Resource Center
Below you’ll find the most helpful accident resources that our clients use to stand up to negligent people and organizations and get the compensation they need to put their lives back together after a personal injury.
Birth Injury Signs and Symptoms
There are many different signs and symptoms of a birth injury, some of which are immediately apparent, while others take time to appear. Many of these injuries and impairments occur due to medical negligence or malpractice.
Immediate Signs and Symptoms of a Birth Injury
Some symptoms of a childbirth injury may be obvious shortly after the baby is delivered. For example, if your baby is lying on their back, their head may lag a bit when you pick them up. The infant may also have a “stiff” feeling while being held.
Early signs of a birth injury may include:
- Abrasions, bruises, or swelling on the infant’s face, head, or shoulder
- A “floppy” appearance indicates a lack of muscle tone
- An infant requiring resuscitation (CPR or a breathing tube) at the time of delivery
- An infant’s failure to begin breathing immediately following delivery
- One arm that is limp in appearance
- Seizures that develop within 48 hours
Keep in mind that these are general birth injury signs and symptoms. It’s important to consult a medical professional if you notice symptoms of a birth injury.
Birth Injury Symptoms That Develop Later
There are other signs of a birth injury that don’t show up until a child gets a little bit older. In fact, the severity of symptoms might not be clear for a year or longer.
These are examples of symptoms that may not appear until a baby is about a year old:
- An inability to crawl, walk or sit up
- Stiffness in the joints or muscles or an inability to control leg or arm movement
- The child has trouble performing basic movements, such as clapping or grasping
Brain Injury at Birth Symptoms
Medical negligence may often lead to brain damage or a baby experiencing symptoms of a brain injury at birth. For example, bleeding of the brain due to the use of vacuum extractors may lead to shock. Symptoms include swelling that spreads from the neck to the ears, which may then seem out of place.
Skull fractures may occur after forceps are used during delivery. If the baby has what looks like a dent in the head, that could be a sign that a fracture has occurred.
Signs of Cerebral Palsy
Cerebral palsy (CP) is a very common developmental disability that’s often caused by brain injury at birth. In some cases, a medical professional’s mistake may cause the development of CP.
Medical errors may cause a rupture of the uterus or umbilical cord complications, such as the cord wrapping around the baby’s throat. These may cut off oxygen to the infant’s brain. Oxygen deprivation or asphyxia may result in cerebral palsy.
The signs of cerebral palsy include:
- Difficulty eating
- Excessive drooling
- Missing certain developmental milestones, like rolling over, sitting, or standing
- Seeming to favor one side of the body — crawling while dragging one leg or reaching with one hand far more often than the other
- Stiff muscles or issues with muscle control or motor skills
- Trouble swallowing
If a brain injury at birth caused your child to develop cerebral palsy, you may be able to file a cerebral palsy lawsuit to pursue compensation that may help cover your child’s treatment and hold the negligent medical professionals accountable.
Medical Malpractice
When a patient is injured as a result of negligent care by a medical doctor, health care professional, or hospital, the circumstance is commonly referred to as “medical malpractice.” In medical malpractice cases, injuries may vary from minor to life-altering, and, if severe enough, may result in death.
Medical Malpractice is Common
Medical malpractice occurs far too often.
In fact, a recent report from Johns Hopkins Medicine estimates as many as 250,000 Americans die each year from preventable medical mistakes, making it the third-leading cause of death in the United States.
If you believe that you are a victim of medical malpractice, you may be able to file a medical malpractice lawsuit as a way to secure financial compensation for pain and suffering, medical expenses, life care costs, and lost work wages.
What Is a Medical Malpractice Lawsuit?
A medical malpractice lawsuit is typically filed shortly after a medical professional’s care resulted in a patient’s injury. These lawsuits may vary based on the type and severity of the injury, but all medical malpractice suits aim to provide injured patients with significant financial compensation.
In medical malpractice lawsuits, a medical provider or facility may have:
- Failed to provide an acceptable standard of care
- Acted with negligence, either through an omission or a direct negligent act
- Caused significant injury to the patient
In order for a patient to secure financial compensation for an injury caused by medical negligence, their legal team must prove that the injury was the result of medical malpractice, meeting the criteria noted above.
Types of Medical Malpractice
There are several different types of medical malpractice, but the common denominator is that negligent medical care results in a significant injury to a patient. Through no fault of their own, medical malpractice victims are forced to experience dramatic physical and emotional challenges, potentially for the rest of their lives.
It’s worth noting that the type of medical malpractice and the severity of the injury may have drastic impacts on the victim’s claim for compensation. Below, we outline some of the more common types of medical malpractice, though this list is not exhaustive.
Birth and Pregnancy Injuries Malpractice
Birth injuries and pregnancy injuries are some of the more common types of medical malpractice. These injuries are caused by medical negligence and take place before, during, or shortly after the birth of a newborn, often resulting in significant injury to the child.
In a birth injury medical malpractice case, the baby’s brain and/or body is injured, resulting in injuries that may last a lifetime. As devastating as it is, around 7 of every 1,000 newborns may be injured at birth.
Some of the more common birth injuries include:
- Cerebral palsy
- Erb’s palsy
- Infant brain damage
- Injuries to the brachial plexus nerves
Other serious birth injuries may result in bleeding and/or lack of oxygen in the brain, facial nerve damage, and/or skull fracturing.
Failure to Diagnose Malpractice Lawsuits
Failure to diagnose conditions and failure to diagnose cancer are two of the more common types of medical malpractice lawsuits. When a doctor or medical practitioner fails to diagnose a serious medical condition, illness, or disease, it may prove catastrophic for the patient.
A doctor may fail to diagnose:
- Heart attack
- Stroke
- Blood clot
- Pulmonary embolism
- Infection
If a doctor fails to diagnose cancer, tumors may progress and spread undetected, and the patient may then miss their window of opportunity for life-extending therapies or surgeries.
Surgery
During a surgical operation, a surgeon may make preventable mistakes that result in patient injury. Known as surgical errors, this type of medical malpractice is shockingly common.
Preventable surgical errors include:
- Wrong-site surgery (when surgery is done on the wrong part or side of the body, like removing the left lung when cancer was in the right lung instead)
- Wrong-patient surgery
- Damage to internal organs
- Surgical tools left inside of the body
- Improper management of post-operative complications
- Botched plastic surgery
Though these types of errors may seem extreme, over 51.4 million surgeries are conducted each year in the United States. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), 1 in every 112,000 surgeries may result in an error — a figure that does not include ER and ambulance operations, which produce more surgical errors.
Other Medical Malpractice Cases
While failure-to-diagnose, surgical, and birth-related medical malpractice are more common, there are many other types of medical malpractice as well, each of which may be equally catastrophic.
Some other medical malpractice cases include:
- Delayed diagnosis: A doctor diagnoses a disease or condition later than they otherwise should have
- Emergency room errors: An ER doctor makes a medical error in an emergency-room setting that results in significant injury to the patient
- Failure to treat: A doctor makes an accurate diagnosis, but does not prescribe adequate medical treatment
- Misdiagnosis: A doctor makes an incorrect diagnosis, resulting in improper treatment
- Prescription drug errors: A doctor prescribes the wrong medication or the right medication but in too high or too low a dosage
If you do not see the medical malpractice situation that injured you or your loved one, we may still determine if you have a case. Contact us today for a free consultation.
Please seek the advice of a medical professional before making health care decisions. This advertisement is not associated with any government agency.
Please seek the advice of a medical professional before making health care decisions. This advertisement is not associated with any government agency.
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