A child’s birth is one of a family’s most cherished moments, filled with the joy of welcoming a new family member and expectations for the child’s future. When parents begin to suspect that their child suffered a birth injury, their child’s future suddenly becomes uncertain.
Sometimes a birth injury is immediately apparent, with signs like forceps marks, a broken collarbone, or serious injuries such as Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), with severe brain damage. But what if a birth injury isn’t immediately apparent? How do you recognize the signs of a brain injury weeks or even months after the child’s birth?
Often, the signs of a birth injury are too subtle during the hours and early days following a birth for parents or even medical professionals to observe. Often, it isn’t until a child begins missing milestones that parents suspect a problem. Common delayed signs of birth injury include the following:
If you suspect your child has suffered a birth injury based on one or more of the above signs, it’s crucial for the child to undergo a complete medical evaluation by a pediatrician. Physical examinations and blood tests can determine whether or not a child suffered a birth injury and inform parents of possible outcomes.
Most states, including Illinois, have Early Intervention Programs that assess children with suspected developmental delays and provide services before pre-school.
Birth injuries can be as mild as an abrasion on a child’s scalp caused by a forceps delivery, or they can be severe or catastrophic injuries, such as a hypoxic brain injury or spinal cord damage. The most common causes of birth injuries in medical malpractice cases include the following:
If a laboring mother or infant experienced medical problems or a medical emergency during labor and delivery, and a child shows later signs of birth injury, such as missed milestones or seizures, the attending physician, labor and delivery care team, or the medical facility could be liable for the family’s damages through a medical malpractice birth injury claim. Reach out to our Chicago medical malpractice attorney for assistance.
A birth-injured child may face impacts ranging from mild cognitive and motor delays to cerebral palsy, epilepsy, blindness, or cognitive impairment. A birth injury lawyer in Chicago investigates all aspects of the birth injury, identifies the breach of the provider’s legal duty of care that caused the birth injury, and carefully calculates the past and future economic and non-economic damages to obtain the maximum compensation available and a sense of justice for the family.
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