What the law says about pregnancy-related malpractice
Pregnancy-related malpractice falls under New York’s medical malpractice law. It applies when a healthcare provider fails to meet the accepted standard of care — the level of skill and caution a reasonably careful provider would have used in the same situation — and that failure causes injury during prenatal care, labor, or delivery.
Not every bad outcome is malpractice. Pregnancy carries real risks even with excellent care, and a complication alone does not prove negligence. The legal question is whether the provider did something a competent provider would not have done, or failed to do something a competent provider would have done, and whether that specific deviation caused the harm. Because these cases turn on medical judgment, they almost always require testimony from qualified medical experts.
Who can be held liable
Liability depends on who was involved in your care and what they did. Potentially responsible parties can include:
- Obstetricians and gynecologists who mismanage prenatal care, labor, or delivery.
- Midwives and nurses who fail to monitor or escalate warning signs.
- Anesthesiologists for errors in administering epidurals or anesthesia.
- Hospitals and clinics, which can be responsible for their employees’ conduct and for systemic failures in staffing, monitoring, or protocols.
- Other specialists, such as radiologists or maternal-fetal medicine doctors, when their errors contribute to harm.
If your care was provided at a public hospital or by a government-employed provider, special rules and much shorter deadlines apply, including a Notice of Claim requirement. GML §50-e
Common scenarios
Pregnancy-related malpractice claims often arise from situations such as:
- Failure to diagnose or treat conditions like preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, or infections.
- Failure to monitor fetal distress or to act on abnormal heart-rate readings.
- Delayed or improperly performed cesarean sections.
- Improper use of forceps or vacuum extraction.
- Medication errors during pregnancy or delivery.
- Birth injuries to the baby, including oxygen deprivation that can lead to cerebral palsy and other lasting conditions.
Some of these injuries affect the mother, some affect the child, and some affect both. Where a child suffers a permanent birth injury, the case often overlaps with birth injury and cerebral palsy birth injury claims.
How value is determined
There is no set price for these cases, and no honest lawyer can promise a number. The value of a claim depends on the specific facts. Factors that influence it include:
- The severity and permanence of the injury to the mother or child.
- Past and future medical care, therapy, and assistive needs — which can be lifelong for a severely injured child.
- Lost earning capacity, for the parent and, in birth-injury cases, the child.
- Pain, suffering, and loss of normal life.
- The strength of the evidence and expert support showing the provider caused the harm.
Under New York’s comparative negligence rule, a recovery can be reduced if the injured party shares some fault, though this is uncommon in pregnancy cases. CPLR §1411 Every case is different, and prior results never guarantee a future outcome.
Deadlines you cannot miss
In New York, most medical malpractice claims must be filed within roughly two and a half years of the act or omission, or of the end of continuous treatment for the same condition. CPLR §214-a There are important exceptions that can extend the deadline for children, so a child’s claim may have more time than a parent’s. Claims against public hospitals require a Notice of Claim within 90 days and a much shorter overall window. GML §50-i Because the rules are technical and missing a deadline usually ends a case, it is critical to have the timeline reviewed early.
What to do next
If you suspect pregnancy-related malpractice, gather your prenatal, labor, and delivery records and any notes about what you were told. Keep track of ongoing medical care and expenses. Then have the facts reviewed by an attorney who handles New York medical malpractice and birth injury cases, ideally before any deadline runs. A qualified lawyer can arrange for medical experts to assess whether the standard of care was met and whether a provider’s conduct caused the harm.
Frequently asked questions
Is a bad outcome during birth automatically malpractice?
No. Pregnancy and childbirth carry real risks even with excellent care, and a complication by itself does not prove negligence. Malpractice exists only when a provider deviated from the accepted standard of care and that deviation caused the injury, which usually must be shown through medical expert testimony.
How long do I have to file a pregnancy malpractice claim in New York?
Most New York medical malpractice claims must be filed within about two and a half years of the negligent act or the end of continuous treatment for the same condition. Special rules can extend the time for a child's claim, and cases against public hospitals require a Notice of Claim within 90 days. Have your timeline reviewed early, because missing a deadline usually ends the case.
Who can be sued in a pregnancy-related malpractice case?
Depending on the facts, potentially liable parties include obstetricians, midwives, nurses, anesthesiologists, specialists, and the hospital or clinic responsible for its staff and protocols. Identifying the right defendants requires reviewing the medical records and how care was delivered.
Can both the mother and the baby have a claim?
Yes. The same negligence can injure the mother, the child, or both, and each may have a separate claim with different deadlines. A child's birth injury claim, such as one involving cerebral palsy, often follows different timing rules than the parent's claim.
How much is a pregnancy malpractice case worth?
There is no set value, and no responsible lawyer can promise an amount. Worth depends on factors like the severity and permanence of the injury, lifelong medical and care needs, lost earning capacity, and the strength of the evidence. Every case is different and prior results do not guarantee future outcomes.