What a cerebral palsy lawsuit actually is
Cerebral palsy (CP) is a group of disorders affecting movement, muscle tone, and posture, caused by injury to the developing brain. Not every case of CP is the result of a mistake; some are linked to genetics, infections, or events no one could have prevented. A cerebral palsy lawsuit is appropriate only when the brain injury was caused by negligent medical care, meaning a provider did something a reasonably careful provider would not have done, or failed to do something they should have.
Common examples include failing to monitor or act on signs of fetal distress, delaying a medically necessary cesarean section, mishandling a difficult delivery, or failing to diagnose and treat infections or oxygen deprivation. The core legal question is whether substandard care, rather than an unavoidable complication, caused the harm.
What the law requires you to prove
Because a cerebral palsy claim is a form of medical malpractice, you generally have to establish four things: that the provider owed your child a duty of care, that they breached the accepted standard of care, that the breach caused the injury, and that the injury resulted in damages. CPLR §214-a
Proving causation is usually the hardest part. It typically requires medical experts, such as obstetricians, neurologists, and neonatologists, to review the fetal monitoring strips, delivery records, and imaging, and to explain how the care fell short and how that failure led to the brain injury. A credible case is built on records and expert analysis, not assumptions.
Who can be held liable
Liability depends on who was responsible for the care and where it was delivered. Potentially responsible parties can include the obstetrician, the delivering physician, nurses, anesthesiologists, and the hospital or medical practice. When the negligence happened at a public or county hospital, different and shorter notice rules can apply, including a Notice of Claim requirement that must be filed quickly. GML §50-e
Identifying every potentially liable party early matters, because it affects both the deadlines and how the case is built.
How the value of a case is determined
There is no set figure for a cerebral palsy case, and you should be cautious of anyone who promises one. Outcomes vary widely, and prior results never guarantee future ones. What a case is worth depends on the specific facts and on factors such as:
- The severity of the disability and its impact on mobility, communication, and independence
- The lifetime cost of medical care, therapy, equipment, and home modifications
- Lost future earning capacity
- The strength of the evidence showing negligence caused the injury
- Pain, suffering, and loss of enjoyment of life
Many serious CP cases involve life-care planning experts and economists who project a child’s needs over a lifetime. The point is to account for real, documented needs, not to chase a headline number.
Deadlines you cannot ignore
New York applies the medical malpractice statute of limitations, which is generally about two and a half years from the negligent act. CPLR §214-a For children, New York also recognizes an infancy toll that can extend the deadline, but it does not extend it indefinitely, and the rules are technical. Cases involving public hospitals carry their own, much shorter notice deadlines. GML §50-i
Because the deadlines are complicated and unforgiving, the safest course is to have the facts reviewed as early as possible rather than waiting until you are sure something went wrong.
Common scenarios that lead to claims
Families often come forward after learning that warning signs were present in the record. Recurring patterns include untreated fetal oxygen deprivation, failure to respond to abnormal heart-rate tracings, improper use of delivery instruments, untreated maternal infections, and delays in performing a needed C-section. None of these automatically prove a case, but each is a reason to have qualified experts examine the records.
What to do next
Gather and preserve your medical records, including prenatal care, labor and delivery notes, fetal monitoring strips, and any neonatal records. Write down your timeline of events while it is fresh. Then have the matter reviewed by a lawyer who handles birth injury medical malpractice and can arrange an honest expert evaluation. Because of the deadlines, an early review protects your options even if you are not yet certain a mistake was made.
Frequently asked questions
Does cerebral palsy always mean medical malpractice occurred?
No. Cerebral palsy can result from genetics, infections, or complications no one could have prevented. A lawsuit is only appropriate when negligent medical care caused the brain injury, which is why expert review of the records is essential before any claim is filed.
How long do I have to file a cerebral palsy lawsuit in New York?
New York's medical malpractice statute of limitations is generally about two and a half years from the negligent act. For children, an infancy toll may extend that deadline, but not indefinitely, and claims against public hospitals carry much shorter notice deadlines. Because the rules are technical, it is best to have the timeline reviewed early.
What do I need to prove to win a cerebral palsy case?
You generally must show the provider owed a duty of care, breached the accepted standard of care, that the breach caused the injury, and that damages resulted. Causation usually requires medical experts to review fetal monitoring, delivery records, and imaging and to connect the substandard care to the brain injury.
Who can be held responsible in a cerebral palsy claim?
Potentially responsible parties include the obstetrician, delivering physician, nurses, anesthesiologists, and the hospital or practice. When care was provided at a public hospital, special and shorter notice rules can apply, so it is important to identify every party early.
How much is a cerebral palsy case worth?
There is no fixed amount, and outcomes vary case by case; prior results never guarantee future ones. Value depends on the severity of the disability, lifetime care and therapy costs, lost earning capacity, the strength of the evidence, and pain and suffering. Serious cases often involve life-care planners and economists to document a child's lifetime needs.