Charles Lewis Scales, an infant, sued the United States through his mother, Judy Renee Scales, as next friend under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346, 2671 — 2680, alleging that he was born with congenital rubella syndrome as a result of the negligent medical treatment his mother received during her basic training for service in the Air Force. Charles alleged three instances of negligent conduct. First, he claimed that Air Force medical personnel were negligent in administering a rubella vaccination to his mother without determining first whether she was pregnant. They were negligent a second time in failing to ascertain whether his mother was pregnant when she later contracted rubella. And finally, they were careless in failing to send for her medical records, which indicated that she had been diagnosed “probable rubella,” once it was discovered that she was pregnant.
Having denied the government’s motion to dismiss based on
Feres
v.
United States,
When Judy Renee Scales was inducted into the United States Air Force on June 27, 1977, and assigned to undergo basic training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, she was unaware that she was approximately one month pregnant. During her basic training, Lackland AFB experienced an outbreak of rubella. Rubella is an infectious disease, commonly known as German measles, that may cause permanent injury to an unborn fetus, particularly if it is contracted in the first trimester of pregnancy. Ms. Scales believes that she received a rubella vaccination as part of the battery of inoculations given all recruits during basic training. This vaccination, allegedly administered to Ms. Scales while she was pregnant, is claimed to have resulted in Charles’ congenital rubella syndrome. The government insists that there is no evidence, other than hearsay, to support the conclusion that Ms. Scales received a rubella vaccination during her basic training. Furthermore, assuming that Ms. Scales was vaccinated against rubella, the government argues that there is no evidence demonstrating a causal connection between a rubella vaccination administered to the mother and congenital rubella syndrome in the child.
On July 25, 1977, Ms. Scales was hospitalized at Lackland AFB with complaints of nausea, stiff joints, and a rash. A physician in the dispensary diagnosed her symptoms as “probable rubella,” but neither informed Ms. Scales of the diagnosis nor made any effort to determine whether she was pregnant. When Ms. Scales completed her basic training at the end of August 1977, she was transferred from Lackland AFB to Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Mississippi. One month later she discovered that she was nineteen weeks pregnant. The Air Force physician treating Ms. Scales during her pregnancy never requested her medical records from Lackland, even though he administered two rubella titer tests that indicated *972 Ms. Scales’ exposure to rubella at some point in the past. Unfortunately, the tests cannot pinpoint accurately when a rubella infection has occurred unless the infection is acute, which was not Ms. Scales’ case. Ms. Scales was discharged from the Air Force in December, 1977, because of her pregnancy. On March 21, 1978, she gave birth to Charles Lewis Scales. Charles suffers from several congenital defects, including cataracts, a heart murmur, possible neurological damage, respiratory problems, growth deficiencies, and possible mental and physical retardation. Expert testimony at trial agreed that Charles’ defects are characteristic of congenital rubella syndrome resulting from his mother’s exposure to rubella during the early stages of her pregnancy. Ms. Scales maintains that if she had known about the “probable rubella” diagnosis and the effect of rubella on an unborn child, she would have aborted the fetus she was carrying. Thus, the basic thrust of Charles’ theory of damages is that but for the negligence of Air Force medical personnel he would never have been born. The question we must address, however, is not whether Charles presents a supportable legal theory, but whether the court below had jurisdiction to consider his claim.
The FTCA provides that the United States shall be liable for tort claims “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances.” 28 U.S.C. § 2674. While this act “waives the Government’s immunity from suit in sweeping language,”
United States v. Yellow Cab Co.,
The Supreme Court clarified and reaffirmed the rationale underlying the
Feres
doctrine in
Stencel Aero Engineering Corp.
v.
United States,
While these two prongs of the rationale underlying the
Feres
doctrine are
*973
recognized frequently in cases discussing the rule,
see, e.g., Johnson v. United States,
Reasoning as the Supreme Court did in
Stencel
and as the Ninth Circuit did in
Monaco, supra,
The policies that support the
Feres
doctrine clearly would preclude Charles’ mother from bringing suit against the United States based on the negligent medical treatment she received while on active duty in the Air Force. Two of the claims rejected in
Feres
were based on allegations of medical malpractice. Moreover, this Court has held repeatedly since
Feres
that claims based on medical malpractice fall within the bounds of the
Feres
doctrine when the plaintiff was a serviceman on active duty at the time of the alleged malpractice.
Stanley v. Central Intelligence Agency,
*974
If we accept the argument that a suit brought by Charles’ mother would tend to undermine military discipline, which we must since it is the law, then it is impossible to see how the result should be different if Charles sues the government instead. Appellee attempts to escape
Feres
by relying on those cases that allow dependents of servicemen to recover for negligent medical treatment they received in the hands of army medical personnel,
e.g., Costley v. United States,
In cases that allow the dependents of servicemen to sue the government, the negligent conduct is directed to the dependent alone and does not involve any décisions by the military toward enlisted personnel. Charles’ allegations of negligence by contrast focus entirely on the medical treatment that Air Force physicians gave his mother. The treatment accorded his mother is inherently inseparable from the treatment accorded Charles as a fetus in his mother’s body. Consequently, the district court’s analysis is the same whether the suit is brought by Charles or Ms. Scales. In either instance, the judge is placed in the position of questioning the propriety of decisions or conduct of fellow members of the Armed Forces. This is precisely the type of examination that
Feres
seeks to avoid.
See Broudy v. United States,
Furthermore, though
Monaco
may be distinguished superficially as appellee suggests, the Ninth Circuit in that case did not rest its decision on the fact that the infant plaintiff’s claim lacked an independent ground of recovery. In fact, Judge Nelson noted specifically that Denise sought relief for injury to herself, “but this does not change the substantive analysis: the court still must examine the Government’s activity in relation to military personnel on active duty.”
Monaco, supra,
For the foregoing reasons we are compelled, however reluctantly, to reverse the judgment of the district court and dismiss the claim as barred by
Feres.
We are not blind to the tragedy of Charles’ condition, and we regret the effects of our conclusion. Nevertheless, we are not writing on a clean slate. Though the rationale underlying
Feres
has been criticized by courts,
e.g., Monaco, supra,
REVERSED.
Notes
. This Court explained the evolution of the Feres doctrine from
Brooks v. United States,
