Skip to main content
Main Contact Details
Enquiry
UTM Elements
 
Home / Medical negligence / Birth injury compensation claims

Birth injury compensation claims

Our birth injury solicitors secure life-changing compensation settlements and early provision for care, therapies, adapted accommodation and equipment, for children with cerebral palsy and birth-related disability.

Mothers and babies have a right to receive safe care throughout pregnancy, labour and birth. During this time, the maternity team of GPs, midwives, obstetric, neonatal and paediatric doctors, ultrasonographers, anaesthetists and nurses must work together to provide care of a standard which ensures the safety of both mother and child.

Failings in maternity care can cause severe injury leading to lifelong disability. If your child has suffered a birth injury as a result of negligent maternity care, our birth injury solicitors can help you claim the compensation to provide lifelong care, specialist therapies, adapted housing, and educational support - helping your child achieve the best possible quality of life.

Get in touch with our experienced medical negligence solicitors - we can help.

Starting your birth injury claim

If you have concerns about the maternity care you or your child received around the time of birth, or if you have been contacted by HSIB, the Maternity and Newborn Safety Investigations (MNSI), or NHS Resolution, it is sensible to seek specialist legal advice. Contact from these organisations can indicate that aspects of care are being reviewed. It is important to note, not all families are contacted even where care fell below the expected standard. Early, independent legal advice can help you understand what options are available to you and your family to secure the compensation and answers you and your child needs.

You can contact us by telephone or by email for free, confidential advice from a specialist birth injury solicitor. We will listen carefully to your concerns, explain your options in clear and straightforward terms, and advise whether we can help investigate the care provided. Where appropriate, we can request an interim payment to meet your child’s immediate needs. Our solicitors will then support you through the remaining process in a sensitive and supportive way, with a focus on securing the maximum support and compensation for your child.

 

Birth injury compensation FAQs

What is a birth injury?

Birth injury, or birth trauma is any injury or harm that occurs to a baby during pregnancy, labour, or around the time of birth, which may result from complications or mistakes in medical care.

Some injuries happen despite adequate care, while others occur because healthcare professionals failed to act appropriately, often missing signs of distress or delaying delivery.

Birth injury claims often involve severely disabling conditions, such as cerebral palsy or severe neurological disability, which can be caused by mistakes at any stage of the mother’s maternity care during pregnancy, labour and birth, or the newborn baby’s neonatal care. The full impact of the injury and resulting physical, neurological and behavioural disability on the child’s life may only become evident over time, and may not even be diagnosed as related to the birth injury.

Where a mother is injured or dies as a result of negligently managed pregnancy or birth, she or her family may also be able to claim compensation for her injury and their loss.

Claims involving cerebral palsy, hypoxic brain injury, and other birth-related injuries are complex and should be handled by solicitors who specialise in birth injury cases. Specialist expertise ensures that the full extent and impact of the injury is explored to secure maximum compensation and support.

What types of maternity mistakes can lead to birth injury compensation claims?

Mistakes in maternity care can be made during pregnancy, during labour and birth, immediately after birth or in the early days of the baby’s life. Maternity mistakes made during pregnancy, labour, and birth include:

  • failing to recognise and manage risk factors in pregnancy, including:
    • premature or prolonged rupture of membranes (PROM or PPROM);
    • group B streptococcal (GBS) infection;
    • IUGR (intrauterine growth restriction – baby small for dates);
    • VBAC (vaginal birth after previous caesarean section);
    • Rhesus incompatibility (where mother and baby’s blood groups are incompatible);
    • twin/multiple pregnancies;
    • maternal conditions such as diabetes, epilepsy, VTE or pre-eclampsia.
  • fetal heart rate monitoring errors, including:
    • failing to monitor the fetal heart rate;
    • misinterpreting or failing to act upon fetal heart abnormalities;
    • maternal-fetal heart rate mix-ups.
    • hyperstimulation and syntocinon (uterine stimulant) errors;
    • delays in delivery, failure to escalate to instrumental delivery or emergency caesarean section;
  • negligent management of obstetric complications and emergencies, including:
    • fetal distress or hypoxia;
    • hyperstimulation and uterine rupture;
    • placental abruption and haemorrhage (bleeding);
    • impacted fetal head;
    • shoulder dystocia (disproportionate size of baby to mother’s pelvis);
    • vaginal breech delivery;
    • meconium aspiration.
  • negligent technique in use of forceps/Ventouse suction;
  • anaesthetic awareness and intubation errors.

Mistakes in neonatal care, at birth or in the early days of the baby’s life include:

What are common types of birth injuries caused by medical negligence?

Birth injuries which can be caused by medical negligence include:

Our experienced birth injury solicitors recover maximum compensation settlements for children who have suffered severe birth injury as a result of negligent maternity and neonatal care.

How much compensation can you get for a birth injury?

Compensation settlements for severe disability caused by negligent birth injury are among the highest amounts that can be claimed for medical negligence. Whilst no amount of compensation can ever undo the harm that a child has suffered, the compensation can enable the child and their family to access the help that they need to meet the extensive needs that arise from their birth injury disability. The amount of compensation depends on the severity and impact of the child’s disability, the cost of meeting their needs for the rest of their life, and other factors, such as their life expectancy.

Our clients benefit from early interim payments and outstanding compensation settlements which pay for care, therapies, equipment and adapted accommodation. As soon as we can secure an admission of liability and interim payment from the negligent healthcare provider (usually represented by NHS Resolution) we start to make a difference where it is most needed, whether that’s providing access to SEN educational support and assistive technology, professional help with personal care, specialist therapies and medical treatment, buying an adapted vehicle or moving the child and their family to a more suitable, fully adapted home.

Birth injury compensation claims are complex and must be handled by claimant specialist solicitors to ensure that the child receives the financial provision that they will need throughout their life to manage their disability.

How is birth injury compensation paid?

Ensuring the best settlement for a birth injury claim depends on the child’s solicitor having the expertise to maximise the benefit of the settlement to the child. Our experienced birth injury solicitors work with our experts and client families to gain a detailed understanding of the child’s injuries, their evolving needs, and the best settlement arrangement to meet those needs, to ensure the child receives the full benefit of their compensation. Depending on their needs, final settlements may be paid as:

  • lump sum payments:
    • for larger purchases, such as adapted accommodation or vehicles;
    • to allow for contingencies and flexibility in how the money is spent;

and/or:

  • periodical payments (PPOs):
    • financial security from regular, tax-free payments, index-linked to keep up with inflation;
    • guaranteed lifelong provision for care. 

Once liability has been proven or admitted, interim payments of compensation can be obtained in advance, whilst the case is ongoing:

  • to ease financial hardship;
  • to pay for care, therapies and essential specialist equipment;
  • to help buy and adapt accommodation.

Compensation for clients who are under the age of 18 or whose mental capacity is impaired is protected and administered for them by a Court of Protection appointed deputy or through a personal injury trust. We work closely with our deputyship and personal injury trust specialists and with families to help our severely disabled clients gain the maximum benefit from their settlements.

How are birth injury claims funded?

Birth injury claims are usually funded through Conditional Fee Agreements (CFAs) sometimes called No Win, No Fee agreements. This means you do not pay any legal fees upfront, or if the claim is unsuccessful. If the claim is successful, the legal costs are usually paid by NHS Resolution, which represents the defendant NHS trust or doctor. Under standard CFA rules, solicitors can charge a ‘success fee’ from the compensation, calculated as a percentage of their time.

At Boyes Turner, we do not charge a success fee for birth injury claims involving a child. This means our success fee is always 0%, preserving the compensation secured for your child.

Legal Aid may be another option. Legal Aid is a government-funded scheme that helps cover legal costs for eligible cases and is available for child birth injury claims. Only a small number of solicitors are accredited to provide Legal Aid, and our specialist birth injury team has this accreditation.

Depending on the complexity of the case, Legal Aid may not always be the most suitable funding option. We recommend contacting our birth injury solicitors so we can advise on the best approach, explain your funding options, and manage the claim process from start to finish allowing you to focus on your child and family.

Can you get Legal Aid for birth injury claims?

Legal Aid funding is available to children who have suffered a brain injury, such as cerebral palsy, at birth or within the first few weeks of their life. The child’s injury must have occurred in England or Wales. The parents’ own finances are ignored for the purposes of their child’s application, but the child will not be eligible if they have substantial funds of their own. Legal Aid funding is only available where the eligible child’s claim is handled by a solicitor who is approved as a specialist in cerebral palsy and child brain injury claims by the Legal Aid Agency.

As accredited specialists in cerebral palsy and serious neurological disability claims, we have access to Legal Aid funding for eligible clients. We also offer no win, no fee agreements (Conditional Fee Agreements) for birth injury claims and will discuss with you which method of funding is best for you and your child.

How can we protect our child’s privacy after birth injury compensation?

We understand that families of injured children who receive large compensation settlements worry about publicity and other people’s unwanted interest in their compensation. The courts also recognise these concerns, and we routinely obtain anonymity orders for our vulnerable clients. In addition, our clients’ compensation is always protected, as it is safely invested and managed by a deputy and the Court of Protection. Or, in the case of clients with full mental capacity, through a personal injury trust.

NHS Resolution have admitted liability – do I need my own solicitor to handle my child’s cerebral palsy claim?

The NHS is defended in medical negligence cases by NHS Resolution. NHS Resolution also appoints its own solicitors to represent the NHS in negligence claims.

Since April 2017, NHS Resolution and their own solicitors (who are defending the NHS) have started directly contacting the parents of babies who have suffered brain injury during childbirth, where the NHS maternity care could lead to a claim.

If NHS Resolution or one of their solicitors has contacted you about your NHS maternity or neonatal care, it is vital that you immediately seek independent legal advice from solicitors who specialise in advising injured claimants (patients) in medical negligence birth injury claims.

Boyes Turner have extensive experience of representing clients with cerebral palsy claims in their communications with NHS Resolution’s Early Intervention Scheme. We have found that even when NHS Resolution admits to the parents of a brain-injured child that aspects of their maternity care were negligent, they delay or avoid accepting full liability for the cause of the injury.

NHS Resolution’s role is to reduce the number of birth injury claims that are made, and to reduce the compensation that is paid to NHS patients who have suffered as a result of medical negligence. In our experience, in the rare cases where they offer an unrepresented family an interim payment, it falls far short of the sums that the child is entitled to receive and that we routinely secure for our clients. The sooner the parent comes to us after a birth injury or contact from NHS Resolution, the sooner we can secure a full NHS admission of liability for causing the child’s injury and begin meeting the child’s needs with a substantial interim payment.

Is there a time limit for birth injury claims?

Most medical negligence claims must be started within three years of the incident. However, this time limit does not apply to children, or to adults who do not have full mental capacity to manage their own finances. In practice, the three-year limitation rarely affects a child’s birth injury claim.

If the child has mental capacity at the age of 18, their three-year limitation period starts on the date of their 18th birthday and reaches the deadline when they are 21.

The three-year deadline does apply to any claim brought by a mother or her bereaved family for her own birth trauma injuries or death caused by negligent maternity care.

In birth injury claims where children reach adolescence or young adulthood, their capacity to bring a claim and the applicable time limits are carefully assessed with the help of medical experts.

We advise anyone who is considering making a birth injury claim to contact us as early as you can. This allows us to advise you about the deadlines that apply to your own circumstances, as well as how to ensure you have the best chance of early financial help and a successful claim.

 

What is a birth injury?

Birth injury, or birth trauma is any injury or harm that occurs to a baby during pregnancy, labour, or around the time of birth, which may result from complications or mistakes in medical care.

Some injuries happen despite adequate care, while others occur because healthcare professionals failed to act appropriately, often missing signs of distress or delaying delivery.

Birth injury claims often involve severely disabling conditions, such as cerebral palsy or severe neurological disability, which can be caused by mistakes at any stage of the mother’s maternity care during pregnancy, labour and birth, or the newborn baby’s neonatal care. The full impact of the injury and resulting physical, neurological and behavioural disability on the child’s life may only become evident over time, and may not even be diagnosed as related to the birth injury.

Where a mother is injured or dies as a result of negligently managed pregnancy or birth, she or her family may also be able to claim compensation for her injury and their loss.

Claims involving cerebral palsy, hypoxic brain injury, and other birth-related injuries are complex and should be handled by solicitors who specialise in birth injury cases. Specialist expertise ensures that the full extent and impact of the injury is explored to secure maximum compensation and support.

What types of maternity mistakes can lead to birth injury compensation claims?

Mistakes in maternity care can be made during pregnancy, during labour and birth, immediately after birth or in the early days of the baby’s life. Maternity mistakes made during pregnancy, labour, and birth include:

  • failing to recognise and manage risk factors in pregnancy, including:
    • premature or prolonged rupture of membranes (PROM or PPROM);
    • group B streptococcal (GBS) infection;
    • IUGR (intrauterine growth restriction – baby small for dates);
    • VBAC (vaginal birth after previous caesarean section);
    • Rhesus incompatibility (where mother and baby’s blood groups are incompatible);
    • twin/multiple pregnancies;
    • maternal conditions such as diabetes, epilepsy, VTE or pre-eclampsia.
  • fetal heart rate monitoring errors, including:
    • failing to monitor the fetal heart rate;
    • misinterpreting or failing to act upon fetal heart abnormalities;
    • maternal-fetal heart rate mix-ups.
    • hyperstimulation and syntocinon (uterine stimulant) errors;
    • delays in delivery, failure to escalate to instrumental delivery or emergency caesarean section;
  • negligent management of obstetric complications and emergencies, including:
    • fetal distress or hypoxia;
    • hyperstimulation and uterine rupture;
    • placental abruption and haemorrhage (bleeding);
    • impacted fetal head;
    • shoulder dystocia (disproportionate size of baby to mother’s pelvis);
    • vaginal breech delivery;
    • meconium aspiration.
  • negligent technique in use of forceps/Ventouse suction;
  • anaesthetic awareness and intubation errors.

Mistakes in neonatal care, at birth or in the early days of the baby’s life include:

What are common types of birth injuries caused by medical negligence?

Birth injuries which can be caused by medical negligence include:

Our experienced birth injury solicitors recover maximum compensation settlements for children who have suffered severe birth injury as a result of negligent maternity and neonatal care.

How much compensation can you get for a birth injury?

Compensation settlements for severe disability caused by negligent birth injury are among the highest amounts that can be claimed for medical negligence. Whilst no amount of compensation can ever undo the harm that a child has suffered, the compensation can enable the child and their family to access the help that they need to meet the extensive needs that arise from their birth injury disability. The amount of compensation depends on the severity and impact of the child’s disability, the cost of meeting their needs for the rest of their life, and other factors, such as their life expectancy.

Our clients benefit from early interim payments and outstanding compensation settlements which pay for care, therapies, equipment and adapted accommodation. As soon as we can secure an admission of liability and interim payment from the negligent healthcare provider (usually represented by NHS Resolution) we start to make a difference where it is most needed, whether that’s providing access to SEN educational support and assistive technology, professional help with personal care, specialist therapies and medical treatment, buying an adapted vehicle or moving the child and their family to a more suitable, fully adapted home.

Birth injury compensation claims are complex and must be handled by claimant specialist solicitors to ensure that the child receives the financial provision that they will need throughout their life to manage their disability.

How is birth injury compensation paid?

Ensuring the best settlement for a birth injury claim depends on the child’s solicitor having the expertise to maximise the benefit of the settlement to the child. Our experienced birth injury solicitors work with our experts and client families to gain a detailed understanding of the child’s injuries, their evolving needs, and the best settlement arrangement to meet those needs, to ensure the child receives the full benefit of their compensation. Depending on their needs, final settlements may be paid as:

  • lump sum payments:
    • for larger purchases, such as adapted accommodation or vehicles;
    • to allow for contingencies and flexibility in how the money is spent;

and/or:

  • periodical payments (PPOs):
    • financial security from regular, tax-free payments, index-linked to keep up with inflation;
    • guaranteed lifelong provision for care. 

Once liability has been proven or admitted, interim payments of compensation can be obtained in advance, whilst the case is ongoing:

  • to ease financial hardship;
  • to pay for care, therapies and essential specialist equipment;
  • to help buy and adapt accommodation.

Compensation for clients who are under the age of 18 or whose mental capacity is impaired is protected and administered for them by a Court of Protection appointed deputy or through a personal injury trust. We work closely with our deputyship and personal injury trust specialists and with families to help our severely disabled clients gain the maximum benefit from their settlements.

How are birth injury claims funded?

Birth injury claims are usually funded through Conditional Fee Agreements (CFAs) sometimes called No Win, No Fee agreements. This means you do not pay any legal fees upfront, or if the claim is unsuccessful. If the claim is successful, the legal costs are usually paid by NHS Resolution, which represents the defendant NHS trust or doctor. Under standard CFA rules, solicitors can charge a ‘success fee’ from the compensation, calculated as a percentage of their time.

At Boyes Turner, we do not charge a success fee for birth injury claims involving a child. This means our success fee is always 0%, preserving the compensation secured for your child.

Legal Aid may be another option. Legal Aid is a government-funded scheme that helps cover legal costs for eligible cases and is available for child birth injury claims. Only a small number of solicitors are accredited to provide Legal Aid, and our specialist birth injury team has this accreditation.

Depending on the complexity of the case, Legal Aid may not always be the most suitable funding option. We recommend contacting our birth injury solicitors so we can advise on the best approach, explain your funding options, and manage the claim process from start to finish allowing you to focus on your child and family.

Can you get Legal Aid for birth injury claims?

Legal Aid funding is available to children who have suffered a brain injury, such as cerebral palsy, at birth or within the first few weeks of their life. The child’s injury must have occurred in England or Wales. The parents’ own finances are ignored for the purposes of their child’s application, but the child will not be eligible if they have substantial funds of their own. Legal Aid funding is only available where the eligible child’s claim is handled by a solicitor who is approved as a specialist in cerebral palsy and child brain injury claims by the Legal Aid Agency.

As accredited specialists in cerebral palsy and serious neurological disability claims, we have access to Legal Aid funding for eligible clients. We also offer no win, no fee agreements (Conditional Fee Agreements) for birth injury claims and will discuss with you which method of funding is best for you and your child.

How can we protect our child’s privacy after birth injury compensation?

We understand that families of injured children who receive large compensation settlements worry about publicity and other people’s unwanted interest in their compensation. The courts also recognise these concerns, and we routinely obtain anonymity orders for our vulnerable clients. In addition, our clients’ compensation is always protected, as it is safely invested and managed by a deputy and the Court of Protection. Or, in the case of clients with full mental capacity, through a personal injury trust.

NHS Resolution have admitted liability – do I need my own solicitor to handle my child’s cerebral palsy claim?

The NHS is defended in medical negligence cases by NHS Resolution. NHS Resolution also appoints its own solicitors to represent the NHS in negligence claims.

Since April 2017, NHS Resolution and their own solicitors (who are defending the NHS) have started directly contacting the parents of babies who have suffered brain injury during childbirth, where the NHS maternity care could lead to a claim.

If NHS Resolution or one of their solicitors has contacted you about your NHS maternity or neonatal care, it is vital that you immediately seek independent legal advice from solicitors who specialise in advising injured claimants (patients) in medical negligence birth injury claims.

Boyes Turner have extensive experience of representing clients with cerebral palsy claims in their communications with NHS Resolution’s Early Intervention Scheme. We have found that even when NHS Resolution admits to the parents of a brain-injured child that aspects of their maternity care were negligent, they delay or avoid accepting full liability for the cause of the injury.

NHS Resolution’s role is to reduce the number of birth injury claims that are made, and to reduce the compensation that is paid to NHS patients who have suffered as a result of medical negligence. In our experience, in the rare cases where they offer an unrepresented family an interim payment, it falls far short of the sums that the child is entitled to receive and that we routinely secure for our clients. The sooner the parent comes to us after a birth injury or contact from NHS Resolution, the sooner we can secure a full NHS admission of liability for causing the child’s injury and begin meeting the child’s needs with a substantial interim payment.

Is there a time limit for birth injury claims?

Most medical negligence claims must be started within three years of the incident. However, this time limit does not apply to children, or to adults who do not have full mental capacity to manage their own finances. In practice, the three-year limitation rarely affects a child’s birth injury claim.

If the child has mental capacity at the age of 18, their three-year limitation period starts on the date of their 18th birthday and reaches the deadline when they are 21.

The three-year deadline does apply to any claim brought by a mother or her bereaved family for her own birth trauma injuries or death caused by negligent maternity care.

In birth injury claims where children reach adolescence or young adulthood, their capacity to bring a claim and the applicable time limits are carefully assessed with the help of medical experts.

We advise anyone who is considering making a birth injury claim to contact us as early as you can. This allows us to advise you about the deadlines that apply to your own circumstances, as well as how to ensure you have the best chance of early financial help and a successful claim.

Helping families obtain liability and claim compensation
Watch the video
3mins 25secs
Watch the video
3mins 25secs

In this video, our client families share their experiences of how they were left feeling guilty and responsible for the devastating injuries caused to their child, and how we helped them obtain the acknowledgement and compensation they needed to move forward and begin rebuilding their lives.

Our specialist legal teams understand the causes and the impact of cerebral palsy and provide holistic support to each family in meeting their child’s needs, with life-changing compensation, special educational needs, community care and help with managing the child’s compensation settlement.

"Compensation has helped our clients and their families with care needs, therapy, and equipment needs and ensures that they will continue to receive all the assistance they need for the remainder of their life."

Our birth injury cases

View all

What our clients say

"Birth negligence"

In what can only be described as a stressful process dealing with Birth Negligence for your child, Boyes Turner, specifically Richard Money Kyrle and Tara Byrne made the process as smooth, efficient, and with a high level of understanding and empathy as possible. Each part of the process was explained clearly in layman's terms so I had a clear idea of what to expect and also a timeline of how long each process would take. Both Richard and Tara were always an email or phone call away and having to divulge such past traumatic events was done with the utmost respect and empathy. My son's case has now settled and thanks to all the hard work and fighting for justice we are able to move towards a bright future.

Boyes Turner Client
 

Why choose Boyes Turner?

Watch the video
1min 25sec

“Our clients receive the highest standards of advice and representation and are always treated with compassion, outstanding care and understanding of the physical, emotional, psychological and financial impact that life-changing injury can have upon their lives.”

We are nationally acclaimed for our claimant medical negligence expertise and the outstanding results we achieve for our clients.
Our integrated multidisciplinary team offers our clients a full range of specialist help with compensation, rehabilitation, SEN, deputyship, personal injury trusts and community care.
We are ranked as leading clinical negligence experts in the Chambers Directory and Legal 500 guides to the legal profession and are accredited for our specialist expertise by the Law Society, AvMA, and the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers (APIL).
We secure maximum compensation in claims for adults and children who have suffered catastrophic injury and severe disability, and provide practical support for their families.

Our people

Meet your specialist team
 
Susan Brown photo

Susan Brown

Partner

View Full Profile
 
Julie Marsh headshot

Julie Marsh

Partner

View Full Profile
 
Tara Pileggi-Byrne photo

Tara Pileggi-Byrne

Senior Associate - Solicitor

View Full Profile
 
Sita Soni headshot

Sita Soni

Senior Associate - Solicitor

View Full Profile
 
Vanessa Wand photo

Vanessa Wand

Senior Associate - Solicitor

View Full Profile
 
Headshoot placeholder

Laura Hayes-Payne

Associate - Solicitor

View Full Profile
 
Ben Ireland headshot

Ben Ireland

Solicitor

View Full Profile
 
Hannah Lindley

Hannah Lindley

Solicitor

View Full Profile
 
Imogen Alvarez-Buylla

Imogen Alvarez-Buylla

Trainee Solicitor

View Full Profile
 
Alice Carley headshot

Alice Carley

Paralegal

View Full Profile
 
Nicky Melville headshot

Nicky Melville

Paralegal

View Full Profile
 
Audrey Elmore headshot

Audrey Elmore

Medical records coordinator

View Full Profile

Leading medical negligence solicitors for over 30 years

Our solicitors’ expertise in medical negligence claims and their dedication to improving the lives of their injured clients has been recognised by the legal profession and disability charities for over 30 years.