Amended August 8, 2017 Pamela Plowman and Jeremy Plowman v. Fort Madison Community Hospital, Pil Kang, John Paiva, Davis Radiology, P.C., Leah Steffensmeier, the Women's Center, and Fort Madison Physicians and Surgeons ( 2017 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 15–0974
    Filed June 2, 2017
    Amended August 8, 2017
    PAMELA PLOWMAN and JEREMY PLOWMAN,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    FORT MADISON COMMUNITY HOSPITAL, PIL KANG, JOHN PAIVA,
    DAVIS RADIOLOGY, P.C., LEAH STEFFENSMEIER, THE WOMEN’S
    CENTER, and FORT MADISON PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Lee (North) County,
    John M. Wright, Judge.
    Parents of severely disabled child appeal summary judgment
    dismissing   their wrongful-birth medical      negligence action   against
    physicians providing prenatal care.       DISTRICT COURT SUMMARY
    JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED.
    Wayne M. Willoughby of Gershon, Willoughby, Getz & Smith, LLC,
    Baltimore, Maryland, Darwin Bünger of Crowley, Bünger & Prill,
    Burlington, for appellants.
    Nancy J. Penner and Jennifer E. Rinden of Shuttleworth &
    Ingersoll, P.L.C., Cedar Rapids, for appellees Fort Madison Community
    Hospital, Leah Steffensmeier, The Women’s Center, and Fort Madison
    Physicians and Surgeons.
    2
    Christine L. Conover and Carrie L. Thompson of Simmons, Perrine,
    Moyer, Bergman, PLC, Cedar Rapids, for appellees Pil Kang, John Paiva,
    and Davis Radiology, P.C.
    3
    WATERMAN, Justice.
    This appeal presents a question of first impression under Iowa law:
    whether the parents of a child born with severe disabilities may bring a
    medical negligence action based on the physicians’ failure to inform them
    of prenatal test results showing a congenital defect that would have led
    them to terminate the pregnancy.           This is known as a wrongful-birth
    claim.     Other jurisdictions are divided as to the parents’ right to sue,
    with most states recognizing such claims. We previously held parents
    have no right to sue for wrongful pregnancy based on a medical mistake
    that led to the birth of a “normal, healthy child.” Nanke v. Napier, 
    346 N.W.2d 520
    , 523 (Iowa 1984).
    The parents in this Iowa action allege the prenatal doctors failed to
    inform them of abnormalities noted during an ultrasound. Their child
    was born with severe cognitive defects and remains unable to speak or
    walk at age five. The parents allege they would have chosen to terminate
    the pregnancy if they had been informed of what the ultrasound allegedly
    showed. They seek to recover for their ordinary and extraordinary costs
    of raising the child and for their loss of income and emotional distress.
    The district court granted the medical defendants’ motion for summary
    judgment on the grounds that Iowa has not recognized “wrongful birth”
    as a cause of action.
    For the reasons explained below, we join the majority of courts to
    allow parents to sue for the wrongful birth of a severely disabled child.
    This theory fits within general tort principles for medical negligence
    actions. We reverse the district court’s summary judgment and remand
    the case to allow the parents’ wrongful-birth claims to proceed consistent
    with this opinion.
    4
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    The following facts are undisputed or set forth in the light most
    favorable to the plaintiffs. Pamela Plowman and Jeremy Plowman were
    married with two children, ages four and three, when Pamela became
    pregnant with their third child, Z.P., in late 2010. At the time, Pamela
    was employed at a retirement community working as a cook’s assistant.
    On January 18, 2011, Pamela began seeing Leah Steffensmeier, a
    physician specializing in obstetrics and gynecology, for her prenatal care
    at the Fort Madison Community Hospital (FMCH). 1
    On April 25, approximately twenty-two weeks into her pregnancy,
    Pamela underwent an ultrasound at FMCH to assess fetal growth.
    Dr. Pil Kang, a radiologist employed by Davis Radiology, P.C., interpreted
    the results and prepared a report. Dr. John Paiva, another radiologist at
    that clinic, reviewed and signed the report. The report found that Z.P.
    displayed head abnormalities and recommended follow-up. Specifically,
    the report noted,
    1) Suboptimal visualization of the head structure with
    cavum septum pellucidum not well seen.     Recommend
    follow-up to document normal appearance.
    2) Single, live intrauterine pregnancy consistent with 22
    weeks 3 days by today’s scan.
    3) Slightly  low    head     circumference     to   abnormal
    circumference ratio without definite etiology. Again, consider
    follow-up.
    The films of the ultrasound showed Dr. Kang took three measurements
    of the head circumference. Each indicated Z.P.’s head was abnormally
    small, less than the third-to-sixth percentile for his development.
    Dr. Kang did not report these findings.           Rather, he reported the
    1Dr. Steffensmeier worked at Fort Madison Physicians and Surgeons and The
    Women’s Center, located within FMCH.
    5
    head/abdominal circumference of Z.P. was “within two standard
    deviations    of   normal,”    with   the    head   circumference/abdominal
    circumference ratio being “slightly” below normal. On May 11, Pamela
    met with Dr. Steffensmeier, who told her the ultrasound showed “[t]hat
    everything was fine” with the baby’s development.            Pamela was never
    informed “that the radiologist had found any abnormalities, or that the
    ultrasound was in any way abnormal.” No further testing was done to
    follow up on the ultrasound results as recommended in the report.
    On August 17, Pamela delivered Z.P., a baby boy. The delivery was
    uneventful.     About two months after birth, Pamela began to have
    concerns about Z.P.’s development.            She noticed he “had bicycle
    movements, smacking of the tongue. He’d stare off a lot, he’d stiffen up.”
    At four months after birth, Z.P.’s pediatrician recommended Pamela see a
    specialist in Iowa City, Iowa, for Z.P.’s care. Pamela began taking Z.P. to
    Iowa City for testing and treatment.         Z.P. was diagnosed with small
    corpus    callosum,    which    plaintiffs   contend   relates   to   the   head
    circumference as shown in the ultrasound.           Z.P. suffers from cerebral
    palsy, microcephaly, intellectual disability, cortical visual impairment,
    and seizure disorder. He requires frequent visits to numerous doctors in
    Iowa City and Keokuk. Physical therapists come to his home one to two
    times weekly. He is on daily medication for seizures and reflux. Doctors
    have been unable to determine the exact cause of Z.P.’s disabilities. It is
    unlikely Z.P. will ever walk or speak.
    On July 31, 2013, Pamela filed this lawsuit against FMCH, The
    Women’s      Center,   Fort   Madison    Physicians    and   Surgeons,      Davis
    Radiology, P.C., and doctors Kang, Paiva, and Steffensmeier. She does
    not claim the defendants caused Z.P.’s disabilities; rather, she alleges the
    doctors negligently failed to accurately interpret, diagnose, monitor,
    6
    respond to, and communicate the fetal abnormalities evident in the
    April 25, 2011 ultrasound.      As a result of this negligent care, Pamela
    gave birth to Z.P., a child with severe brain abnormalities. If she had
    been informed of the abnormalities prior to birth, she “would have
    terminated her pregnancy.” The petition sought damages for (1) the cost
    of past, present, and future extraordinary care required for Z.P. as a
    result of his disabilities; (2) the cost of ordinary care raising the child;
    (3) Pamela’s mental anguish; and (4) Pamela’s loss of income.       Jeremy
    filed a separate action, mirroring Pamela’s claims.       No claim has been
    made on behalf of Z.P.; rather, the parents sue for their own individual
    injuries and costs attributable to Z.P.’s disabilities.
    The defendants filed answers denying negligence and asserting the
    petitions failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The
    radiologists also alleged plaintiffs could not prove causation because
    Z.P.’s injuries were caused by a preexisting medical condition.         The
    district court consolidated the actions.
    Meanwhile, Pamela and Jeremy divorced in September of 2013.
    Jeremy and Pamela share physical custody of their children, including
    Z.P.   Pamela lives with her new fiancé in Keokuk, Iowa.        Pamela quit
    working so she could attend Z.P.’s medical appointments. Z.P. does not
    walk or talk and is frequently sick; however, Pamela also noted that
    when he is not sick, he is “really happy” and “a good baby.”        Pamela
    testified she “really enjoy[s] spending time with [Z.P.] and get[s] a lot of
    happiness from him.”
    On September 11, the defendants filed a motion for summary
    judgment. The motion stated,
    Plaintiffs do not assert that Defendants’ care and treatment
    caused [Z.P.’s] injuries. Instead, Plaintiffs allege that had
    “Mrs. Plowman [been] informed of her unborn child’s
    7
    potential brain abnormality, Mrs. Plowman would have
    terminated her pregnancy and Plaintiff’s injuries would have
    been avoided.” This is a wrongful birth claim.
    Defendants argued that a cause of action for wrongful birth had not been
    recognized in Iowa; therefore, plaintiffs’ claims should be dismissed.
    Plaintiffs resisted the motion, arguing Iowa law did not preclude a
    wrongful-birth claim.
    On May 27, 2015, the district court granted the defendants’ motion
    for summary judgment. The court expressly declined to recognize a new
    cause of action for wrongful birth, stating a decision to do so was more
    properly left “to the legislature or the Supreme Court.”          Plaintiffs
    appealed, and we retained the case.
    II. Standard of Review.
    “We review a district court ruling granting a motion for summary
    judgment for correction of errors at law.” Estate of Gray ex rel. Gray v.
    Baldi, 
    880 N.W.2d 451
    , 455 (Iowa 2016) (quoting Rathje v. Mercy Hosp.,
    
    745 N.W.2d 443
    , 447 (Iowa 2008)). “Summary judgment is appropriate
    when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”        Barker v. Capotosto, 
    875 N.W.2d 157
    , 161 (Iowa 2016) (quoting Amish Connection, Inc. v. State
    Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 
    861 N.W.2d 230
    , 235 (Iowa 2015)).         “Summary
    judgment is appropriate if the only conflict concerns the legal
    consequences of undisputed facts.”        Peppmeier v. Murphy, 
    708 N.W.2d 57
    , 58 (Iowa 2005) (quoting Farmers Nat’l Bank of Winfield v. Winfield
    Implement Co., 
    702 N.W.2d 465
    , 466 (Iowa 2005)).         “We . . . view the
    record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and will grant
    that party all reasonable inferences that can be drawn from the record.”
    
    Baldi, 880 N.W.2d at 455
    (quoting Cawthorn v. Catholic Health Initiatives
    Iowa Corp., 
    806 N.W.2d 282
    , 286 (Iowa 2011)).
    8
    “The moving party has the burden of showing the nonexistence” of
    a genuine issue of material fact. Nelson v. Lindaman, 
    867 N.W.2d 1
    , 6
    (Iowa 2015). “An issue of fact is ‘material’ only when the dispute involves
    facts which might affect the outcome of the suit, given the applicable
    governing law.” 
    Id. (quoting Wallace
    v. Des Moines Indep. Cmty. Sch. Dist.
    Bd. of Dirs., 
    754 N.W.2d 854
    , 857 (Iowa 2008)). “An issue is ‘genuine’ if
    the evidence in the record ‘is such that a reasonable jury could return a
    verdict for the non-moving party.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting Wallace
    , 754 N.W.2d at
    857). “Speculation is not sufficient to generate a genuine issue of fact.”
    
    Id. (quoting Hlubek
    v. Pelecky, 
    701 N.W.2d 93
    , 96 (Iowa 2005)). We also
    note,
    Because resolution of issues of negligence and
    proximate cause turns on the reasonableness of the acts and
    conduct of the parties under all the facts and circumstances,
    actions for malpractice “are ordinarily not susceptible of
    summary adjudication.”
    Campbell v. Delbridge, 
    670 N.W.2d 108
    , 110 (Iowa 2003) (quoting Oswald
    v. LeGrand, 
    453 N.W.2d 634
    , 635 (Iowa 1990)).
    III. Analysis.
    The threshold question is whether Iowa law allows parents to sue
    for wrongful birth. Defendants allege that the claim is a new cause of
    action unsupported by Iowa law.       Plaintiffs, on the other hand, allege
    that this case falls within the traditional elements of medical negligence
    and note a clear majority of other jurisdictions allow parents to sue
    under these facts. We conclude that wrongful birth fits within common
    law tort principles governing medical negligence claims, and no public
    policy or statute precludes the cause of action.
    A. Wrongful-Birth Jurisprudence. We begin by defining terms.
    Courts categorize three distinct types of claims. 
    Nanke, 346 N.W.2d at 9
    521. “Wrongful pregnancy” is a medical negligence action “brought by
    the parents of a healthy, but unplanned, child against a physician who
    negligently performed a sterilization or abortion.” 
    Id. “Wrongful birth”
    is
    an action “brought by parents of a child born with birth defects.”       
    Id. “Wrongful life”
    is a claim “brought by the child suffering from such birth
    defects.” 
    Id. One court
    discussed use of the term “wrongful” as follows:
    These labels are not instructive. Any “wrongfulness” lies not
    in the life, the birth, the conception, or the pregnancy, but in
    the negligence of the physician. The harm, if any, is not the
    birth itself but the effect of the defendant’s negligence on the
    parents’ physical, emotional, and financial well-being
    resulting from the denial to the parents of their right, as the
    case may be, to decide whether to bear a child or whether to
    bear a child with a genetic or other defect.
    Viccaro v. Milunsky, 
    551 N.E.2d 8
    , 9 n.3 (Mass. 1990); see also Wendy F.
    Hensel, The Disabling Impact of Wrongful Birth and Wrongful Life Actions,
    40 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 141, 164–67 (2005) (contrasting wrongful-
    birth and wrongful-life actions); Mark Strasser, Yes, Virginia, There Can
    Be Wrongful Life: On Consistency, Public Policy, and the Birth-Related
    Torts, 4 Geo. J. Gender & L. 821, 824–28 (differentiating wrongful-
    pregnancy and wrongful-birth claims) [hereinafter Strasser].
    In Nanke, we addressed whether parents could recover for
    wrongful pregnancy in Iowa after a failed abortion procedure led to the
    birth of a healthy 
    child. 346 N.W.2d at 521
    (“[T]he factual situation
    involved in this case would more accurately be depicted as a claim for
    ‘wrongful pregnancy.’ ”). We held the parents could not recover, noting
    “a parent cannot be said to have been damaged or injured by the birth
    and rearing of a normal, healthy child because the invaluable benefits of
    parenthood outweigh the mere monetary burdens as a matter of law.” 
    Id. at 522–23.
    Nanke is distinguishable, as we expressly limited its holding
    to deny recovery for the costs of raising a “normal, healthy” child:
    10
    Our ruling today is limited to the unique facts of this
    case and the narrow issue presented. We hold only that the
    parent of a normal, healthy child may not maintain an action
    to recover the expenses of rearing that child from a physician
    whose alleged negligence in performing a therapeutic
    abortion permitted the birth of such child.
    
    Id. at 523
    (emphasis added). We now address the separate question of
    whether parents of a child born with severe disabilities can sue for
    wrongful birth.
    In a wrongful-birth action, parents of a child born with a
    detectable birth defect allege that they would have avoided conception or
    terminated the pregnancy but for the physician’s negligent failure to
    inform them of the likelihood of the birth defect. Keel v. Banach, 
    624 So. 2d 1022
    , 1024 (Ala. 1993). The injury to the parents results from the
    loss of the opportunity to make an informed decision about whether to
    avoid or terminate the pregnancy. Garrison v. Med. Ctr. of Del., Inc., 
    581 A.2d 288
    , 290 (Del. 1989).
    A majority of states recognize wrongful-birth claims.                  At least
    twenty-three states recognize the claim by judicial decision. 
    2 Me. 2See
    ,  e.g., 
    Keel, 624 So. 2d at 1029
    ; Turpin v. Sortini, 
    643 P.2d 954
    , 965 (Cal.
    1982) (en banc); Lininger ex rel. Lininger v. Eisenbaum, 
    764 P.2d 1202
    , 1208 (Colo.
    1988) (en banc); Rich v. Foye, 
    976 A.2d 819
    , 824 (Conn. Super. Ct. 2007); 
    Garrison, 581 A.2d at 291
    ; Haymon v. Wilkerson, 
    535 A.2d 880
    , 884–85 (D.C. 1987); Kush v. Lloyd,
    
    616 So. 2d 415
    , 423–24 (Fla. 1992) (per curiam); Clark v. Children’s Mem’l Hosp., 
    955 N.E.2d 1065
    , 1072 (Ill. 2011); Siemieniec v. Lutheran Gen. Hosp., 
    512 N.E.2d 691
    , 705–
    06 (Ill. 1987), overruled in part by 
    Clark, 955 N.E.2d at 1087
    ; Bader v. Johnson, 
    732 N.E.2d 1212
    , 1220 (Ind. 2000); Pitre v. Opelousas Gen. Hosp., 
    530 So. 2d 1151
    , 1163
    (La. 1988); Reed v. Campagnolo, 
    630 A.2d 1145
    , 1152 (Md. 1993); 
    Viccaro, 551 N.E.2d at 11
    ; Greco v. United States, 
    893 P.2d 345
    , 348 (Nev. 1995); Smith v. Cote, 
    513 A.2d 341
    , 348 (N.H. 1986); Schroeder v. Perkel, 
    432 A.2d 834
    , 840 (N.J. 1981); Becker v.
    Schwartz, 
    386 N.E.2d 807
    , 813 (N.Y. 1978); Tomlinson v. Metro. Pediatrics, LLC, 
    366 P.3d 370
    , 386 (Or. Ct. App. 2015), review granted, 
    2016 WL 6693689
    (June 30, 2016);
    Owens v. Foote, 
    773 S.W.2d 911
    , 913 (Tenn. 1989); Jacobs v. Theimer, 
    519 S.W.2d 846
    ,
    849 (Tex. 1975); Naccash v. Burger, 
    290 S.E.2d 825
    , 830 (Va. 1982); Harbeson v. Parke-
    Davis, Inc., 
    656 P.2d 483
    , 488 (Wash. 1983) (en banc); James G. v. Caserta, 
    332 S.E.2d 872
    , 882 (W. Va. 1985); Dumer v. St. Michael’s Hosp., 
    233 N.W.2d 372
    , 377 (Wis. 1975);
    see also Phillips v. United States, 
    508 F. Supp. 544
    , 551 (D.S.C. 1981) (stating
    South Carolina would recognize the action).
    11
    allows wrongful-birth claims by statute. 3             A minority of jurisdictions
    decline to do so.       Three state supreme courts have refused to allow
    wrongful-birth claims. 4      Twelve states have enacted legislation barring
    wrongful-birth claims. 5 Three of those states had allowed wrongful-birth
    claims by judicial decision before the legislature barred them. 6
    “Two    developments       help    explain     the   trend   toward    judicial
    acceptance of wrongful birth actions.” Smith v. Cote, 
    513 A.2d 341
    , 345
    (N.H. 1986). First, advancements in prenatal care have resulted in an
    “increased ability of health care professionals to predict and detect the
    presence of fetal defects.”       
    Id. This raises
    the importance of genetic
    counseling for expecting parents.               
    Id. Indeed, prenatal
    testing is
    “extremely prevalent and is widely accepted,” and “will likely become
    more common in the future.”              Cailin Harris, Statutory Prohibitions on
    Wrongful Birth Claims & Their Dangerous Effects on Parents, 34 B.C. J.L.
    3Me.Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 24, § 2931 (West, Westlaw current through ch. 1 of the
    2017 Reg. Sess.).
    4See,e.g., Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Grp. v. Abelson, 
    398 S.E.2d 557
    , 563
    (Ga. 1990); Grubbs ex rel. Grubbs v. Barbourville Family Health Ctr., 
    120 S.W.3d 682
    ,
    689 (Ky. 2003); Azzolino v. Dingfelder, 
    337 S.E.2d 528
    , 537 (N.C. 1985).
    5See  Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 12-719 (Westlaw current through 2016 legislation);
    Idaho Code Ann. § 5-334 (West, Westlaw current through ch. 37 of 2017 1st Reg. Sess.);
    Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-1906 (West, Westlaw current through laws enacted as of Jan. 18,
    2017); Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 600.2971 (West, Westlaw current through No. 563 of
    2016 Reg. Sess.); Minn. Stat. Ann. § 145.424 (West, Westlaw current through ch. 5
    2017 Reg. Sess.); Mo. Ann. Stat. § 188.130 (West, Westlaw current through 2016 Reg.
    Sess.); Mont. Code Ann. § 27-1-747 (West, Westlaw current through Feb. 20, 2017);
    Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2305.116 (West, Westlaw through 2016 Reg. Sess.); Okla. Stat.
    Ann. tit. 63, § 1-741.12 (West, Westlaw current through 2016 2d Sess.); 42 Pa. Stat. &
    Cons. Stat. Ann. § 8305 (West, Westlaw current through 2016 Reg. Sess.); S.D. Codified
    Laws § 21-55-2 (Westlaw current through Feb. 23, 2017); Utah Code Ann. § 78B-3-109
    (West, Westlaw current through 2016 4th Special Sess.).
    6See Blake v. Cruz, 
    698 P.2d 315
    , 320–21 (Idaho 1984), superseded by statute,
    Idaho Code Ann. § 5-334; Arche v. United States, 
    798 P.2d 477
    , 480 (Kan. 1990),
    superseded by statute, Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-1906; Speck v. Finegold, 
    439 A.2d 110
    ,
    113–15 (Pa. 1981), superseded by statute, 42 Pa. Stat. & Cons. Stat. Ann. § 8305.
    12
    & Soc. Just. 365, 370 (2014) (recognizing that the American Congress of
    Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends doctors test all pregnant
    women for genetic abnormalities) [hereinafter Harris].
    Second, Roe v. Wade and its progeny established as a matter of
    federal constitutional law that a woman has a right to choose whether to
    terminate her pregnancy free from state interference before the fetus is
    viable.   
    410 U.S. 113
    , 153, 
    93 S. Ct. 705
    , 727 (1973) (“This right of
    privacy . . . is broad enough to encompass a woman’s decision whether
    or not to terminate her pregnancy.”); Whole Woman’s Health v.
    Hellerstedt, 579 U.S. ___, ___, 
    136 S. Ct. 2292
    , 2318 (2016) (striking
    down Texas laws regulating abortion clinics that imposed undue burdens
    on the women’s right to choose to terminate pregnancy).         As a result,
    today
    it is possible for prospective parents (1) to know, well in
    advance of birth, of the risk or presence of congenital defects
    in the fetus they have conceived; and (2) to decide to
    terminate the pregnancy on the basis of this knowledge.
    
    Cote, 513 A.2d at 346
    .      Accordingly, courts have held physicians who
    perform prenatal care and testing “have an obligation to adhere to
    reasonable standards of professional performance.” 
    Id. B. Wrongful
    Birth as a Cognizable Claim Under Iowa Law.
    Against this backdrop, we turn to whether Iowa law allows a cause of
    action for wrongful birth. In Dier v. Peters, we addressed whether Iowa
    tort law allows a cause of action for paternity fraud. 
    815 N.W.2d 1
    , 4
    (Iowa 2012). We considered three factors to decide whether to recognize
    the right to sue: (1) whether the action is consistent with traditional
    concepts of common law, (2) whether there are prevailing policy reasons
    against recognizing such a cause of action, and (3) whether Iowa statutes
    speak to the issue.       
    Id. at 3.
       Because paternity fraud fit within
    13
    traditional notions of common law fraud and was not “contrary to a law
    or policy expressed by the general assembly,” we determined the father
    could maintain the claim. 
    Id. at 13–14.
    We use the Dier three-factor test
    to decide whether to recognize a wrongful-birth claim.
    1. Whether a wrongful-birth claim is consistent with traditional
    concepts of common law. From our vantage point, a wrongful-birth claim
    “fit[s] comfortably within the traditional boundaries of [negligence] law.”
    See 
    id. at 7.
    We join the majority of other jurisdictions in concluding
    wrongful-birth claims fall within existing medical negligence principles.
    See, e.g., Lininger ex rel. Lininger v. Eisenbaum, 
    764 P.2d 1202
    , 1205
    (Colo. 1988) (en banc) (“Although courts and commentators often speak
    of wrongful life and wrongful birth as torts in themselves, it is more
    accurate to view these terms as describing the result of a physician’s
    negligence.”); Becker v. Schwartz, 
    386 N.E.2d 807
    , 811 (N.Y. 1978)
    (“Irrespective of the label coined, plaintiffs’ complaints sound essentially
    in negligence or medical malpractice.”); Owens v. Foote, 
    773 S.W.2d 911
    ,
    913 (Tenn. 1989) (“[M]edical malpractice suits of this nature, brought by
    parents, alleging birth defects of an infant, are not unknown in this State
    and we see no reason to endeavor to fit them into some specific category
    beyond a suit for ordinary negligence.”); Naccash v. Burger, 
    290 S.E.2d 825
    , 829 (Va. 1982) (“Whether a cause of action exists for the wrongs
    complained of and the damages sought . . . should be determined . . .
    according to traditional tort principles.”).
    The traditional elements of a medical negligence action are (1) an
    applicable standard of care, (2) a violation of this standard, and (3) a
    causal relationship between the violation and injury sustained. Phillips
    v. Covenant Clinic, 
    625 N.W.2d 714
    , 718 (Iowa 2001). “A physician owes
    a duty to his patient to exercise the ordinary knowledge and skill of his
    14
    or her profession in a reasonable and careful manner when undertaking
    the care and treatment of a patient.” J.A.H. ex rel. R.M.H. v. Wadle &
    Assocs., P.C., 
    589 N.W.2d 256
    , 260 (Iowa 1999). This duty is based on
    privity, arising from the contractual relationship between the two.      
    Id. Although this
    contractual physician–patient relationship is sufficient to
    establish a duty, it is not required. 
    Id. To establish
    a deviation from the
    standard of care, plaintiffs need to prove that a reasonably competent
    physician would have observed the abnormalities from the ultrasound or
    other procedure and reported the results to the parents.        “Ordinarily,
    evidence of the applicable standard of care—and its breach—must be
    furnished by an expert.” 
    Oswald, 453 N.W.2d at 635
    . As to causation,
    plaintiffs must prove if the procedure had not been performed negligently
    or delayed and the parents had been timely informed of the impairment,
    they would have chosen to terminate the pregnancy.             Finally, the
    resulting injury to the parents “lies in their being deprived of the
    opportunity to make an informed decision to terminate the pregnancy,
    requiring them to incur extraordinary expenses in the care and
    education of their child afflicted with a genetic abnormality.” 
    Garrison, 581 A.2d at 290
    .
    Courts declining to allow wrongful-birth claims have questioned
    the elements of causation and injury. One judge who dissented from a
    decision allowing a wrongful-birth claim concluded the physician “cannot
    be said to have caused” the child’s genetic abnormality:
    The disorder is genetic and not the result of any injury
    negligently inflicted by the doctor. In addition it is incurable
    and was incurable from the moment of conception. Thus the
    doctor’s alleged negligent failure to detect it during prenatal
    examination cannot be considered a cause of the condition
    by analogy to those cases in which the doctor has failed to
    make a timely diagnosis . . . .
    15
    
    Becker, 386 N.E.2d at 816
    (Wachtler, J., dissenting in part). By contrast,
    in traditional medical negligence actions seeking recovery for a child’s
    disabling injuries, the disability was allegedly inflicted by the defendant
    doctor.    See, e.g., Asher v. OB-Gyn Specialists, P.C., 
    846 N.W.2d 492
    ,
    494–95, 503 (Iowa 2014) (affirming jury verdict awarding damages to
    parents for their baby’s brachial plexis injury and broken clavicle caused
    by physician’s negligence during delivery), overruled on other grounds by
    Alcala v. Marriott Int’l, Inc., 
    880 N.W.2d 699
    , 708 n.3 (Iowa 2016); Kilker
    ex rel. Kilker v. Mulry, 
    437 N.W.2d 1
    , 2 (Iowa Ct. App. 1988) (reviewing
    appeal in case alleging child’s brain injury was caused by doctor’s
    negligence).
    Yet we have previously allowed patients to sue for a physician’s
    negligent failure to diagnose health problems the physician did not
    cause.     In DeBurkarte v. Louvar, a physician failed to timely diagnose
    breast cancer. 
    393 N.W.2d 131
    , 133 (Iowa 1986). The defendant argued
    there was insufficient evidence to hold that “his failure to properly
    diagnose the cancer probably caused [the plaintiff’s] injuries.” 
    Id. at 134.
    Although it was undisputed that the physician did not “cause” the
    plaintiff’s cancer, we allowed recovery for the plaintiff’s lost chance of
    survival. 
    Id. at 137.
    We reasoned that the physician’s negligent failure
    to diagnose, in combination with the preexisting condition, increased the
    risk of harm to the plaintiff who otherwise could have obtained timely
    treatment.     See 
    id. at 135.
         Any other rule would “subvert[] the
    deter[r]ence objectives of tort law by denying recovery for the effects of
    conduct that causes statistically demonstrable losses.”         
    Id. at 137
    (quoting Joseph H. King Jr., Causation, Valuation, and Chance in
    Personal     Injury Torts   Involving Preexisting Conditions   and Future
    Consequences, 90 Yale L.J. 1353, 1377 (1981)).
    16
    Causation “take[s] on a markedly more complex character . . . in
    those cases in which alleged negligence combines with a preexisting
    condition to cause the ultimate harm to the plaintiff.” Mead v. Adrian,
    
    670 N.W.2d 174
    , 182 (Iowa 2003) (Cady, J., concurring specially); see
    also Greco v. United States, 
    893 P.2d 345
    , 349 (Nev. 1995) (“Even though
    the physician did not cause the cancer, the physician can be held liable
    for damages resulting from the patient’s decreased opportunity to fight
    the cancer, and for the more extensive pain, suffering and medical
    treatment the patient must undergo by reason of the negligent
    diagnosis.”). Here, it is undisputed the physicians did not cause Z.P.’s
    birth defects. But the parents testified they would have terminated the
    pregnancy, and thereby avoided the costs of Z.P.’s disability, had the
    physicians informed them of the ultrasound results.
    Courts disallowing wrongful-birth claims reject the view “that the
    existence of a human life can constitute an injury cognizable at law.”
    Azzolino v. Dingfelder, 
    337 S.E.2d 528
    , 533–34 (N.C. 1985) (“[W]e are
    unwilling to say that life, even life with severe defects, may ever amount
    to a legal injury.”). We said as much in Nanke as to a healthy 
    child. 346 N.W.2d at 523
    (“That a child can be considered an injury offends
    fundamental values attached to human life.” (quoting Cockrum v.
    Baumgartner, 
    447 N.E.2d 385
    , 388–89 (Ill. 1983))). However, under the
    wrongful-birth theory, the relevant injury is not the resulting life, but the
    negligent deprivation of information important to the parents’ choice
    whether to terminate a pregnancy.         Courts disallowing wrongful-birth
    claims “conflate[] the claimants’ injury allegation with their ultimate
    claim for damages.” Grubbs ex rel. Grubbs v. Barbourville Family Health
    Ctr., P.S.C., 
    120 S.W.3d 682
    , 694–95 (Ky. 2003) (Keller, J., concurring in
    17
    part and dissenting in part).    A dissenting justice saw this “analytical
    flaw” in the majority’s rejection of a wrongful-birth theory:
    [W]hile both the majority and concurring opinions attempt to
    frame the relevant issue . . . as whether [the child’s] life can
    constitute a legal injury in the context of a prima facie case
    for medical malpractice, “we need not find that ‘life, even life
    with severe defects,’ constitutes a legal injury in order to
    recognize the . . . claim for relief” because “[t]he resulting
    injury to the plaintiff parents lies in their being deprived of
    the opportunity to make an informed decision to terminate
    the pregnancy[.]” . . . [A]lthough one facet of a plaintiff’s
    compensable damages in such cases may consist of
    extraordinary costs associated with the care and education
    of a child with birth-defect-related disabilities, those
    damages are available only because they are the result of a
    physician’s violation of the patient’s right to make an
    informed procreative decision[.]
    
    Id. at 695
    (some alterations in original) (footnote omitted) (first quoting
    
    Lininger, 764 P.2d at 1206
    ; and then quoting 
    Garrison, 581 A.2d at 290
    ).
    The compensable injury in a wrongful-birth claim is the parents’
    loss of the opportunity to make an informed decision to terminate the
    pregnancy. This is analogous to a claim for medical negligence based on
    lack of informed consent.       Both types of claims arise out of “the
    unquestioned principle that absent extenuating circumstances a patient
    has the right to exercise control over his or her body by making an
    informed decision.” Pauscher v. Iowa Methodist Med. Ctr., 
    408 N.W.2d 355
    , 358 (Iowa 1987). “The patient’s right to make an intelligent and
    informed decision cannot be exercised when information material to that
    decision is withheld.”   
    Id. at 359–60.
       To make an informed decision
    regarding continuation of a pregnancy, “the patient has the right to
    expect the information reasonably necessary to that process will be made
    available by the physician.” 
    Id. at 360.
    We are persuaded by the New Jersey Supreme Court’s analysis
    comparing informed-consent and wrongful-birth actions:
    18
    In sum, the informed consent and wrongful birth
    causes of action are similar in that both require the
    physician to disclose those medically accepted risks that a
    reasonably prudent patient in the plaintiff’s position would
    deem material to her decision. What is or is not a medically
    accepted risk is informed by what the physician knows or
    ought to know of the patient’s history and condition. . . . In
    both causes of action, the plaintiff must prove not only that
    a reasonably prudent patient in her position, if apprised of
    all material risks, would have elected a different course of
    treatment or care. . . . [T]he test of proximate causation is
    satisfied by showing that an undisclosed fetal risk was
    material to a woman in her position; the risk materialized,
    was reasonably foreseeable and not remote in relation to the
    doctor’s negligence; and, had plaintiff known of that risk, she
    would have terminated her pregnancy.
    Canesi ex rel. Canesi v. Wilson, 
    730 A.2d 805
    , 813 (N.J. 1999); see also
    Bader v. Johnson, 
    732 N.E.2d 1212
    , 1217 (Ind. 2000) (stating physician
    providing prenatal care has a duty to disclose “material facts relevant to
    the patient’s decision about treatment,” and while “discussion of this
    duty has generally arisen in cases involving informed consent and the
    doctrine of fraudulent concealment . . . , the underlying premise is still
    the same” (footnotes omitted)); Reed v. Campagnolo, 
    630 A.2d 1145
    , 1149
    (Md. 1993) (concluding that wrongful-birth cases “present a form of
    proximate cause reasoning that is analogous to that applied in informed
    consent cases”).
    “[A]n action in tort for a negligently performed or delayed medical
    diagnostic procedure lies within the common law of negligence . . . .”
    
    Garrison, 581 A.2d at 291
    . We decline to “compound[] or complicat[e]
    our medical malpractice jurisprudence by according this particular form
    of professional negligence action some special status apart from
    presently recognized medical malpractice.”      
    Greco, 893 P.2d at 348
    .
    Without altering traditional rules of negligence, we acknowledge “a newly
    recognized compensable event to which those traditional rules apply.”
    
    Mead, 670 N.W.2d at 178
    (applying loss-of-chance doctrine to traditional
    19
    principles of proximate cause).      The parents have alleged “a well-
    recognized civil wrong without contorting any of the elements to conform
    to [the] facts.” 
    Dier, 815 N.W.2d at 11
    (allowing paternity-fraud claim to
    proceed because it met traditional elements of a fraud claim despite
    presenting an atypical fact pattern).     We conclude that a claim for
    wrongful birth is consistent with traditional common law principles of
    medical negligence, and we move on to the second Dier factor.
    2. Whether there are prevailing policy reasons against recognizing
    such a cause of action.      Defendants contend that recognition of a
    wrongful-birth action would contravene Iowa public policy. Public policy
    “is not predicated on this court’s ‘generalized concepts of fairness and
    justice.’ ” 
    Id. at 12
    (quoting Claude v. Guar. Nat’l Ins. Co., 
    679 N.W.2d 659
    , 663 (Iowa 2004)).
    Rather, “[w]e must look to the Constitution, statutes, and
    judicial decisions of [this] state, to determine [our] public
    policy and that which is not prohibited by statute,
    condemned by judicial decision, nor contrary to the public
    morals contravenes no principle of public policy.”
    
    Id. (alterations in
    original) (quoting 
    Claude, 679 N.W.2d at 663
    ).
    In Nanke, we confronted whether the parents of a “normal, healthy
    child” could recover for costs associated with raising the child after a
    negligently performed 
    abortion. 346 N.W.2d at 522
    –23. We concluded
    they could not because “the invaluable benefits of parenthood outweigh
    the mere monetary burdens as a matter of law.” 
    Id. at 523
    . We stated,
    The bond of affection between a child and parent, the pride
    in the child’s achievement, and the comfort, counsel and
    society of a child are incalculable benefits, which should not
    be measured by some misplaced attempt to put a specific
    dollar value on a child’s life.
    
    Id. (quoting Beardsley
    v. Wierdsma, 
    650 P.2d 288
    , 293 (Wyo. 1982)). We
    also highlighted the “awkwardness that would inevitably surface under
    20
    the application of the Restatement (Second) § 920 ‘benefits’ approach,”
    which offsets damages incurred by a benefit obtained.        
    Id. We noted
    parents would have to show that they did not want the child and the
    child was of minimal value to them to minimize the offset.          
    Id. We refused
    to sanction this type of argument. 
    Id. The defendants
    contend the same reasoning applies here.             They
    argue a contrary holding would stigmatize the disabled community,
    encourage abortions, increase the cost of prenatal care, and result in
    fraudulent claims. We are not persuaded those concerns warrant closing
    the courthouse door to parents harmed by medical negligence.
    First, we distinguish the policy concerns expressed in Nanke. In a
    wrongful-birth claim, the injury is not the resulting life of a healthy child
    as in Nanke, but rather is the parent’s deprivation of information
    material to making an informed decision whether to terminate a
    pregnancy of a child likely to be born with severe disabilities.          Our
    informed-consent caselaw rests on the patient’s right to exercise control
    in making personal medical decisions. See 
    Pauscher, 408 N.W.2d at 358
    .
    Iowa Code section 147.137 (2017) codifies a presumption of informed
    consent when a patient receives in writing the risks “of death, brain
    damage, quadriplegia, paraplegia, the loss or loss of function of any
    organ or limb, or disfiguring scars associated with such procedure.” In
    Pauscher, we relied on this statute in recognizing a legislative public
    policy favoring informed 
    consent. 408 N.W.2d at 361
    .
    The legislature also has made a policy choice to help ensure a
    woman makes an informed decision whether to terminate or continue
    her pregnancy. Iowa Code section 146A.1(2) states that as a prerequisite
    to an abortion, a woman must be “provided information regarding the
    options relative to a pregnancy, including continuing the pregnancy to
    21
    term and retaining parental rights following the child’s birth, continuing
    the pregnancy to term and placing the child up for adoption, and
    terminating the pregnancy.”         (Emphasis added.); 7 see also 
    id. § 135L.2
    (establishing program for minors seeking an abortion to receive
    information on decision whether to continue or terminate the pregnancy).
    To make an informed decision whether to proceed with the pregnancy,
    the woman must be informed of all material facts, including the
    likelihood the child will be born with a severe birth defect.
    Nanke relied in part on an offset 
    rule. 346 N.W.2d at 523
    . Under
    the Restatement (Second) of Torts,
    [w]hen the defendant’s tortious conduct has caused harm to
    the plaintiff . . . and in so doing has conferred a special
    benefit to the interest of the plaintiff that was harmed, the
    value of the benefit conferred is considered in mitigation of
    damages . . . .
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920, at 509 (Am. Law Inst. 1979). 8 We
    noted in Nanke that a strict application of this rule to the ordinary costs
    of raising a normal, healthy child would require the parent to prove the
    child was of minimal value to 
    them. 346 N.W.2d at 523
    . In contrast, the
    Lininger court pointed out that in wrongful-birth cases involving a
    severely disabled child,
    the extraordinary financial burden the [Plaintiffs] claim to
    have suffered, and will continue to suffer, is sufficiently
    7Section  146A.1(1) also states that a woman must be given the opportunity to
    view an ultrasound of the fetus “as part of the standard of care.” The Iowa legislature
    recently revised Iowa Code section 146A.1 to provide that “[a] physician performing an
    abortion shall obtain written certification from the pregnant woman of all of the
    following at least seventy-two hours prior to performing an abortion:” an ultrasound
    viewing, description of the unborn child, hearing the heartbeat of the unborn child, and
    relevant information regarding pregnancy, adoption, and termination. S.F. 471, 87th
    G.A., 1st Sess. § 1 (Iowa 2017).
    8We find no such provision in the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for
    Physical & Emotional Harm (Am. Law Inst. 2010 & 2012).
    22
    unrelated to the pleasure they will derive from raising [the
    disabled child] as to preclude operation of the benefit rule, at
    least to the extent that it would require some offset against
    those particular 
    damages. 764 P.2d at 1207
    . Imagine the case of a woman carrying a healthy fetus
    injured during the delivery because of a failure to diagnose a birthing
    issue, such as an umbilical cord wrapped around the neck.                       In that
    circumstance,
    we would have no problem assessing damages.            More
    importantly we would not even consider the theory that the
    joy of parenthood should offset the damages. Would anyone
    in their right mind suggest that where a healthy fetus is
    injured during delivery the joy of parenthood should offset
    the damages? There is no more joy in an abnormal fetus
    come to full term than a normal fetus permanently injured at
    delivery. Both are heartbreaking conditions that demand far
    more psychological and financial resources than those
    blessed with normal children can imagine.
    Atlanta Obstetrics & Gynecology Grp. v. Abelson, 
    398 S.E.2d 557
    , 565
    (Ga. 1990) (Smith, P.J., dissenting). Pamela testified she “really enjoy[s]
    spending time with [Z.P.] and get[s] a lot of happiness from him.” But
    “that pleasure will be derived in spite of, rather than because of, [the
    child’s] affliction.” Schroeder v. Perkel, 
    432 A.2d 834
    , 842 (N.J. 1981).
    We decline to monetize the joy of raising a severely disabled child to
    offset the costs of raising him. 9
    9Other   courts have reached the same conclusion that the concerns raised in
    Nanke do not preclude recovery for extraordinary costs of raising a disabled child. See
    Strasser, 4 Geo. J. Gender & L. at 832 (collecting cases declining to award damages for
    raising a healthy child, but allowing wrongful-birth claims for extraordinary costs). For
    example, the Haymon court disallowed an action for wrongful pregnancy but allowed an
    action for wrongful 
    birth. 535 A.2d at 884
    (noting the rationale of a decision denying a
    wrongful-pregnancy claim was “misplaced in the context of [a] wrongful birth case”
    because “the claimed injury and the economic relief sought . . . are completely
    distinct”). In a wrongful-birth claim, parents seek extraordinary medical expenses due
    to their deprivation “of their right to make an informed decision whether to carry their
    child to term.” 
    Id. By contrast,
    in wrongful-pregnancy and wrongful-life cases, “the
    injury was life itself.” 
    Bader, 732 N.E.2d at 1219
    (disallowing wrongful-life claim but
    allowing wrongful-birth claim). The law is not equipped to weigh the value of life versus
    23
    Defendants      argue    that   allowing    wrongful-birth      claims    will
    stigmatize the disabled community.           That concern does not warrant
    closing the courthouse door to these parents. “We fail to see how the
    parents’ recovery of extraordinary medical and educational expenses, so
    as to minimize the detrimental effect of the child’s impairment, is
    outweighed by any speculation about stigma that he might suffer.”
    
    Lininger, 764 P.2d at 1207
    ; see also Turpin v. Sortini, 
    643 P.2d 954
    , 961–
    62 (Cal. 1982) (en banc) (“[I]t is hard to see how an award of damages to
    a severely handicapped or suffering child would ‘disavow’ the value of life
    or in any way suggest that the child is not entitled to the full measure of
    legal and nonlegal rights and privileges accorded to all members of
    society.”). Parents make “the difficult decision to sue for wrongful birth
    because they want[] to recover costs in order to ensure that their [child]
    would have the best possible medical care.” Harris, 34 B.C. J.L. & Soc.
    Just. at 395. For example, damages from a wrongful-birth claim were
    used by one family to “pay for some of the expenses of raising their
    [child], including prostheses, wheelchairs, operations, attendants, and
    other healthcare needs.” 
    Id. Defendants argue
    the disabled child may
    later be emotionally traumatized upon learning his or her parents would
    have chosen to abort. But given Z.P.’s severe cognitive disabilities, there
    is nothing in the record to indicate he will someday understand his
    parents sued over their lost opportunity to avoid his birth.
    Defendants also contend that allowing a right to sue for wrongful
    birth will increase the cost of prenatal care by encouraging physicians to
    practice “defensive medicine” and that increased disclosure of risks will
    _________________________
    nonlife, but with appropriate expert testimony juries are capable of calculating the
    extraordinary costs of raising a severely disabled child. See 
    id. 24 lead
    to more abortions. We disagree that these concerns justify closing
    the courthouse door.
    A physician need not, indeed should not, advise a patient on
    whether to abort a child. A physician’s responsibility is
    simply to exercise due care to provide the information
    necessary for the patient to make an informed decision. If
    physicians do this, they need not fear a lawsuit if parents
    bear a child of one sex rather than the other, or even a child
    with congenital defects. The physician will not be liable for
    the patient’s informed decision on the abortion question. To
    deny . . . any remedy for a physician’s negligently
    withholding      information    or   negligently     providing
    misinformation so immunizes the physician as to encourage
    the physician himself, in effect, to make the abortion
    decision.
    
    Azzolino, 337 S.E.2d at 538
    (Exum, J., dissenting). There are limitations
    on a physician’s liability for a failure to disclose, or a negligent
    disclosure, already inherent in the common law negligence standard. As
    in informed-consent cases, a physician will only be liable when he or she
    has failed to disclose a material fact relevant to the decision to continue
    or terminate the pregnancy.      See 
    Pauscher, 408 N.W.2d at 361
    –62
    (“Materiality may be said to be the significance a reasonable person, in
    what the physician knows or should know is his [or her] patient’s
    position, would attach to the disclosed risk or risks in deciding whether
    to submit . . . to surgery or treatment.” (alteration in original) (quoting
    Wilkinson v. Vesey, 
    295 A.2d 676
    , 689 (R.I. 1972))).       The applicable
    standard of care represents another limitation: a physician will only be
    liable for failure to discover a risk if a physician of reasonable care and
    skill in good standing under like circumstances would have discovered it.
    See Bray v. Hill, 
    517 N.W.2d 223
    , 226 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994) (discussing
    applicable standard).
    Finally, defendants argue that recognition of wrongful-birth claims
    will lead to fraudulent claims. The Missouri Supreme Court declined to
    25
    allow lawsuits for wrongful birth, noting that “[i]n the wrongful birth
    action, the right to recovery is based solely on the woman testifying, long
    after the fact and when it is in her financial interest to do so, that she
    would have chosen to abort if the physician had but told her” of the risk
    of genetic abnormality. Wilson v. Kuenzi, 
    751 S.W.2d 741
    , 745–46 (Mo.
    1988) (en banc).         Although proof of causation will depend on a
    “counterfactual,” or what the plaintiffs would have done if they had been
    properly informed by their physicians, this is the standard of proof in
    every informed-consent case. 
    Cote, 513 A.2d at 347
    ; see also 
    Pauscher, 408 N.W.2d at 360
    (stating one element of informed consent is proof that
    “[d]isclosure of the risk would have led a reasonable patient in plaintiff’s
    position to reject the medical procedure or choose a different course of
    treatment”).     We favor placing trust in Iowa juries and our adversary
    system to root out fraudulent claims, rather than the alternative of
    closing the courthouse door to victimized parents with legitimate claims.
    We must consider “the public policy implications of an opposite
    ruling.”   
    Dier, 815 N.W.2d at 12
    .           Declining to recognize a claim for
    wrongful birth would “immunize those in the medical field from liability
    for their performance in one particular area of medical malpractice,”
    namely, prenatal care and genetic counseling.                
    Bader, 732 N.E.2d at 1219
    –20 (quoting Garrison v. Foy, 
    486 N.E.2d 5
    , 8 (Ind. Ct. App. 1985)).
    The defendants in this case have identified no other common law
    decision apart from Nanke in which we immunize physicians from
    liability for their negligence, and we decline to do so here. 10 Conversely,
    10The  legislature has enacted certain statutory immunities for physicians that
    further other public policy goals, such as encouraging the reporting and investigation of
    child abuse complaints. See, e.g., 
    Nelson, 867 N.W.2d at 9
    (“We therefore construe the
    immunity provision in [Iowa Code] section 232.73 liberally to encourage
    communications between physicians and DHS child abuse investigators.”).
    26
    recognition of wrongful-birth actions will encourage more accurate
    prenatal testing.   See Phillips v. United States, 
    508 F. Supp. 544
    , 551
    (D.S.C. 1981).   Allowing recovery is also consistent with a goal of tort
    law—to compensate an injured party with damages in order to attempt to
    make them whole. See Wilson v. IBP, Inc., 
    589 N.W.2d 729
    , 732 (Iowa
    1999). On balance, we conclude public policy favors allowing wrongful-
    birth actions. If the legislature disagrees with our decision, it is free to
    enact a statute precluding wrongful-birth claims.        No such statute is
    currently on the books.
    3. Whether Iowa statutes speak to the issue. Turning to the last
    Dier factor, defendants argue Iowa should not recognize a wrongful-birth
    claim because Iowa Code section 613.15A and Iowa Rule of Civil
    Procedure 1.206 limit parents’ ability to recover medical expenses for a
    child’s injuries. Iowa Code section 613.15A provides,
    A parent or the parents of a child may recover for the
    expense and actual loss of services, companionship, and
    society resulting from injury to or death of a minor child and
    may recover for the expense and actual loss of services,
    companionship, and society resulting from the death of an
    adult child.
    Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.206 states, “A parent or the parents, may
    sue for the expense and actual loss of services, companionship and
    society resulting from injury to or death of a minor child.”
    Both Iowa Code section 613.15A and rule 1.206 by their plain
    language apply to parents seeking to recover expenses resulting from the
    “injury . . . of a minor child.”   (Emphasis added.)     To pursue a claim
    under those provisions, a parent must establish that the child’s injury
    was wrongfully or negligently caused.        “Actions brought under rule
    [1.206] are not for the injury to the child but for the injury to the [parent]
    as a consequence of the injury to the child.” Wardlow v. City of Keokuk,
    27
    
    190 N.W.2d 439
    , 443 (Iowa 1971) (emphasis added); accord Jones v.
    State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    760 N.W.2d 186
    , 188 (Iowa 2008). “[T]he
    gist of a rule [1.206] action is ‘a wrong done to the parent in consequence
    of injury to his child by the actionable negligence of another.’ ” Dunn v.
    Rose Way, Inc., 
    333 N.W.2d 830
    , 832 (Iowa 1983) (emphasis added)
    (quoting Handeland v. Brown, 
    216 N.W.2d 574
    , 578 (Iowa 1974)).
    Here, as the defendants note, “there is no allegation that
    Defendants negligently caused [Z.P.’s] injuries.” There is no injury to the
    child; rather, the injury is to the parents—specifically their right to make
    an informed choice whether to continue or end a pregnancy. Rule 1.206
    and section 613.15A do not govern a wrongful-birth claim. We conclude
    the Iowa legislature has not statutorily barred wrongful-birth claims.
    The Iowa legislature, however, has by statute expressed its policy
    preference for medical informed-consent procedures and accurately
    informing a woman regarding her options for continuing or terminating a
    pregnancy. See Iowa Code § 146A.1; 
    id. § 147.137.
    Allowing a cause of
    action here furthers this legislative purpose without contravening section
    613.15A or rule 1.206. Thus, we conclude that an action for wrongful-
    birth is cognizable under Iowa law.
    The parents must prove the defendant’s negligence deprived them
    of the opportunity to lawfully terminate the pregnancy in Iowa. See 
    id. § 707.7
    (generally prohibiting abortions after the second trimester of the
    pregnancy with exceptions to preserve life or health of the mother);11
    11Section   707.7 provides in relevant part,
    1. Any person who intentionally terminates a human pregnancy,
    with the knowledge and voluntary consent of the pregnant person, after
    the end of the second trimester of the pregnancy where death of the fetus
    results commits feticide. Feticide is a class “C” felony.
    ....
    28
    OB/GYN Specialists of Palm Beaches, P.A. v. Mejia, 
    134 So. 3d 1084
    ,
    1087–88, 1091 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2014) (requiring plaintiff in wrongful-
    birth claim to prove she was deprived of the opportunity to lawfully
    obtain an abortion within the time permitted under the forum state’s law,
    regardless of the plaintiff’s ability to obtain a lawful late-term abortion in
    another state).       We conclude Iowa public policy would not permit
    recovery for wrongful birth if the abortion in question would be illegal.12
    To the contrary, the public policy codified in section 707.7 precludes
    such a recovery.             The Plowmans’s claims arise from the allegedly
    misinterpreted ultrasound during the second trimester of Pamela’s
    pregnancy with Z.P.
    The right to sue for wrongful birth belongs to parents who were
    denied the opportunity to make an informed choice whether to lawfully
    terminate a pregnancy in Iowa. It is not this court’s role to second-guess
    that intensely personal and difficult decision. Parents of children with
    disabilities may find their lives enriched by the challenges and joys they
    _________________________
    4. This section shall not apply to the termination of a human
    pregnancy performed by a physician licensed in this state to practice
    medicine or surgery or osteopathic medicine or surgery when in the best
    clinical judgment of the physician the termination is performed to
    preserve the life or health of the pregnant person or of the fetus and
    every reasonable medical effort not inconsistent with preserving the life
    of the pregnant person is made to preserve the life of a viable fetus.
    Iowa Code § 707.7(1), (4).
    12The Iowa legislature recently enacted chapter 146B, which prohibits abortions
    after twenty weeks of fetal gestation other than cases of medical emergency. S.F. 471,
    87th G.A., 1st Sess. § 3 (Iowa 2017) (to be codified at Iowa Code § 146B.2(2)(a)).
    Nevertheless, the legislature clarified that the Act “shall not be interpreted to . . .
    prohibit abortion prior to an unborn child reaching a postfertilization age of twenty
    weeks.” 
    Id. § 5.
    The legislation also allows a woman to maintain an action for actual
    damages against a physician who performs an abortion in violation of this chapter. 
    Id. § 4
    (to be codified at Iowa Code § 146B.3). The legislation was not made retroactive.
    See Iowa Code § 4.5 (“A statute is presumed to be prospective in its operation unless
    expressly made retrospective.”).
    29
    confront daily. But under our tort law, financial compensation should be
    paid by the negligent physician if liability is proven.
    C. The Father’s Wrongful-Birth Claim. Jeremy, as the father of
    a profoundly disabled child, may be obligated to pay for his share of the
    child’s care for the rest of his life. See Iowa Code § 252A.3(3) (outlining
    dependent support obligations).     Defendants nevertheless contend that
    Jeremy cannot bring a claim for wrongful birth because he had no
    physician–patient relationship with them. Pamela testified Jeremy may
    have attended “some” prenatal appointments with her, but the record
    does not disclose whether Jeremy attended her obstetrical ultrasound or
    to what extent Jeremy relied on what Pamela was told by the defendants.
    Jeremy does not claim that he personally had a physician–patient
    relationship with any defendant.
    Courts are divided as to whether physicians providing prenatal
    care owe a duty that extends to the father.         Most courts specifically
    addressing the question have allowed the father’s wrongful-birth claim to
    proceed. See Khadim v. Lab. Corp. of Am., 
    838 F. Supp. 2d 448
    , 459–60
    (W.D. Va. 2011) (applying Virginia law and ruling that genetic testing lab
    owed duty to both parents); 
    Keel, 624 So. 2d at 1030
    (reinstating
    wrongful-birth claims of both parents and noting that defendants, by
    failing to inform mother of possibility of congenital birth defects, “directly
    deprived her and derivatively, her husband,” of the option to abort);
    Andalon v. Superior Ct., 
    208 Cal. Rptr. 899
    , 905 (Ct. App. 1984) (holding
    the father “is manifestly a direct beneficiary of tort-duty imposed by
    virtue of [his wife’s] doctor-patient relationship” with physician who failed
    to detect their child’s Down syndrome); Rich v. Foye, 
    976 A.2d 819
    , 830
    (Conn. Super. Ct. 2007) (rejecting defendants’ argument they owed no
    duty to father on wrongful-birth claims arising from interpretation of
    30
    fetal ultrasound); Chamberland v. Physicians for Women’s Health, LLC,
    No. CV010164040S, 
    2006 WL 437553
    , at *7 (Conn. Super. Ct. Feb. 6,
    2006) (“The court also notes that most of the wrongful birth cases from
    other jurisdictions cited by both parties make no distinction between the
    duty owed to the mother and the father.”); DiNatale v. Lieberman, 
    409 So. 2d 512
    , 513 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1982) (noting the father “shares the
    legal obligation to provide for the child’s care and support [and his] right
    is not dependent upon the mother’s cause of action but is his
    individually”); Lab. Corp. of Am. v. Hood, 
    911 A.2d 841
    , 852 (Md. 2006)
    (answering certified question that genetic testing lab possibly owed duty
    to father dependent on fact-finding); Geler v. Akawie, 
    818 A.2d 402
    , 414
    (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 2003) (requiring retrial of wrongful-birth claims
    by both parents arising from negligent genetic counseling); Estate of
    Amos v. Vanderbilt Univ., 
    62 S.W.3d 133
    , 138 (Tenn. 2001) (reinstating
    father’s jury award in wrongful-birth action for negligent transmission of
    HIV virus to mother leading to death of their child exposed in utero). But
    see Breyne v. Potter, 
    574 S.E.2d 916
    , 921 (Ga. Ct. App. 2002) (holding
    physician who misdiagnosed Down syndrome leading to abortion owed
    no duty to unmarried father who was not his patient); Molloy v. Meier,
    
    660 N.W.2d 444
    , 453 (Minn. Ct. App. 2003) (holding physician’s duty of
    care did not extend to patient’s husband who was not the biological
    father and never attended her prenatal appointments); Broadnax v.
    Gonzales, 
    809 N.E.2d 645
    , 649 n.3 (N.Y. 2004) (“The treating physician
    owes no duty of care to the expectant father.”); Krishnan v. Sepulveda,
    
    916 S.W.2d 478
    , 482 (Tex. 1995) (holding physician owed duty only to
    expectant mother, not the father); Fruiterman v. Granata, 
    668 S.E.2d 127
    , 135–36 (Va. 2008) (holding father’s wrongful-birth claim failed
    because the defendant’s prenatal services were provided to the mother
    31
    alone, not to the plaintiffs “as a couple”).               Other courts allow the
    “parents” to bring claims for wrongful-birth without separately analyzing
    the father’s right to recover. 13
    Although we have never addressed whether a physician providing
    prenatal care to the expectant mother owes a duty to the child’s father,
    we have addressed the duty of physicians to third parties in other
    contexts. “It is hornbook law that in any tort case the threshold question
    is whether the defendant owed a legal duty to the plaintiff.” 
    J.A.H., 589 N.W.2d at 258
    .        “A legal duty ‘is defined by the relationship between
    individuals; it is a legal obligation imposed upon one individual for the
    benefit of another person or particularized class of persons.’ ”                      
    Id. (quoting Sankey
    v. Richenberger, 
    456 N.W.2d 206
    , 209 (Iowa 1990)).
    “Whether, under a given set of facts, such a duty exists is a question of
    law.” 
    Id. (quoting Leonard
    v. State, 
    491 N.W.2d 508
    , 509 (Iowa 1992)).
    We generally look to three factors to determine whether a physician owed
    a duty to a nonpatient: “(1) the relationship between the parties,
    (2) reasonable foreseeability of harm to the person who is injured, and
    13See,    e.g., 
    Lininger, 764 P.2d at 1207
    (“[T]he Liningers may prove and recover
    those extraordinary medical and education expenses occasioned by Pierce’s
    blindness.”); 
    Garrison, 581 A.2d at 292
    (“If the health care provider deprives the parents
    of the ability to choose not to carry an unwell fetus to term, the provider may be held
    liable for the resulting extraordinary expenses of the parents for child care.” (Emphasis
    added.)); 
    Siemieniec, 512 N.E.2d at 705
    (agreeing with the majority of courts “that an
    action for the wrongful birth of a genetically or congenitally defective child may be
    maintained by the parents of such child” (emphasis added)); 
    Viccaro, 551 N.E.2d at 11
    (“We agree with the general rule that the Viccaros are entitled to recover the
    extraordinary medical and educational expenses and other extraordinary costs
    associated with caring for Adam.”); 
    Cote, 513 A.2d at 351
    (“We already have held that a
    wrongful birth defendant is liable for the pecuniary losses incurred by the parents.”
    (Emphasis added.)); 
    Harbeson, 656 P.2d at 488
    (“The parents’ right to prevent a
    defective child and correlative duty flowing from that right is the heart of the wrongful
    birth action.” (Emphasis added.)); 
    Caserta, 332 S.E.2d at 882
    (“[P]arents may in a
    wrongful birth action recover the extraordinary costs for rearing a child with birth
    defects . . . .” (Emphasis added.)).
    32
    (3) public policy considerations.”    
    Id. We now
    review how we have
    applied these factors to date and their application to wrongful-birth
    cases.
    In Leonard, a state mental hospital discharged a patient, Henry
    Parrish, to outpatient care after treating him for bipolar 
    disorder. 491 N.W.2d at 510
    . Shortly after his release, Parrish returned to work and
    severely beat a coworker, John Leonard, without provocation.              
    Id. Leonard sued
    the state. 
    Id. Leonard did
    not know Parrish before his
    commitment and discharge, and Parrish’s psychiatrist had never heard
    Parrish make any threats against Leonard.       
    Id. at 511.
      We held as a
    matter of law the treating psychiatrist owed no duty to Leonard as a
    member of the general public. 
    Id. at 512.
    We concluded the “risks to the
    general public posed by the negligent release of dangerous mental
    patients would be far outweighed by the disservice to the general public if
    treating physicians were subject to civil liability for discharge decisions.”
    
    Id. We worried
    that “the treating physicians would indulge every
    presumption in favor of further restraint, out of fear of being sued.” 
    Id. (quoting Sherrill
    v. Wilson, 
    653 N.W.2d 661
    , 664 (Mo. 1983) (en banc)).
    Similarly, in Schmidt v. Mahoney, we held a physician owed no
    duty to a motorist injured by his patient. 
    659 N.W.2d 552
    , 555 (Iowa
    2003). Dr. Mahoney treated a woman for a seizure disorder, but failed to
    warn her not to drive. 
    Id. at 553.
    She suffered a seizure and lost control
    of her vehicle, colliding with Schmidt’s car. 
    Id. Schmidt sued
    the doctor
    for negligence. 
    Id. We affirmed
    the district court’s ruling granting the
    doctor’s motion to dismiss. 
    Id. at 556.
    As in Leonard, we declined on
    public policy grounds to extend the physician’s duty to members of the
    general public, fearing the resulting liability would adversely impact the
    33
    physician–patient      relationship         through        overly     restrictive
    recommendations. 
    Id. at 555.
    Leonard and Schmidt are distinguishable. Jeremy is not suing as a
    member of the general public, but rather, as the patient’s husband at the
    time of the prenatal care and birth and as the father of their child. This
    ameliorates the concern for open-ended liability. See 
    Hood, 911 A.2d at 852
    (noting father’s wrongful-birth claim “would not risk an extension [of
    tort duty] to ‘an indeterminate class of people’ . . . but only to the father
    of the child who would be responsible for the child’s support”). Thus, we
    turn to our duty precedent in which the plaintiff had a close familial
    relationship with the medical defendant’s patient.
    In J.A.H., we addressed a physician’s duty to a son for negligent
    treatment of his mother by her 
    therapist. 589 N.W.2d at 257
    . The son
    alleged the therapist’s treatment caused his mother to develop false
    memories, damaging their parent–child relationship.           
    Id. We observed
    that in medical negligence actions, a physician’s duty to the patient
    arises from their contractual relationship. 
    Id. at 260.
    But we observed
    that we had previously relaxed the privity requirement in professional
    negligence actions, especially for negligent medical care, and stated “lack
    of privity is not necessarily determinative on the question of duty.” 
    Id. at 260–61.
    We recognized it was foreseeable that the son would be harmed
    by “the fallout of the negligent mental health care to his mother,” yet we
    did not base our decision on foreseeability. 
    Id. at 261–62.
    Rather, we
    determined once again that public policy considerations precluded
    imposing a duty on therapists to nonpatient family members. 
    Id. at 263.
    We noted the “problem of divided loyalties and the need to protect
    confidentiality.”    
    Id. Specifically, we
      stated     that   “[p]reserving
    confidentiality in a mental health setting is probably more important
    34
    than in any other type of medical setting.” 
    Id. We echoed
    concerns that
    a therapist might alter treatment to the patient’s detriment to avoid
    liability to third parties. 
    Id. Those public
    policy concerns are not present in a wrongful-birth
    action.    We do not see that the mother’s prenatal care would be
    compromised, or patient confidentiality threatened, if physicians could
    be civilly liable for negligence to both the expectant mother and father.
    To the contrary, physicians providing prenatal care would have a greater
    incentive to improve fetal testing and disclosure to both parents if their
    liability for negligence extended to the father as well as the mother.
    We find particularly compelling the father’s joint legal obligation to
    support a disabled child. The physician–patient relationship is with the
    mother, not the father, but doctors providing prenatal care can easily
    foresee harm to both parents who must raise a profoundly disabled child.
    Indeed, physicians who negligently injure a baby during delivery are
    already liable in tort to both parents.    See 
    Asher, 846 N.W.2d at 499
    (concluding that physician’s scope of liability for birth injury was
    established as a matter of law and affirming judgment on jury verdict
    awarding damages to both parents and child).
    Fathers also have a voice in reproductive decisions, although the
    ultimate decision to terminate a pregnancy belongs to the mother.
    Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, 
    505 U.S. 833
    , 898, 
    112 S. Ct. 2791
    , 2831 (1992). The plaintiffs in this case were married at the time of
    the prenatal care and birth, and it is undisputed that Jeremy is Z.P.’s
    father, with legal obligations to support his child.     A husband has a
    “deep and proper concern and interest . . . in his wife’s pregnancy and in
    the growth and development of the fetus she is carrying.” 
    Id. at 895,
    112
    S. Ct. at 2830 (alteration in original) (quoting Planned Parenthood of
    35
    Cent. Mo. v. Danforth, 
    428 U.S. 52
    , 69, 
    96 S. Ct. 2831
    , 2841 (1976)).
    Maryland’s highest court expressly rejected the argument that the
    woman’s sole right to choose to abort precluded recognizing her
    husband’s right to sue for wrongful birth. 
    Hood, 911 A.2d at 851
    (noting
    that the plaintiffs, like many other married couples, would “jointly”
    decide whether to terminate a pregnancy); see also 
    Andalon, 208 Cal. Rptr. at 905
    (noting husband-father’s injury “flows from his role as a
    participant in the reproductive life of the marital couple and its lawful
    choices [and noting t]he burdens of parental responsibility fall directly on
    his shoulders” (footnote omitted)). Although the father has no legal right
    to compel or prevent an abortion, he does have an interest in
    participating in decisions regarding family planning. 14
    For these reasons, we hold that a father-husband such as Jeremy
    may bring a wrongful-birth claim under Iowa law, notwithstanding his
    lack of a physician–patient relationship with the defendants.
    D. Recoverable Damages in This Wrongful-Birth Action to Be
    Determined on Remand. The Plowmans seek damages for (1) their cost
    of ordinary care raising the child; (2) their cost of extraordinary care
    required for Z.P.’s life as a result of his disabilities; (3) their own pain,
    suffering, and mental anguish; and (4) their loss of income. They are not
    claiming any damages for loss of their child’s consortium or services or
    for Pamela’s labor and delivery of Z.P.
    Because the district court granted defendants’ motion for summary
    judgment on liability, it did not decide which damage claims can be
    submitted to the jury. A supreme court is “a court of review, not of first
    14The Iowa legislature has also allowed a father of a fetus upon whom a partial-
    birth abortion is performed to sue the physician. See Iowa Code § 707.8A(4)(a).
    36
    view.” Cutter v. Wilkinson, 
    544 U.S. 709
    , 718 n.7, 
    125 S. Ct. 2113
    , 2120
    n.7 (2005).   The defendants did not file motions for partial summary
    judgment on particular elements of damages. On this sparse appellate
    record, we decline to decide what damages are recoverable. On remand,
    the district court must determine which types of damages may be
    submitted to the jury under the factual record made by the parties.
    IV. Disposition.
    We reverse the district court’s summary judgment and remand the
    case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    DISTRICT COURT SUMMARY JUDGMENT REVERSED AND
    CASE REMANDED.
    All justices concur except Cady, C.J., who concurs specially, and
    Mansfield, J., who dissents.
    37
    #15–0974, Plowman v. Ft. Madison Cmty. Hosp.
    CADY, Chief Justice (concurring specially).
    I concur in the opinion of the court. The claim described in the
    case fits within the existing framework of a medical malpractice tort, and
    the alleged wrongful conduct gives rise to damages.         However, the
    damages recoverable under the tort must not hinge on the distinction
    between a child perceived as “normal” and a child perceived as
    “disabled.”   Such a distinction can be illusory and only risks
    unwarranted stereotypes and undeserved assumptions based on bias.
    See Anne Bloom, The Radiating Effects of Torts, 62 DePaul L. Rev. 229,
    242 (2013); Wendy F. Hensel, The Disabling Impact of Wrongful Birth and
    Wrongful Life Actions, 40 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 141, 144 (2005). Such a
    distinction must be discontinued.
    In Nanke v. Napier, we held a parent could not recover damages for
    a negligently performed abortion that resulted in the birth of a “normal,
    healthy child” because the benefits of parenthood exceeded the financial
    burdens associated with parenthood. 
    346 N.W.2d 520
    , 522 (Iowa 1984).
    In this case, we identify the injury claimed in Nanke as the birth of a
    healthy child when seeking to distinguish the injury here as the
    deprivation of a parent’s ability to make an informed decision to
    terminate pregnancy. In truth, the injury in both cases is the same. In
    both cases, parents are deprived of the outcome of the decision they
    either made or would have made if given the opportunity. Thus, the real
    distinction between Nanke and this case is the perception that the child
    in Nanke was born normal and the child in this case was born disabled.
    See Anne Bloom & Paul Steven Miller, Blindsight: How We See
    Disabilities in Tort Litigation, 
    86 Wash. L
    . Rev. 709, 719–20 (2011). This
    means these cases instruct that damages are recoverable under this tort
    38
    only when the child is disabled.      This holding implies that while the
    benefits of parenting “normal, healthy” children can outweigh the costs,
    the benefits of parenting a disabled child will not.
    Society would be better served if we proceed forward with this tort
    by abandoning the inclination to distinguish people as either normal or
    disabled. See Richard K. Scotch, Models of Disability and the Americans
    with Disabilities Act, 21 Berkeley J. Emp. & Lab. L. 213, 214–15 (2000).
    Instead, damages under the tort should be recoverable when the extra
    financial burden of raising the child would be substantial enough to
    support a decision to terminate a pregnancy under prevailing community
    and medical standards.        This standard does not impinge on the
    individual constitutional right to an abortion; it only permits damages
    associated with the decision when the extra expenses of parenthood
    would reasonably support the termination of a pregnancy. In this way,
    the reasonableness of the decision to terminate pregnancy will not hinge
    on identifying the child as disabled, but on the extra expenses associated
    with parenting the child.    Those expenses describe the essence of the
    damages. Our law should in every instance seek to remove assumptions
    based on perceived differences in people.
    39
    #15–0974, Plowman v. Ft. Madison Cmty. Hosp.
    MANSFIELD, Justice (dissenting).
    I respectfully dissent because I cannot agree that we should create
    a cause of action for “wrongful birth.”
    Nothing compels us to establish a wrongful-birth cause of action.
    As plaintiffs’ very able counsel conceded at oral argument, Roe v. Wade,
    
    410 U.S. 113
    , 
    93 S. Ct. 705
    (1973), does not require this result. There is
    no constitutional imperative here.
    In my view, the court’s decision is incorrect for three reasons.
    First, this cause of action did not exist at common law and is contrary to
    traditional common law concepts.          Second, Iowa statutes, specifically
    Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.206, foreclose this cause of action. Third,
    there are good public policy reasons not to recognize the claim. See Dier
    v. Peters, 
    815 N.W.2d 1
    , 3 (Iowa 2012) (citing and applying these three
    factors in determining whether Iowa tort law allows an action for
    paternity fraud).
    I. Common Law Precedents Do Not Support This Claim.
    The common law does not support this cause of action.               At
    common law, parents could not recover for the wrongful birth of a child.
    See Etkind v. Suarez, 
    519 S.E.2d 210
    , 214 (Ga. 1999); Hickman v. Grp.
    Health Plan, Inc., 
    396 N.W.2d 10
    , 13 (Minn. 1986); Wood v. Univ. of Utah
    Med. Ctr., 
    67 P.3d 436
    , 442 (Utah 2002).         This was true even though
    abortion was not illegal at common law. See Abrams v. Foshee, 
    3 Iowa 274
    , 278–80 (1856).
    Furthermore, even if we were not constrained by Iowa statutes and
    could tinker with the common law in this area, there are good reasons
    not to do so.       This is not a straight-and-simple case of medical
    malpractice, as the majority suggests. In general, a medical malpractice
    40
    claim cannot be pursued in the absence of physical harm.               See
    Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liab. for Physical & Emotional Harm § 6, at
    67 (Am. Law Inst. 2010) (“An actor whose negligence is a factual cause of
    physical harm is subject to liability for any such harm within the scope
    of liability . . . .”).
    Plaintiffs do not contend that the defendants’ actions caused
    physical harm to Z—but rather that Z’s birth as a severely disabled child
    has caused them economic and emotional harm. In the plaintiffs’ words,
    A baby such as Z.P. is not the injury. The injury is
    that the parents were denied the right to make a deeply
    personal but informed decision whether to give birth to a
    potentially severely brain damaged child and willingly incur
    the foreseeable economic and emotional costs associated
    with caring for such a child.
    I do not minimize the financial and personal burdens on the Plowmans of
    raising a severely disabled child.    But this is not a typical medical
    malpractice claim.
    It is true we have allowed medical malpractice claims to be
    pursued in the absence of physical injury when a breach of duty will
    “inevitably” result in mental anguish, pain and suffering. See Oswald v.
    LeGrand, 
    453 N.W.2d 634
    , 639–40 (Iowa 1990) (limiting the holding to “a
    combination of the two factors existing here: extremely rude behavior or
    crass insensitivity coupled with an unusual vulnerability on the part of
    the person receiving professional services”); see also Restatement (Third)
    of Torts: Liab. for Physical & Emotional Harm § 47(b) & cmt. f, at 175,
    179 (Am. Law Inst. 2012) (allowing recovery for serious emotional harm
    in the context of “specified categories of activities, undertakings, or
    relationships in which negligent conduct is especially likely to cause
    serious emotional harm” while noting that “the mere fact that serious
    emotional harm was foreseeable under the facts of the specific case” is
    41
    insufficient). Yet even if one could argue for the Oswald exception here,
    plaintiffs’ lawsuit has clearly traveled some distance from a traditional
    medical malpractice claim.
    My colleagues analogize the wrongful-birth claim to a failure-to-
    diagnose or a failure-to-provide-informed-consent cause of action. These
    off-base comparisons do not advance the majority’s analysis. Under a
    failure-to-diagnose claim, the physician can be sued because his or her
    negligence has resulted in physical harm, or at least greater physical
    harm than would otherwise have occurred. See, e.g., Murtha v. Cahalan,
    
    745 N.W.2d 711
    , 716 (Iowa 2008) (“[T]he ‘injury’ is the development of
    the problem into a more serious condition which poses greater danger to
    the patient or which requires more extensive treatment.” (emphasis
    omitted) (quoting DeBoer v. Brown, 
    673 P.2d 912
    , 914 (Ariz. 1983) (en
    banc))). Similarly, the informed-consent theory permits a physician to be
    sued only when inadequate disclosure of the risks of a “proposed medical
    procedure” results in “injury.” See Pauscher v. Iowa Methodist Med. Ctr.,
    
    408 N.W.2d 355
    , 359–60 (Iowa 1987). Here, again, the alleged breach of
    duty has not caused physical harm.
    II. This Claim Is Contrary to an Iowa Statute.
    Furthermore, existing, longstanding Iowa legislation weighs against
    the creation of the wrongful-birth cause of action and, in my view,
    forecloses it. In 1860, our legislature enacted what is now Iowa Rule of
    Civil Procedure 1.206. See Iowa Code § 2792 (1860); see also 
    id. § 4187
    (repealing in whole the 1851 Code of Civil Practice).      The 1860 law
    provided,
    A father, or in case of his death or imprisonment or desertion
    of his family, the mother, may prosecute as plaintiff an
    action for the expenses and actual loss of service resulting
    from injury or death of a minor child.
    42
    Iowa Code § 2792.
    Other than amendments eliminating the preference for the father,
    this statute has remained basically unchanged for over 150 years. 15 And
    until now, we have adhered to its limits. For example, in 1926, we did
    not let a father recover for the wrongful death of a thirteen-year-old son
    who had been emancipated. Lipovac v. Iowa Ry. & Light Co., 
    202 Iowa 517
    , 522–23, 
    210 N.W. 573
    , 575–76 (1926). We explained that the father
    “must bring himself within [the statute’s] terms in order to be entitled to
    recover.”     
    Id. at 519,
    210 N.W. at 574 (recognizing that an action to
    recover under the statute “cannot be extended to cases omitted from its
    provisions or applied to those not fairly within its purview”). In 1971, we
    held that emotional distress damages were not recoverable because the
    statute was limited to “expense” and “loss of services.” See Wardlow v.
    City of Keokuk, 
    190 N.W.2d 439
    , 448 (Iowa 1971) (noting that recovery is
    “limited by the precise language of [the statute]”). We have also declined
    to allow parents to recover damages for injury or death of an adult child,
    reasoning, “The legislature has defined the remedies available for injury
    to or death of a person, and thus, any recovery is limited to those
    remedies provided by the legislature.” Kulish v. W. Side Unlimited Corp.,
    
    545 N.W.2d 860
    , 862 (Iowa 1996); see also Kuta v. Newberg, 
    600 N.W.2d 280
    , 287 (Iowa 1999) (denying recovery of consortium damages for an
    adult child under the statute even though “public policy might well
    support a different rule”).
    15In 1973, the legislature eliminated the paternal preference. See 1973 Iowa
    Acts ch. 316, at 660. Current Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.206 provides, “A parent, or
    the parents, may sue for the expense and actual loss of services, companionship and
    society resulting from injury to or death of a minor child.”
    43
    In Dunn v. Rose Way, Inc., we held that a father could recover
    under this statute for the death of a viable unborn child. 
    333 N.W.2d 830
    , 833 (Iowa 1983).              But we did so on the basis of close textual
    analysis of rule 1.206. We explained, “A minor person is simply one who
    has not yet reached majority, a category which certainly includes unborn
    persons.” 
    Id. Thus, to
    date, we have respected the boundaries of rule 1.206.
    Under this statute, parents cannot sue for emotional distress because
    the statute is limited to recovery of expenses and loss of services.
    Likewise, until the law was changed, parents could not sue for the injury
    or death of an adult child under rule 1.206 because it only referenced
    minor children. 16 And while parents can sue for the death of an unborn
    child, this is only because we have concluded an unborn child fits within
    rule 1.206’s definition of a minor child.
    Rule 1.206 thus controls a parent’s right to recover for tortious
    conduct affecting a minor child. See 
    Wardlow, 190 N.W.2d at 443
    ; see
    also 
    Dunn, 333 N.W.2d at 833
    (“What is involved here is a right of
    recovery given to a parent.”).                And the statute limits recovery to
    circumstances when there is an “injury to” or the “death of” a minor
    child.     No part of rule 1.206 authorizes recovery for a child’s birth.
    Consistent with our prior cases, we should continue to honor the
    legislative lines that rule 1.206 has drawn. Because the statute includes
    16In   2007, the legislature enacted a new statute, which provided,
    A parent or the parents of a child may recover for the expense
    and actual loss of services, companionship, and society resulting from
    injury to or death of a minor child and may recover for the expense and
    actual loss of services, companionship, and society resulting from the
    death of an adult child.
    2007 Iowa Acts ch. 132, § 1 (codified at Iowa Code § 613.15A (2011)).
    44
    “injury” and “death” but not “birth,” parents may recover for an injury to
    a minor child or the death of a minor child, but not for the minor child’s
    birth. Otherwise, we would be rewriting the statute.
    The court says that rule 1.206 does not “speak to” the wrongful-
    birth cause of action because such a claim does not involve injury to the
    minor child. However, by the same logic, we could just as well have said
    that rule 1.206 does not “speak to” claims relating to adult children or
    claims for emotional distress damages.          We didn’t.     Under the
    interpretive canon expressio unius est exclusio alterius, the legislature’s
    decision to include recovery for “injury to” or “death of” a minor child
    also means it did not intend to include recovery for the birth of a child.
    See Homan v. Branstad, 
    887 N.W.2d 153
    , 166 (Iowa 2016) (“It is an
    established rule of statutory construction that ‘legislative intent is
    expressed by omission as well as by inclusion, and the express mention
    of one thing implies the exclusion of others not so mentioned.’ ” (quoting
    Marcus v. Young, 
    538 N.W.2d 285
    , 289 (Iowa 1995)).           This rule of
    construction has special force here given that a wrongful-birth cause of
    action has no footing in traditional common law.
    III. Public Policy Considerations Should Also Defeat This
    Claim.
    Finally, there are valid public policy reasons not to recognize this
    claim. It goes without saying that a main source of public policy should
    be the enactments of the public’s representatives, namely the legislature.
    See Berry v. Liberty Holdings, Inc., 
    803 N.W.2d 106
    , 110–11 (Iowa 2011)
    (discussing public policy in the context of a wrongful-discharge claim).
    Unless a public policy is “clear and apparent,” “public policy is best left
    to our legislative branch of government to decide as representatives of
    45
    the people.”       Galloway v. State, 
    790 N.W.2d 252
    , 259 (Iowa 2010)
    (Cady, J., dissenting).
    Bowing to this approach in part, the court cites recent informed-
    consent laws relating to abortion as reflective of legislative policy.
    However, the last time the Iowa legislature was actually free to set policy
    in this area predated Roe v. Wade.             At that time the legislature made
    performing an abortion illegal, except to save the life of the mother. See
    Iowa Code § 701.1 (1973). 17 An honest appraisal of the legislature’s Iowa
    Code section 146A.1 would find that it is intended to discourage, not
    encourage, abortions. The statute sets forth prerequisites for abortion
    only, not for carrying a pregnancy to term.              See Iowa Code § 146A.1
    (2017). It requires some creativity to read section 146A.1 as support for
    the new cause of action the court establishes today. 18
    17The legislature first criminalized the performance of any abortion in 1859. See
    1859 Iowa Acts ch. 58, § 1 (codified at Iowa Code § 4221 (1860)). Aside from
    renumbering and minor changes, the statute remained unchanged until it was
    substantially amended in 1977 following Roe v. Wade. See 1976 Iowa Acts ch. 1245,
    ch. 4, § 526 (repealing Iowa Code § 701.1 (1977)); 
    id. ch. 1245,
    ch. 1, § 707 (enacting
    Iowa Code § 707.7 (1979)).
    18Section 146A.1 is entitled “Prerequisites for an abortion,” and at the time of
    the alleged malpractice read as follows:
    Except in the case of a medical emergency, as defined in section
    135L.1, for any woman, the physician shall certify both of the following
    before performing an abortion:
    1. That the woman has been given the opportunity to view an
    ultrasound image of the fetus as part of the standard of care.
    2. That the woman has been provided information regarding
    the options relative to a pregnancy, including continuing the
    pregnancy to term and retaining parental rights following the
    child’s birth, continuing the pregnancy to term and placing the
    child for adoption, and terminating the pregnancy.
    Iowa Code § 146A.1. In the 2017 session, the legislature added more prerequisites for
    an abortion, including a seventy-two hour waiting period. See S.F. 471, 87th G.A., 1st
    Sess. § 1 (Iowa 2017) (to be codified at Iowa Code § 146A.1(1)).
    46
    Also relevant from a public policy perspective are the consequences
    of a particular ruling.   See, e.g., Mulhern v. Catholic Health Initiatives,
    
    799 N.W.2d 104
    , 121–22 (Iowa 2011).        In my view, the court’s ruling
    leads to a slippery slope. True, today’s decision is limited to a “severely
    disabled child.” But the court does not define the term. What if testing
    indicates the child will be born blind or without a hand? Is that enough?
    The court’s decision also opens up the possibility for other claims.
    Can a mother sue a father for not telling her that he carried a genetic
    disorder, on the theory that she would otherwise have had an abortion?
    Can a father sue a mother for not telling him she carried a genetic
    disorder, on the theory that he would not have had unprotected sex?
    Can a couple that relies on an outside sperm donor sue the source of
    that donation in tort?
    Or suppose a physician recommends a potentially life-saving
    course of treatment for a seriously ill octogenarian whose adult children
    hold medical power of attorney.      The children agree to the course of
    treatment, which prolongs the octogenarian’s life but doesn’t alleviate his
    misery.   Instead, it drains the remaining assets of his estate.        The
    majority opinion opens up the possibility that the children could sue for
    “wrongful prolonging of life.”
    Another unanswered question is how one will select a jury in a
    wrongful-birth case. Many Iowans have deep-seated moral and religious
    objections to abortion, even if the unborn child has a severe disability.
    This raises the specter of a highly intrusive and uncomfortable voir dire,
    leading to the exclusion of a large swath of our population from the jury
    panel. See Thornhill v. Midwest Physician Ctr. of Orland Park, 
    787 N.E.2d 247
    , 257 (Ill. App. Ct. 2003) (“The court excused 11 potential jurors
    based upon their opinions regarding abortion.”); Wuth ex rel. Kessler v.
    47
    Lab. Corp. of Am., 
    359 P.3d 841
    , 852 (Wash. Ct. App. 2015) (“Jury
    selection began on October 21, 2013. On the Wuths’ motion, the trial
    court employed a written juror questionnaire and individual questioning
    of some prospective jurors to determine whether they were able to render
    an impartial verdict. The questionnaire asked whether the prospective
    jurors believed abortion is morally wrong or should be illegal, whether
    they had close contact with a disabled child, whether they had been a
    party to medical negligence lawsuit and whether they knew any of the
    parties. Jurors who responded affirmatively to any of the questions were
    brought in for individual questioning.”).
    The best argument the court has for its ruling is that it provides
    greater motivation for physicians to provide more accurate diagnoses of
    conditions in unborn children. I agree that courts should take incentives
    into account in deciding cases, particularly under the common law.      I
    also agree that traditional tort law works well and does a good job of
    internalizing the costs of negligent conduct. Yet I question whether the
    majority’s incentive is needed or beneficial here.   In a typical medical
    malpractice case, the causation inquiry is a scientific one: Did the
    physician’s negligence cause the injury?    Here, though, the causation
    inquiry is a human one: If the risks of a disability had been accurately
    disclosed, would the woman have terminated her pregnancy? Given the
    type of causation inquiry the factfinder must resolve, there is a
    possibility of overdeterrence.   Although this matter is not part of the
    present appeal, it is a subject of disagreement among the parties, with
    the defendants pointing out that the plaintiff declined her physician’s
    offer of amniocentesis during a subsequent pregnancy.
    I would have no problem with a potential breach of contract claim
    against a physician who contractually assumes a duty to provide a
    48
    competent diagnosis of an unborn child’s condition.                Parties are today
    free by private arrangement to allocate this responsibility.               This could
    also avoid any question as to what course of action would have been
    taken and eliminate the possible overdeterrence problem I have
    mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
    As the Kentucky Supreme Court noted when it rejected the
    wrongful-birth cause of action,
    The Bogans believe that patients should have a breach of
    contract action against the physicians who offered and
    charged for diagnostic prenatal testing, yet who allegedly did
    not perform those services correctly. Despite our holding
    denying the tort claim as a matter of law, a physician who
    contracts and charges for a service, such as a prenatal
    ultrasound and consequent opinion as to the results of the
    ultrasound, is liable for any breach of contract in this
    regard.
    Grubbs ex rel. Grubbs v. Barbourville Family Health Ctr., P.S.C., 
    120 S.W.3d 682
    , 691 (Ky. 2003).
    IV. Conclusion.
    For all these reasons, I would affirm the grant of summary
    judgment and let the general assembly decide whether to authorize this
    cause of action. 19
    19The majority puts the shoe on the other foot, stating, “If the legislature
    disagrees with our decision, it is free to enact a statute precluding wrongful-birth
    claims.” This observation is undoubtedly true. In several states, legislatures have
    enacted statutes to overturn court decisions permitting wrongful-birth claims. See, e.g.,
    Blake v. Cruz, 
    698 P.2d 315
    , 320–21 (Idaho 1984), superseded by statute, Idaho Code
    Ann. § 5-334(1) (West, Westlaw current through laws enacted as of Jan. 18, 2017), as
    recognized in Vanvooren v. Astin, 
    111 P.3d 125
    , 127–28 (Idaho 2005). However, I would
    not impose that burden on the Iowa General Assembly. In our system of government, it
    is the legislature’s job, not ours, generally to take the initiative on matters of public
    policy.