Discover the most frequent causes of pregnancy and childbirth related medical malpractice and wrongful death, what legal rights you have, and what to do if you or a loved one have been harmed by hospital or physician negligence (failure to use reasonable care).
For many Georgia women, the day they find out that they are pregnant is one of the most exciting days of their lives. While most pregnancies and childbirths follow normal timelines and hit the milestones that the guidebooks, websites, and apps predict, in the infrequent instances when things do not progress as expected, women and their families are left confused, hurt, and uncertain of who to turn to.
This is never more the case than when the life or health of the mother or child was harmed as a result of medical negligence and malpractice.
No parent wants to find themselves filing a pregnancy or childbirth malpractice lawsuit, but if you believe you or a loved one has been injured by inappropriate medical care, read on to educate yourself about the most common instances of preventable injury during pregnancy and labor.
While the process of childbirth always causes the mother some degree of trauma, when the care that a physician and hospital are supposed to offer increases that trauma rather than minimizes it, especially when it might have been prevented altogether, the physician and hospital might be guilty of medical negligence.
Preventable pregnancy- and birth-related injury and the malpractice that causes it can occur when:
Out of every 1000 live births in the United States, approximately 7 involve a birth injury. This means that approximately 28,000 birth injuries occur in the United States each year.
While medical malpractice during pregnancy and childbirth is rare, birth-related negligence on the part of physicians and hospitals is one of the leading causes of medical malpractice lawsuits today.
Instances of medical negligence can occur in the care and treatment of both mother and child, and they can occur during both pregnancy and labor and delivery. Some causes of harm to the mother or child are congenital and would occur regardless of hospital or physician intervention.
However, certain injuries occur specifically as a result of a physician or hospital interfering inappropriately or failing to act with an appropriate degree of skill, timeliness, or care.
The sections that follow detail the most frequent causes of medical malpractice during pregnancy and childbirth.
Injury to a mother or her baby can happen at any point in the nine months leading up to labor and delivery, often as a result of circumstances that cannot be prevented, but also as a result of physician or hospital negligence.
When physicians fail to recognize or respond appropriately to signs of serious problems during routine appointments, the consequences can be dire for both mother and child. The most frequent causes of negligence during pregnancy include:
Negligent care such as the above can result in serious maternal or fetal injury and even lead to maternal or fetal death before labor and delivery. These scenarios often lead physicians and hospitals into higher risk scenarios during labor and delivery, which dramatically increases the risk of injury during childbirth itself.
While some of the dangers to mother and child during labor and delivery are consequences of physician negligence during pregnancy, many other threats are unique to the experience of childbirth itself.
Once labor begins, the causes of physician and hospital negligence that most often lead to injury during pregnancy continue to increase risks to mother and child during labor and delivery, including
This sort of negligence can often result in harmful delays in performing a c-section or failing to perform a required c-section altogether, failure to induce, and delayed delivery. Delayed delivery often results in damage to the baby as a result of oxygen deprivation (hypoxia).
Medication errors, including over-medication for the mother can also happen during delayed delivery. This is when practitioners rely too heavily on drugs like Cytotec or Pitocin.
Problems arise during childbirth most often under the following circumstances, according to Stanford Children’s Health:
While these characteristics do not guarantee physician or hospital negligence, they make childbirth more complicated and therefore increase the likelihood that malpractice can occur.
Typically, injury to babies during delivery fall into several different categories: bone or nerve damage, neurological damage, and bleeding and bruising.
The most frequent injuries to babies’ bones and nerves during delivery include:
Labor and delivery can also result in a number of neurological injuries, including:
Finally, babies can also suffer from extensive bruising and subcutaneous bleeding, often as a result of obstetricians using forceps or a vacuum to deliver the infant:
As many injuries potential await expectant mothers during childbirth as await their children. Most often, maternal injuries during childbirth can be classified into four different categories:
Clearly, each of these injuries could naturally occur during childbirth. While experiencing any of them does not necessarily indicate that mother or baby are victims of medical negligence, they do warrant careful reflection on the treatment both mother and baby received while in the care of their doctors and their hospital.
Thankfully, there is restitution and a path forward for victims of pregnancy- and childbirth-related injury, mortality, and malpractice. If you believe you or a loved one have experienced medical malpractice during pregnancy or childbirth, you are empowered and entitled to be made whole under the law. At Marks Law Group, LLC we understand that navigating a medical malpractice lawsuit can be confusing and time consuming, especially when you have a newborn to care for.
At Marks Law Group, we can help you begin to find your new normal after pregnancy and childbirth. We will carefully investigate and build your case meticulously. Call us today at (678) 251-9309.