Pregnancy Modifications: “I Didn’t Offer a Modification and a Pregnant Student Was Injured.”

A clearly pregnant student came to my Vinyasa class. I taught a “Twisting Triangle” pose. I didn’t say “don’t do this if pregnant.” She did it, fell, and suffered placental abruption (thankfully mild). She sued for negligence, saying I had a duty to warn her.

Key Takeaways

  • Standard of Care: You are expected to know contraindications for pregnancy. Closed twists are generally contraindicated.
  • “Special Populations”: As with fitness, if you don’t have a Prenatal Cert, you might be out of scope.
  • Fetal Injury: The fetus is a separate plaintiff.
  • General Class Waiver: Does your waiver say “I am not pregnant” or “I agree to modify”?

The “Why”: The Failure to Warn

The Trap:
Negligence = Duty -> Breach -> Causation -> Damages.
Duty: To keep students safe.
Breach: Failing to offer a modification for a known condition.
If you saw she was pregnant and said nothing, you breached your duty.

The Investigation: I Quoted 3 Major Carriers

1. Yoga Alliance (Alliant)

  • My Analysis: They expect RYT-200s to know basic modifications. They will defend you, but they will review your training.

2. beYogi

  • My Analysis: Covers general instruction. They emphasize that the student has a responsibility to listen to their body (“Contributory Negligence”).

3. MamaNurture (Specialty)

  • My Analysis: If you specialize in this, get specialty insurance.

[IMAGE: List of “Contraindicated Poses” for pregnancy]

Comparison Table: Prenatal Liability

CarrierRequires Prenatal Cert?Covers General Classes?
AlliantNo (Basic Mod)Yes
SpecialtyYesYes
GenericStrictYes

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. General Call Out: “If you are pregnant or have injuries, please modify.”
  2. Specific Cues: “Avoid closed twists if pregnant.”
  3. Don’t Single Out: Don’t shout at her. Walk over and whisper.
  4. Waiver: Ensure it covers pregnancy risks.

FAQ

Am I liable if she didn’t tell me?
No. You are not psychic.

Can I tell her not to take the class?
Be careful. Discrimination laws apply. Better to modify.

What if she ignores my modification?
“Assumption of Risk.” You warned her; she ignored it. You are safe.

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