Cerebral Palsy Due to Birth Injury: How a Cerebral Palsy Lawyer Can Help
A cerebral palsy diagnosis changes a family’s life. Beyond the immediate medical questions, parents are often left wondering how their child’s condition came about and whether anything could have been done differently. In some cases, cerebral palsy is the result of a birth injury; and where that injury was caused or worsened by negligent medical care, families may have legal options.
This guide explains what cerebral palsy is, when it may be linked to a birth injury, and how a cerebral palsy lawyer can help families understand their rights and pursue compensation for the long-term costs of care.
Understanding Cerebral Palsy
Cerebral palsy (CP) is a group of permanent disorders that affect movement, posture, and muscle coordination. It is caused by damage to or abnormal development of the parts of the brain that control movement. Cerebral palsy is one of the most common motor disabilities in childhood, and its severity ranges widely, some children have mild physical limitations, while others require lifelong support for mobility, communication, and daily care.
There are several types of cerebral palsy, including spastic (the most common), dyskinetic, ataxic, and mixed forms. Many children with cerebral palsy also have related conditions such as seizures, intellectual disability, vision or hearing impairments, and difficulties with feeding or speech.
When Cerebral Palsy Is Caused by a Birth Injury
Not all cerebral palsy is caused by events around the time of birth. Cerebral palsy can result from prenatal factors, genetic conditions, infections, premature birth, or events that occur after delivery. In a meaningful number of cases, however, cerebral palsy due to birth injury is linked to something that happened during labour and delivery, including:
- Oxygen deprivation (hypoxic-ischemic injury) caused by problems such as umbilical cord compression, placental abruption, or uterine rupture.
- Failure to monitor or respond to fetal distress detected on fetal heart rate tracings.
- Delayed caesarean section when emergency delivery was clinically indicated.
- Mismanagement of shoulder dystocia or other obstructed labour.
- Improper use of delivery tools such as forceps or vacuum extractors.
- Untreated maternal infections or untreated severe jaundice (kernicterus) in the newborn period.
- Failure to recognize and treat hypoglycemia or other metabolic problems shortly after birth.
When events like these cause hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) or other brain injury, the resulting cerebral palsy may be the consequence of substandard care rather than an unavoidable outcome.
Signs the Cerebral Palsy May Be Linked to a Birth Injury
Certain findings in the medical records often point to a birth-related cause. Qualified medical reviewers will typically look for:
- Low Apgar scores at 5 and 10 minutes after birth
- Abnormal cord blood gas readings consistent with significant acidosis
- Documentation of moderate or severe encephalopathy on the Sarnat scale
- Need for resuscitation at birth
- NICU admission and treatment with therapeutic hypothermia (cooling)
- MRI findings showing patterns of brain injury consistent with hypoxic-ischemic injury near the time of delivery
- A clinical timeline that lines up with a specific event during labour and delivery
None of these findings alone proves negligence. Together, they can help establish whether the cerebral palsy was likely caused by something that went wrong during birth, and whether the medical team’s response met the standard of care.
How a Cerebral Palsy Lawyer Can Help
A cerebral palsy lawyer who handles medical malpractice and birth injury claims plays several important roles for the family.
Investigating What Happened
The first step is usually obtaining the complete medical records — prenatal care, labour and delivery notes, fetal monitoring strips, hospital charts, NICU records, and follow-up assessments. A lawyer will work with qualified medical reviewers in obstetrics, neonatology, neurology, and other relevant fields to assess whether the standard of care was met and whether any breach is connected to the child’s injury.
Building the Case
Birth injury and cerebral palsy claims require detailed evidence, including expert reports, imaging review, and medical literature. A lawyer coordinates this work, identifies the right reviewers, and prepares the case for negotiation or litigation. In Canada, claims involving doctors are typically defended by the Canadian Medical Protective Association (CMPA), and hospitals are usually defended by their own insurers — both well-resourced and represented by experienced counsel.
Calculating the Cost of Care
Cerebral palsy is often a lifelong condition, and the cost of care over a child’s lifetime can be substantial. A cerebral palsy lawyer will work with economists, life-care planners, and other professionals to estimate the realistic cost of medical care, therapy, equipment, accessible housing and transportation, education supports, lost earning capacity, and care that parents may need to provide. These projections are central to any meaningful settlement or judgement.
Managing Deadlines
Limitation periods in Canada are strict, and the rules for claims involving children differ from those for adults. In Ontario, for example, the basic limitation period generally does not start running for a minor until they reach the age of majority, but there are exceptions and specific rules involving litigation guardians. Other provinces have their own rules. A lawyer will identify the limitation periods that apply and make sure the claim is started within them.
What Compensation May Cover
Compensation in a successful cerebral palsy birth injury claim is intended to address the full range of impacts on the child and family. Depending on the case, damages may include:
- Past and future medical and rehabilitation costs
- Therapies such as physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language therapy
- Assistive devices, mobility equipment, and communication aids
- Home and vehicle modifications for accessibility
- Attendant and personal support care
- Educational supports and tutoring
- Loss of future earning capacity for the child
- Out-of-pocket costs and lost income for parents who provide care
- Pain and suffering, subject to the cap set by the Supreme Court of Canada
In addition to a civil claim, families of children with cerebral palsy may also be eligible for government benefits and disability supports that vary by province. A lawyer can help families understand how a settlement may interact with those benefits.
Practical Steps for Families
If you believe your child’s cerebral palsy may be due to a birth injury, a few practical steps can help protect both your child’s care and any future legal claim:
- Focus on your child’s medical care first — ongoing follow-up with paediatricians, neurologists, and therapists is the priority.
- Request the complete medical records from every provider and facility involved, including prenatal care, the hospital, and any NICU stay.
- Keep a written record of dates, names, and conversations while the details are still fresh.
- Track expenses and care needs from the start, including equipment, therapy, missed work, and home modifications.
- Speak to a cerebral palsy lawyer early so the medical records can be reviewed before key deadlines become an issue.
How Diamond and Diamond Can Help
The team of lawyers at Diamond and Diamond has experience handling birth injury and cerebral palsy claims across Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and beyond. We help families investigate what happened, work with qualified medical reviewers, and pursue compensation that reflects the long-term needs of children with cerebral palsy due to birth injury.
To speak with someone now, call our 24/7 injury hotline at 1-800-567-HURT or visit diamondlaw.ca. We offer free consultations and case evaluations to families across Canada.