Do I Need The Help of a Brain Damaged Baby Lawyer?
How Brain Damaged Baby Lawyers Can Help You and Your Baby
Brain damaged baby lawyers help injured people every day. Specifically, they help parents of brain injured children. Lawsuits are complicated in and of themselves, but combined with medical terms, medical files, and the like, they are beyond the ability of a layperson to understand and execute. Your brain damaged baby lawyer will calm your fears and negotiate the complicated insurance, medical, and legal systems, representing you and your child. This allows you to concentrate on your life and caring for your child.
Unfortunately there are thousands of children born with avoidable brain injury each year. Malpractice occurs when a medical professional (i.e. doctor) does not do what he or she is supposed to do in a particular situation. In other words, malpractice occurs when a doctor doesn’t follow proper medical protocols. Malpractice and brain injury may have occurred if your baby’s umbilical cord was wrapped around his or her neck, your baby got stuck under your public bone, or a cesarean section was not performed in a timely manner.
Maternal infection, premature birth, genetic malformation, jaundice, and blood disease can also cause brain injury. Remember, in thousands of births each year, brain injury could have been avoided with property medical care. In these cases, the brain injury was caused by medical malpractice through negligent action or negligent inaction.
It is in your best interest to call highly qualified brain damaged baby lawyers as soon as you can. You will receive both a free legal consultation and a full case analysis. Not sure if malpractice occurred? Here are some indications that malpractice may have caused your baby’s brain damage:
- You hear a nurse or doctor say that he or she should have done something differently or that something should not have happened the way it did
- Your baby was not breathing upon birth (CPR was performed, your baby was blue, or your baby did not cry upon birth)
- Your baby needed to be forcefully pulled from the birth canal with forceps or suction
- Your baby had to stay more than one night in the hospital or was admitted to the NICU
- Your baby scored low on the Apgar test
- Your baby’s umbilical cord was wrapped around his or her neck during labor and delivery