OPINION
Following the removal of this medical malpractice action to federal court from the state courts of Kentucky, the district judge granted motions filed by the defendants, Big Sandy Health Care, Inc., Angela K. Maggard, M.D., and Joanna Santiesteban, M.D., to substitute the United States of America as the sole party defendant and to dismiss this action for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The plaintiffs, Melissa Wilson, Josh Wilson, and the Estate of Nicholas Hunter Wilson, now appeal those rulings, contending that the district court decision deprived them of their right under the Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution to a trial by jury and that, in any event, the plaintiffs were entitled to advance notice from the defendants that the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346, 2671-2680, was the exclusive remedy for the malpractice claims alleged. We find no basis upon which to disturb the judgment of the district court, and we therefore affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
For approximately 35 years, Big Sandy Health Care has operated as a non-profit medical clinic in an historically under-served area of Eastern Kentucky.
See Wilson v. Big Sandy Healthcare, Inc.,
Melissa Wilson, her husband Josh, and the estate of Nicholas Wilson then filed suit against Big Sandy Health Care, Inc., and against Doctors Maggard and Santiesteban, contending that the defendants failed to perform and interpret properly various prenatal genetic tests that would have revealed little Nicholas’s defect. According to the plaintiffs’ complaint, had the family been made aware of the existence of the severe defect, the mother and father would have terminated the pregnancy. Because the defendants did not inform Wilson of the existence of the defect, however, the plaintiffs assert that they all experienced mental and physical pain and suffering and incurred otherwise unnecessary medical and hospital expenses.
The defendants removed the matter to federal district court, attaching to the notice of removal a certification that “the Defendants, Angela K. Maggard, M.D.[,] and Joanna Santiesteban, M.D., were acting within the scope of their employment as employees of [ ] Big Sandy Health Care, Inc., at the time of the incident and are therefore deemed to be [] Public Health Service Officers or employees.” Pursuant to the provisions of the Federally Supported Health Centers Assistance Act of 1992, 42 U.S.C. § 233, the district judge concluded that the defendants had “federal employee” status and had, therefore, consented to be sued only in accordance with the limited waiver of immunity contained in the Federal Tort Claims Act.
See Wilson,
DISCUSSION
The right of an individual to be tried by a jury of peers was deemed so important by the nation’s founders that the Bill of Rights contained explicit reference to the principle. In the Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution, the drafters provided:
In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.
The phrase “common law,” does not, however, mean “merely suits, which the
common
law recognized among its old and settled proceedings, but suits in which
legal
rights were to be ascertained and determined, in contradistinction to those where equitable rights alone were recognized, and equitable remedies were administered.”
Curtis v. Loether,
*333
Focusing on the likelihood that lawsuits seeking compensation for injury to person or property were recognized at common law, the plaintiffs first argue that they are entitled to a jury trial in this matter. The defendants, relying upon the provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 233, insist, however, that this action is actually a claim against the United States and that, “[a]s sovereign, the United States is immune from suit, unless it waives this immunity and consents to suit.”
Center for Bio-Ethical Reform, Inc. v. City of Springboro,
Moreover, even in those instances in which Congress has chosen to waive the government’s immunity from suit, “the plaintiff has a right to a trial by jury only where that right is one of ‘the terms of [the Government’s] consent to be sued,’ ” and where the right is expressed in clear and unequivocal terms.
Lehman,
Thus thwarted in their primary assertion that they were constitutionally entitled to a jury trial in this matter, the plaintiffs alternatively concede that the United States, as sovereign, may avoid jury trials in tort actions but contend that the defendants in this action are not in fact representatives of the federal government and — as private citizens and private entities — are not subject to the same constitutional limitations and mandates. This contention plainly has no merit.
Pursuant to the provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 254b(c)(l)(A), the government “may make grants to public and nonprofit private entities for projects to plan and develop health centers which will serve medically underserved populations.” In part due to the relatively high cost of obtaining malpractice insurance for treatment of such high-risk patients, however, the efforts to provide necessary medical care in such underserved areas initially faced significant roadblocks. To alleviate the financial burden on the medical providers, Congress passed the Federally Supported Health Centers Assistance Act of 1992, 42 U.S.C. § 233, through which practitioners at certain health centers providing necessary medical services “shall be deemed to be ... employee[s] of the Public Health Service.” 42 U.S.C. § 233(g)(1)(A). By virtue of being “deemed” federal employees, personal injury, negligence, and malpractice suits against such individuals and centers are circumscribed by the limitations imposed by the Federal Tort Claims Act. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 233(g)(1)(A) and 233(a).
In order for medical centers and caregivers to qualify for these protections, the Attorney General is first required to ad *334 vise the court within 15 days of the filing of any malpractice action in state court that the named defendant or defendants are deemed to be Public Health Service employees and that such “employees” were acting within the scope of their employment. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 238(l)(1) and (c). After the certification has been filed, the Attorney General is then required to remove the action to federal district court, where it is “deemed a tort action brought against the United States under the provisions of Title 28 and all references thereto.” 42 U.S.C. § 233(c). Because, under the relevant provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 2402, “any action against the United States under section 1346 shall be tried by the court without a jury,” the district court in this matter correctly concluded that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a jury trial and were otherwise required to comply with Federal Tort Claims Act prerequisites.
In similar circumstances, the United States Supreme Court arrived at the same conclusion. The plaintiff in
Osborn v. Haley,
Before this court, the plaintiffs recognize the precedential authority of
Osborn.
They maintain, however, that
Osborn
is of limited utility in determining whether the Wilsons have a constitutional right to a jury trial on their claims because the defendants in this case, unlike the defendant in
Osborn,
are not true federal employees, but are only “deemed to be” federal employees. Whether defendants are actual federal employees or are only deemed by statute to be federal employees is, however, irrelevant in this context. As the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit stated in
Hammond v. United States,
If the United States can abolish the right to a cause of action altogether,] it can also abolish the right to a jury trial that is part of it. When the United States abolishes a cause of action and then sets up a separate administrative remedy against itself, as it has here, the seventh amendment does not require that it must also provide a jury trial.
In
Hammond,
the plaintiff challenged the application of a federal statute that called for substituting the United States as a defendant “in all suits against private contractors to the government for radiation injuries arising from any of the United States atomic weapons testing programs, and mak[ing] the Federal Tort Claims Act ... the sole remedy for those injuries.”
Id.
at 9. Noting that other courts had upheld the constitutionality of similar provisions in other statutes,
see Jones v.
*335
Wyeth Labs., Inc.,
Additionally, even if the provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 233 had not functioned in such a manner as to treat the Wilsons’ causes of action as claims that must be brought in conformity with the Federal Tort Claims Act, the Seventh Amendment would have guaranteed the plaintiffs no rights in their state court litigation. As noted by the Supreme Court in
Osborn,
the Seventh Amendment “is inapplicable to proceedings in state court.”
Osborn
The plaintiffs also submit that, even if 42 U.S.C. § 233 is constitutional, they were entitled to advance written notice under 42 U.S.C. § 233(o)(2)(E) “of the extent to which the legal liability of the health care practitioner is limited pursuant to [the applicable statutory scheme].” This argument is patently without merit, however. By its very terms, § 233(o) applies only to “[v]olunteer services provided by health professionals at free clinics.” (Emphasis added.) Because Big Sandy Health Care, Inc., is not a free clinic, and because no other provision of § 233 applicable to facilities that charge fees for services requires such advance notice, the defendants in this case did not violate any relevant notice provision.
CONCLUSION
The Seventh Amendment’s guarantee of trial by jury has consistently been interpreted by the federal courts in such a manner as to be inapplicable both in state court actions and in claims against the federal government. Because the Attorney General, exercising authority granted by Congress, has seen fit to accord the defendants in this case the status of federal employees, thus allowing for the substitution of the United States as the sole defendant in this action originating in state court, the plaintiffs have no constitutional recourse for the bench-trial mandate of the applicable statutes. Furthermore, those portions of 42 U.S.C. § 233 applicable to these plaintiffs do not impose upon the healthcare providers a duty to provide advance notice to patients about possible statutory limitations in malpractice actions. For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court substituting the United States as the sole defendant and dismissing the plaintiffs’ complaint without prejudice.
