The Guardian (USA)

Spanish woman raised by wrong family seeks damages for baby swap mistake

- Sam Jones in Madrid

A woman is seeking €3m (£2.5m) in damages from a regional health department in northern Spain after it emerged that she and another baby were accidental­ly handed to the wrong families hours after they were born almost two decades ago.

The maternity ward mix-up, which health authoritie­s in the La Rioja region have attributed to “human error”, came to light by chance after a DNA test.

The babies were born five hours apart in a hospital in La Rioja in 2002, and were both placed in incubators because they were underweigh­t. One went to live with parents, while the other was raised by a woman she believed to be her grandmothe­r. Neither has been identified in the ongoing legal proceeding­s.

The switch, which was reported by the La Rioja newspaper, was discovered four years ago after the grandmothe­r of the latter girl complained that her father was not fulfilling his responsibi­lities. The complaint involved a DNA test, which establishe­d that he was not the girl’s father. A subsequent DNA test then showed she was not the child of the woman she thought was her mother.

The discovery prompted an investigat­ion by the regional health authority, which concluded there was only one other baby with whom she could have been accidental­ly switched.

“It was a human error and we haven’t been able to find out who was to blame,” Sara Alba, La Rioja’s regional health chief, told a news conference on Tuesday.

“The systems back then were different and weren’t as computeris­ed as they are now,” Alba said, offering assurances it could not happen again.

La Rioja newspaper reported that the other woman who was handed to the wrong parents had been informed of the mistake.

The complainan­t’s lawyer, José Sáez Morga, said his 19-year-old client was seeking the €3m in damages because she had suffered “negligence so serious that it speaks for itself”.

 ??  ?? Both the babies were born underweigh­t and were placed in incubators. Photograph: Diyan Nenov/Alamy Stock Photo
Both the babies were born underweigh­t and were placed in incubators. Photograph: Diyan Nenov/Alamy Stock Photo

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