wisconsin.

One of the things she enjoys about her practice, she said, is that she gets to take care of people during some of their most vulnerable and stressful times of their lives.

When delivering babies, she said, there are cases in which everything goes exactly as planned and everything is great. The case that went before the Minnesota medical board,

however, was not one of them. She said it was one of the more difficult cases.

But, in the end, everything turned out well.

“I can tell you that we delivered a healthy baby,” Lyerly said.

According to the medical board’s report, Lyerly was approved to practice medicine in Minnesota beginning in August 2017.

The hospital where she practiced, which is not named, began an investigat­ion for “substandar­d or inadequate care.” The hospital was reviewing allegation­s that she failed to recognize the risk profile for a pregnant patient and failed to abide by the recommenda­tions of a maternal-fetal medicine consultant.

In particular, the report said the hospital was looking into allegation­s that Lyerly failed to act on the infant’s category 2 fetal heart tracing and did not respond urgently when the heart tracing reached category 3, the highest level.

Lyerly voluntaril­y suspended her privileges at that Minnesota hospital in March 2019 while still under investigat­ion by the institutio­n. In December, she met with the medical board and acknowledg­ed the late decelerati­ons in the fetal heart rate before performing the C-section.

The report said: “The respondent agrees that the conduct cited above constitute­s a reasonable basis in law and fact to justify the disciplina­ry action under this statute,” which pertains to care that doesn’t conform to the minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing medical practice.

In her defense, Lyerly said she left the Minnesota hospital and returned to Wisconsin during the investigat­ion because one of her sons was having a hard time at his Minnesota high school. As part of her move, she withdrew her privileges at all of the hospitals where she worked.

As for the case itself, she said, it would seem that it’s easy to watch a monitor and decide when to begin a delivery. But, in fact, she said it’s complicate­d to interpret and there are studies on the subjective nature of interpreti­ng fetal monitoring. She disputed that she disagreed with the medical consultant.

“Talk to anybody who’s ever delivered a baby about interpreti­ng fetal monitoring, and they’ll tell you that it can be very tricky, and in the situation, it certainly was,” she said. It’s not unusual in such cases, she added, for doctors to have differences of opinions.

Despite the reprimand, Lyerly said she has never been sued for malpractic­e or had her license restricted.

She said she expects to be attacked because of her role on abortion rights. She was one of the plaintiffs in a Wisconsin lawsuit that succeeded in keeping abortions legal after the Supreme

Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022.

“What society does by using abortion as a wedge to shame people and to drive them apart is causing so much pain and trauma,” she said. “It is unconscion­able to me that politician­s think that they can make these kinds of decisions.”

Today, Lyerly is a traveling doctor, or locum tenans, who provides care for women in rural Minnesota. Abortions are not a regular part of her practice.

Anna Igler, an OB/GYN in Appleton, said she worked side-by-side with Lyerly as colleagues for four years and never had any problems with her. Lyerly would even cover for Igler when she was away, and Igler said she never had complaints about her care. Igler said that wasn’t the case with all of her other partners.

As for Lyerly’s reprimand, she said, anyone can file a complaint against a doctor, as the the political director of Pro-Life Wisconsin has done in the abortion case in which Lyerly is involved. In addition, Igler said, difficult deliveries are not uncommon.

“Every doctor out there has some sort of complicati­on in their practice. Every single one of us. … I would never think — ever — that Dr. Lyerly would ever intentiona­lly do anything to harm a patient.”

Records show Igler donated $1,000 to Lyerly during her earlier political contest. In 2020, Lyerly lost her bid to defeat state Rep. John Macco, a Republican from Ledgeview, by 52% to 48%.

Fisher, the GOP spokesman, said he was not buying these explanatio­ns.

“No amount of downplayin­g or blame-deflecting by Lyerly can erase her reprimand or blatant disregard for the health of her patients,” Fisher said.

Madeleine Buchholz-Kneeland, Lyerly’s campaign manager, said Fisher’s remarks were proof that this is “a political story and not a medical one.” Buchholz-Kneeland said Republican­s are focusing on a single case where there were legitimate differences of medical opinion as the delivery occurred.

Burchholz-Kneeland added, “The last thing MAGA extremists want to see in Congress is a highly respected, peerrecogn­ized OB-GYN doctor like Dr. Lyerly who supports women’s reproducti­ve freedoms, including access to safe and legal abortions.”

Contact Daniel Bice at (414) 313-6684 or dbice@jrn.com. Follow him on X at @DanielBice or on Facebook at fb.me/ daniel.bice.

 ?? ??
 ?? TORK MASON/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Kristin Lyerly acknowledg­es her supporters as she is introduced during her campaign announceme­nt on April 4 at Hinterland Brewery in Green Bay. Lyerly announced her candidacy for the 8th Congressio­nal District being vacated by Rep. Mike Gallagher.
TORK MASON/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Kristin Lyerly acknowledg­es her supporters as she is introduced during her campaign announceme­nt on April 4 at Hinterland Brewery in Green Bay. Lyerly announced her candidacy for the 8th Congressio­nal District being vacated by Rep. Mike Gallagher.

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