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Colorado Birth Injury Claim Attorneys

The day your baby is delivered begins with such promise. It can marred, however, by an injury to your baby, which may have far-reaching consequences. If your infant is injured during the delivery process, you need experienced lawyers to assist in assessing your legal options. At Chalat Hatten & Koupal PC we have that experience. Our attorneys and staff are skilled at handling the complex legal aspects of your case while compassionately helping you understand your rights and options. Contact a lawyer at our firm today to learn about your options for seeking compensation for the injuries your child has sustained.

A "birth injury" describes harm suffered by a baby during the birthing process, usually occurring during travel through the birth canal. A difficult delivery, with the risk of injury to the baby, may occur if the birth canal is too small or the baby is too large (as sometimes occurs when the mother has diabetes). Injury is more likely if the baby is lying in an abnormal position before birth. When these conditions are present, medical care providers should take appropriate steps to minimize the danger to the baby and mother.

Types of Birth Injuries

Some of the most common birth injuries result from two very different conditions: cerebral palsy and Erb's (brachial) palsy. Both cerebral and Erb's palsy are often the result of complications during child delivery itself, though cerebral palsy can sometimes arise either before or shortly after delivery.

Cerebral palsy is the generic term for a number of disorders affecting a baby's brain function and body movement. Cerebral palsy can be the result of an injury to a baby's brain in the womb, during delivery or soon after birth. It can also be caused by a lack of oxygen flow to a baby's brain during delivery.

A treating physician/obstetrician's failure to recognize the need to provide adequate oxygen to the baby, such as by caesarean section, or the unreasonable delay in performing such a procedure procedure may result in cerebral palsy.

Erb's Palsy

In a difficult delivery of a large infant, some of the larger nerves to one or both of the newborn's arms can be stretched and injured. Erb's palsy occurs in about two out of every 1,000 child deliveries, when a baby suffers injury to the brachial plexus. The brachial plexus is a group of nerves that travel from the spinal cord up the arm, extending to the arms and hands. Erb's palsy happens most often during delivery when excessive pressure is put on the baby's head, neck or shoulder because of difficulty delivering the shoulder area (known as "shoulder dystocia"). The condition occurs most frequently in babies of higher-than-average birth weight, and can happen when forceps or vacuum devices are used with too much pressure during delivery.

Nerve Damage

Other nerves may also be damaged during delivery. Pressure to the facial nerves caused by forceps can result in weakness of the muscles on one side of the face. This injury is evident when the newborn cries and the face appears asymmetric. No treatment is needed, and the newborn usually recovers within a few weeks.

Occasionally, the nerve going to the diaphragm (the muscle that separates the organs of the chest from those of the abdomen) is damaged, resulting in paralysis of the diaphragm on the same side. In this case, the newborn may have difficulty breathing.

Injuries to the spinal cord due to overstretching during delivery sometimes occur, though they are extremely rare. These injuries can result in paralysis below the area where the injury occurred. Damage to the spinal cord is often permanent.

Who is at fault?

Although some birth complications cannot be avoided, often the consequences can at least be minimized. A birth injury claim, medical malpractice claim or delivery room malpractice claim is not limited to the conduct of medical doctors, but applies also to nurses, anesthesiologists, health care facilities, pharmaceutical companies and hospitals.

With most births taking place in a hospital, often it is the hospital's employees responsible for the negligent care. Hospitals are corporations that are either public or private entities. In the context of medical malpractice actions, hospitals can be held directly liable for their own negligence and can be held "vicariously" liable for the negligence of their employees. Vicarious liability means a party is held responsible not for its own negligence, but for the negligence of another.

Examples of Our Success

Failure to Monitor Results in Severe Oxygen Deprivation

A client was under the care of her OB/GYN for her pregnancy and the delivery of Baby A. At birth, Baby A had a slow heart beat, was cyanotic and flaccid. The OB/GYN failed to recognize the signs and symptoms of Baby A's fetal distress during the client's labor and did not expedite delivery by performing a C-section. Instead, the doctor attempted to use forceps to deliver the baby. The delays in delivery resulted in multi-organ system damage and brain damage in Baby A. After fewer than three months, Baby A died in her parents' home. The OB/GYN agreed to a confidential settlement.

Contact an attorney at Chalat Hatten & Koupal PC today.

"Past results are no guarantee of future results."

Chalat Hatten & Koupal
1900 Grant Street
Suite 1050
Denver, CO 80203

Toll Free: (866) 701-7292
Phone: (303) 502-5007

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