Advertisement

Infertility Doctor Called Liar or Mistaken : Trial: Expert testifies that a physician accused of using his own sperm with patients was ‘practicing good medicine.’

Share
From Associated Press

An infertility doctor charged with fraud was either lying or mistaken when he told some women they were pregnant, a medical expert said Friday.

But Dr. Robert Harrison, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology from Dublin, Ireland, who was testifying for the defense, said he believed Dr. Cecil Jacobson “was practicing perfectly good medicine.”

Harrison endorsed many of Jacobson’s treatment methods, including the use of hormone injections to help women get pregnant. He said he had doubts, however, about some of the pregnancies that Jacobson diagnosed.

Advertisement

Jacobson has been charged with 52 counts of fraud and perjury. He is accused of using hormone injections to trick some women into believing they were pregnant when they were not, and of using his own sperm to father up to 75 children by artificial insemination while claiming that he was using an anonymous donor program.

Prosecutor Randy Bellows described last week’s testimony by patient Mary Sutphin, who said Jacobson told her she was 10 weeks pregnant. Another doctor said he found no evidence of a pregnancy. She said she went back to Jacobson the same day and he told her the baby was sleeping.

“Doesn’t that suggest to you that Dr. Jacobson lied to the patient?” Bellows asked.

“It suggests either he lied or he made a mistake on his ultrasounds,” Harrison said. “I would agree with you that I had my doubts about this particular pregnancy.”

Harrison said he reached the same conclusion about patient Deborah Gregory, who testified last week that a doctor found no evidence she was pregnant the day after Jacobson said her 18-week pregnancy was progressing well.

Harrison said he examined Jacobson’s records on 118 patients and, “I didn’t find evidence of widespread problems such as you are suggesting.”

“But you’re relying on Dr. Jacobson’s files” and assuming everything in them was true, Bellows said.

Advertisement

Harrison said a pregnancy test could show a positive result after one injection with the hormone HCG. Many patients have testified that they showed positive on pregnancy tests after Jacobson gave them multiple injections of the hormone.

But Harrison endorsed the use of the hormone to help a woman get pregnant and to help her avoid a miscarriage.

Based on Jacobson’s medical records, “I thought he was practicing perfectly good medicine,” Harrison said. “This is entirely within the guidelines for managing infertility patients.”

Another witness, Dr. Mason Andrews, an obstetrician and gynecologist, said Friday that Jacobson was known as a pioneer in his field. Jacobson is credited with introducing the use of amniocentesis in this country to detect fetal defects.

But under cross-examination, Andrews noted that Jacobson’s resume said he was a resident at George Washington University Hospital. Previous testimony has indicated that Jacobson did not perform such a residency.

Several patients whose children allegedly were fathered by Jacobson testified that they were concerned their children could meet and marry someone fathered by the same donor. Some said they were concerned about an increased risk of genetic defects resulting from the birth of a child whose parents have the same biological father.

Advertisement

Dr. Mark Evans, a geneticist at Wayne State University in Detroit, said he thought the risk of that happening was “absolutely minuscule.”

Advertisement