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Ohio Birth Injury Lawyer: What Ohio Hospitals Won't Tell You About Preventable Birth Injuries

Facing a Birth Injury in Ohio: What Are the Key Facts About Medical Malpractice and Your Child’s Rights?

When a new baby comes into the world, it is supposed to be one of the best days of a family’s life. It is a moment filled with joy, hope, and perfect possibilities.

But for many of families in Ohio every year—from the suburbs of Cincinnati to the busy streets of Cleveland—that perfect moment is shattered. Something goes terribly wrong during labor or delivery. Instead of a healthy baby, they go home with a child who has sustained a serious injury during birth.

It is important to understand that birth injuries are different from birth defects. Birth defects are typically unpreventable conditions that develop during gestation due to genetic or environmental factors. Birth injuries, however, are often preventable physical harm caused during the delivery process itself.

The Reality in Our State

In Ohio, the birthing process and labor and delivery are critical times when injuries often occur. The statistics in our state paint a concerning picture that many parents are unaware of until it affects them:

  • Preterm Birth Risks: Ohio currently has a preterm birth rate of 11%, earning the state a “D” rating on the latest March of Dimes report card. In counties with major medical hubs like Cuyahoga (Cleveland) and Lucas (Toledo), that rate spikes to over 12%. Premature birth is a significant risk factor for injuries, requiring doctors to be even more vigilant.
  • Infant Health Disparities: We face a heartbreaking gap in care. In Summit and Franklin counties, Black infants are statistically far more likely to experience severe complications than white infants. This isn’t just a statistic; it represents real families in our neighborhoods receiving unequal outcomes.
  • The Scale of the Issue: With thousands of babies injured annually across the U.S., Ohio families are not outliers. You are part of a large, albeit quiet, community of parents navigating this new reality.

Medical Negligence in Ohio

For decades, our team has dedicated our careers to helping these exact families. Our job is to dig deep, uncover the truth, and challenge powerful hospital systems—whether it’s a massive network in Columbus or a specialized facility in Akron—when a child is harmed by medical malpractice.

If you are reading this, your mind is probably filled with questions: What happened? Was it someone’s fault? What now?

We want to tell you something important right now: You are not alone, and it probably wasn’t your fault.

The fact is, a huge number of serious birth injuries are preventable. They happen because someone—a doctor, a nurse, or a hospital administrator—made a mistake.

  • What is Malpractice? In Ohio, when a mistake by a healthcare provider directly causes a baby’s injury, that is medical malpractice. This can include failure to perform a C-section in time (delayed delivery), improper use of forceps, or failure to monitor the baby’s oxygen levels.
  • Your Rights: When this negligence occurs, Ohio law says you have the right to seek compensation for the massive, lifelong needs your child will have. Families in this situation can file a birth injury claim to pursue compensation for medical bills, therapy costs, and pain and suffering.

The “Data” You Need to Know

We are going to walk you through the facts, the Ohio laws, and the data that the big hospital systems in Columbus and Toledo hope you never find.

  • Statute of Limitations: Although Ohio medical malpractice laws are generally restrictive, if your child survives a birth injury, the state specifically exempts minors from the usual four-year hard deadline and pauses the clock until adulthood, theoretically giving you until their 19th birthday to file a lawsuit.
  • Missing this window can mean losing your rights forever.
  • The Cost of Silence: Large hospital systems sometimes prefer quick, quiet settlements to keep their mistake rates hidden. We want to arm you with the best information possible, because knowing the truth is the first step toward getting your child the help they need.

Find Resources in Your Community

Navigating life after a birth injury requires a network of support close to home. We have created dedicated resource hubs for families across Ohio to help you find the specific answers you need. Click on your city below to view local birth statistics, identify the courthouses where claims are filed, and connect with advocacy groups and support organizations right in your neighborhood. 

What is Medical Malpractice Birth Injury in Ohio? Why Negligence Matters

We need to understand exactly what medical malpractice means under the law. It’s a very specific kind of mistake. It’s not just when a bad outcome happens; it is when a bad outcome occurs because a healthcare provider didn’t follow the rules that every other doctor or nurse follows. Medical professionals must follow proper protocols during these stages to prevent harm. A medical professional’s negligence during childbirth is a leading cause of birth injuries.

Birth injury refers to harm caused to a baby due to a medical professional’s negligence or medical errors during delivery, many of which are preventable.

When investigating a birth injury case, it is crucial to identify medical negligence by reviewing medical records and consulting with experts to determine if the standard of care was breached. 

Was It Unpreventable or Was It Negligence? Understanding the Ohio Standard

In Ohio, just like everywhere else, proving medical malpractice birth injury comes down to proving negligence. Think of it as four important steps. If the healthcare provider misses one of these steps, they were negligent:

  1. Duty: The doctor or nurse had a duty to treat the mother and baby with reasonable care. (This is easy: when they take you on as a patient, they accept this duty.)
  2. Breach: The doctor or nurse breached that duty. This means they did something wrong or failed to do something they should have done. They did not meet the standard of care—the basic, accepted medical procedures. Preventable medical errors often constitute a breach of the standard of care.
  3. Causation: The breach (the mistake) caused the injury. This is the hardest part to prove, but it is everything. We must show that if the doctor had acted correctly, the injury would not have happened.
  4. Damages: The injury caused actual damages (like medical bills, pain, and suffering).

For instance, if an injury happened because a baby was too big, but the doctor did everything right, that is a sad outcome. But if an injury happened because the doctor missed clear signs of fetal distress on a monitor and waited two hours too long to order an emergency C-section, that can be breach and causation. That is a medical malpractice birth injury claim. In legal claims, accurately diagnosing a child’s birth injury and understanding its cause is crucial for families seeking justice and compensation. Serious injuries resulting from preventable medical errors are a key focus of birth injury lawsuits. Severe birth injuries can have lifelong consequences for the child and require substantial compensation to cover ongoing medical and care needs. 

The Ohio Statute that Hospitals Hide: Informed Consent

Here is another key part of Ohio medical malpractice that is often overlooked: Informed Consent (Ohio Revised Code § 2317.54).

  • The Best Definition: Doctors have a duty to tell you the risks and benefits of a procedure and tell you about any reasonable alternatives. They must give you the information needed to make the best decision for yourself and your baby.
  • The Malpractice Link: If a doctor fails to warn a mother about the significant risks of, say, a forceful vacuum delivery, and the baby suffers a severe injury that the mother was never warned about, this can sometimes form a separate basis for a medical malpractice claim.

It’s not just about what the medical staff did wrong; sometimes, it is about what they failed to tell you before they acted.

Key Types of Birth Injuries in Ohio

Many of the most common birth injuries occur during delivery and are linked to trauma or pressure as the baby passes through the birth canal. These common birth injuries can include nerve damage, head injuries, and other conditions that may be preventable with proper care. Injuries to the baby’s head—such as caput succedaneum, cephalohematoma, and facial paralysis—can result from trauma or the use of tools like forceps or vacuums during delivery.

When we talk about birth injuries, we are talking about permanent damage to the baby that changes their life forever. The type of injury often points directly back to the type of negligence that occurred.  

Cerebral Palsy (CP): Cerebral palsy can happen when a baby’s brain is hurt by a lack of oxygen during delivery, turning a joyous moment into a lifelong challenge because of a medical mistake.

Cerebral Palsy is one of the most devastating birth injuries, and it is sometimes linked to brain damage caused by a lack of oxygen (hypoxia) during or shortly after birth. Abnormal muscle tone is a common symptom of cerebral palsy, resulting from brain injury at birth and affecting an infant’s ability to control movements and perform fine motor tasks.

  • The Mistake: This often happens when nurses or doctors fail to recognize signs of fetal distress—like a sudden drop in the baby’s heart rate on the monitoring strip—or fail to act quickly enough to relieve the distress. Disruptions in blood flow during labor can lead to hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE), a severe form of brain injury associated with cerebral palsy, which may result in permanent neurological damage or even death.
  • Little-Known Stat: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates the prevalence of Cerebral Palsy at about 1 in 345 children in the U.S. While not all CP is due to medical malpractice, studies show that a significant percentage—some experts estimate over 20% of cases are directly linked to avoidable oxygen deprivation during the time around delivery. This is why immediate action when distress signals appear is the best standard of care. 

Erb’s Palsy (Brachial Plexus Injury): The Forceful Delivery

Erb’s Palsy is a type of birth injury caused by trauma during delivery, specifically involving nerve damage to the bundle of nerves (the brachial plexus) that controls the shoulder, arm, and hand. This nerve injury can result in weakness, paralysis, and the potential for long-term disability in the affected arm.

  • The Mistake: This injury is typically caused by excessive or improper force used by the doctor when pulling the baby out during a difficult delivery, often when the baby’s shoulder gets stuck behind the mother’s pelvic bone (shoulder dystocia). The doctor pulls too hard or rotates the baby improperly, stretching or tearing the nerves.
  • This specific injury is highly common in malpractice claims because it often leaves clear evidence of the improper force used. It is one of the strongest indicators that the doctor breached the standard of care by not performing the best maneuvers or moving to an emergency C-section fast enough. 

Where Do Injuries Happen? Ohio's Hospital Landscape

A birth injury can happen anywhere, but the resources and pressures at a hospital matter. Healthcare providers at these hospitals are responsible for ensuring the safety of mothers and babies during childbirth. When looking for the best care for your child, knowing where your injury occurred is the first step in the investigation. The quality of a hospital’s resources and staff can directly impact the level of a child’s medical care following a birth injury. 

Staffing and Safety: The Hospital Data You Need to Know

Ohio is home to dozens of large hospital systems, from the sprawling networks in Cleveland and Columbus to smaller county hospitals near me in rural areas. While many offer excellent care, the sheer volume of births and staffing ratios create risks.

  • The Unspoken Stat: Safety organizations like The Leapfrog Group track hospital safety grades across the country, including Ohio. Did you know that hospital ratings—which track things like patient safety processes and infection rates—often correlate with the risk of complications? This is an important piece of data. While a good grade doesn’t guarantee safety, poor staffing ratios—fewer nurses available per patient—increase the risk of delayed treatment, which is a key factor in oxygen-deprivation injuries. 

High-Volume Cities: The Columbus, Cleveland, and Cincinnati Impact

In Ohio’s three largest cities, the pace is often faster, and the risks can sometimes be greater:

  • Columbus Area: With massive institutions like Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and various hospitals near me in the surrounding Franklin County, the volume of births is immense. Negligence often involves a lack of communication or delayed action across different medical departments.
  • Cleveland Area: The intensity of competition between large systems like the Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals means high patient turnover. In these high-volume settings, a nurse missing a critical 15-minute window on a monitoring strip is a common factor in malpractice claims.
  • Cincinnati Area: Hospitals in Hamilton County must balance the rush of a busy urban environment with the best patient outcomes. We often see cases related to instrumentation errors (misuse of forceps or vacuum extractors) in high-pressure delivery situations.

In all these cities, the delivery process in high-volume hospitals can increase the risk of birth injuries due to rushed or improper procedures, making careful monitoring and adherence to medical standards essential. 

The Law is Different: Ohio's Unique Medical Malpractice Rules

If your child was injured in Ohio, you are dealing with a set of laws that are very specific and restrictive. Ohio birth injury cases and medical malpractice cases are governed by unique state laws and procedural requirements, which can impact your ability to seek compensation. Here is the real breakdown of the Ohio Statute of Limitations for birth injuries, based on Ohio Revised Code § 2305.16 and recent Supreme Court rulings.

If the Child Survived (The “Tolling” Rule)

If your child suffered a birth injury (like Cerebral Palsy or Erb’s Palsy) but is alive, Ohio law pauses (or “tolls”) the clock while they are a minor.

  • The Rule: The 1-year timer does not start ticking until the child turns 18.
  • The Deadline: theoretically, you have until the child’s 19th birthday to file the lawsuit.
  • Note: The “Statute of Repose” (the 4-year hard deadline) does not apply to minors in Ohio. The law specifically exempts them.

If the Child Passed Away (“Wrongful Death” )

This is where families lose their rights. If the birth injury resulted in death, the “Tolling Rule” above does not apply to the parents.

  • The Rule: You have 2 years from the date of death to file a Wrongful Death claim.
  • The “4-Year” Wall: A recent Ohio Supreme Court ruling (Everhart v. Coshocton County Memorial Hospital) confirmed that the “Statute of Repose” does apply to wrongful death. This means you generally cannot file a lawsuit more than 4 years after the medical mistake happened, even if the death happened later.

⚠️ Important Warning for Ohio Families Do not wait until your child turns 18. While Ohio law technically allows children to sue up to their 19th birthday, evidence disappears. Nurses retire. Records get lost. Call The Child and Birth Injury Firm immediately to preserve your full rights.

The Proof Barrier: Ohio’s Affidavit of Merit Requirement

Ohio has another tough rule that makes these cases harder from the start: the Affidavit of Merit (Ohio Revised Code § 2305.113).

  • The Requirement: When a medical malpractice lawsuit is filed in Ohio, the lawyer must also file a sworn statement—an affidavit—from a qualified medical doctor. This statement must say that the doctor has reviewed the medical records and believes that negligence occurred.
  • The Firm’s Role: This means that before we can even file a lawsuit, our Team of Lawyers must invest significant time and resources to analyze thousands of pages of medical records and pay a highly qualified medical expert to agree that the standard of care was breached. This entire process can cost thousands of dollars and requires a deep network of medical experts who are willing to take on large hospital systems. It is a huge barrier that proves why only the most experienced law firms should handle these cases. 

Little-Known Stats: The Ohio Data Nobody Shares

When investigating a potential medical malpractice birth injury, our Team of Lawyers digs deeper than just reviewing the usual data. We look for patterns and statistics that point to systemic problems.

C-Section Rates: The Uncomfortable Conversation

Everyone knows C-sections are common, but did you know that the rate of C-sections often reveals more about hospital practices than patient needs?

  • The Unspoken Stat: While the national target C-section rate for low-risk women is often cited as 23.9%, some hospitals in Ohio have significantly higher C-section rates for low-risk first-time mothers. If a C-Section is delayed when a baby is in distress and needs out immediately— that is a key factor in oxygen deprivation and subsequent brain injury. Delays in necessary C-sections can put newborn babies at risk of serious injury, making timely intervention critical to prevent harm.
  • The Research Angle: Our Team of Lawyers investigates whether a doctor’s delay in ordering a C-section was due to the hospital’s policy, a doctor’s schedule, or pure error. This is one of the best ways to prove causation. 

The Nurse Staffing Crisis: The Unseen Risk

The biggest factor in catching fetal distress is the nurse assigned to the mother. They are the ones watching the monitor.

  • The Critical Stat: Nurse-to-patient ratios are a major issue across the nation, including Ohio. Some studies have suggested that when nurses are forced to care for too many patients at once, the risk of patient complications goes up significantly. A missed signal means a delayed response, and a delayed response can mean brain damage. Our investigation always focuses on the nursing notes and staffing logs for the crucial hours leading up to the injury.

For a patient in active labor, the standard of care is generally a 1:1 or 1:2 nurse-to-patient ratio, depending on the complexity of the birth.

However, if the mother is receiving Oxytocin (Pitocin) or has an epidural, the ratio should strictly be 1:1. Since the vast majority of U.S. hospital births involve one or both of these interventions, one nurse per patient is effectively the safety standard for most active labor cases.

The Association of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses (AWHONN). Their Guidelines for Professional Registered Nurse Staffing for Perinatal Units (originally published 2010, updated 2022) are used by legal teams to establish negligence.


AWHONN Recommended Ratios:

  • Active Labor (Uncomplicated): 1 Nurse to 2 Patients
  • Active Labor (With Complications/Interventions): 1 Nurse to 1 Patient
    • Note: “Complications/Interventions” includes the use of Oxytocin (Pitocin) for induction/augmentation or the use of an Epidural.
  • Second Stage (Pushing): 1 Nurse to 1 Patient (Continuous bedside attendance)
  • Scheduled C-Section: 1 Nurse to 1 Patient (plus a separate scrub nurse)
  • Emergency C-Section: 1 Nurse to 1 Patient (plus additional support) 

The Investigation: Proving Negligence in an Ohio Birth Injury Case

Proving medical malpractice birth injury is a massive undertaking. It often referred to as a battle of experts, and the hospital will use every resource to defend its staff. Working with our experienced medical malpractice attorneys is essential for thoroughly investigating and proving a birth injury case. If a settlement is unable to be reached, our birth injury lawyers are prepared to present your case in a trial and fight for a verdict on your behalf.

The Best Evidence: What We Look for in Medical Records

The medical record is the map of the injury. When a family hires us, the first thing our Team of Lawyers does is secure every single record. We don’t just read the doctor’s notes; we analyze the continuous fetal monitoring strips.

  • The Fetal Monitoring Strip: This is often the most crucial piece of evidence. It usuallly shows every heartbeat and every contraction. We often hire expert perinatologists (high-risk pregnancy specialists) to review the strip. They can pinpoint the exact minute the baby went into distress and the precise minute the doctor should have intervened. If the strip shows distress at 8:00 AM, but the C-section was not ordered until 9:00 AM, that one-hour delay can be proof of negligence.
  • The Nursing Notes: Nurses are often the most robust and consistent record keepers. We look for notes that say things like “Resident notified of heart rate drop,” and then we compare that time stamp to when the resident actually arrived. Delays here help prove causation.

The Expert Battle: Why Your Doctor Needs the Best Counter-Expert

In Ohio malpractice trials, the defense will always hire its own expert witness who will swear that the hospital’s care was “within the standard of care.” Our job is to counter this.

  • Our Expert Advantage: We work with a nationwide network of renowned doctors and specialists—not just general practitioners. They provide the most credible, unbiased opinion possible to prove that the standard of care was breached. This is the best way to win a jury’s trust.

Recovering Costs: The Lifetime Financial Burden

The central goal of a medical malpractice birth injury lawsuit is to secure money to care for the child for the rest of their life. Compensation must cover the full scope of the child’s medical care and support their child’s future needs, including ongoing healthcare, therapy, and developmental support. Securing compensation is essential to protect the child’s future, ensuring their well-being and quality of life are provided for as they grow. In the most severe cases, birth injuries can result in even death, making it critical that compensation is adequate to address all possible outcomes. This is not about punishing the doctor; it is about providing for the child. 

The Astonishing Cost: Why Compensation is So High and The Best Damages We Seek in an Ohio Lawsuit

Caring for a child with a birth injury like Cerebral Palsy involves medical costs that often run into the millions of dollars.

Our Team of Lawyers fights to recover several types of damages for your family:

  1. Future Medical Expenses: This is the largest part. It covers future surgeries, medications, adaptive equipment (wheelchairs, lifts), and physical, occupational, and speech therapy for the child’s entire life.
  2. Loss of Earning Capacity: If the child is permanently disabled and cannot work, we seek compensation for the income they would have earned over their lifetime.
  3. Pain and Suffering: This compensates the child for the physical discomfort and emotional trauma of living with a lifelong disability.
  4. Past Expenses: This covers the bills you have already paid since the injury occurred.

We hire professional life care planners and economists to review every medical report and calculate the dollar amounts needed. We do not guess; we use facts to ensure your child’s needs are met by the best available resources.

Finding the Best Help: Choosing Your Team of Lawyers

When your child is hurt, the decision on who should fight for them is the most important one you will ever make. Choosing experienced birth injury lawyers and birth injury attorneys who understand the complexities of these cases is crucial. The difference between success and failure in an Ohio medical malpractice birth injury case often comes down to the firm’s experience, reputation, and resources. Our birth injury attorneys and our dedicated birth injury law firm can provide the best legal options for families seeking justice. The majority of birth injury cases end in a settlement, which means you may not have to set foot in court. 

What to Look for in a Law Firm Near Me

You need a firm that has walked this specific path many times before. When looking for the best representation, consider these factors:

  • Resources: Can the firm afford to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on expert witnesses and trial preparation before receiving any money? If not, they cannot take on the big hospital defense teams.  
  • Reputation: Do they have a long history of successfully challenging the large Ohio hospital systems? Our Team of Lawyers at The Child and Birth Injury Firm has built its reputation on doing just that.
  • Focus: Do they handle all types of law, or do they primarily focus on catastrophic child injury and birth injury? Experience in this niche is the best advantage you can have.  Hence our name – The Child and Birth Injury Firm.
  • Trial Experience: An effective birth injury attorney must have successful trial experience because providers are reluctant to settle out of court.

Your family deserves a Team of Lawyers who will treat your case like the unique and serious fight that it is. Seek justice by working with our firm experienced in securing birth injury settlements and holding negligent parties accountable. We offer a free consultation to discuss your case and your legal options. Our lawyers work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you only pay if they win your case. 

Key Takeaways from The Child and Birth Injury Firm

  1. Act Fast for Records: The general deadline to file a birth injury lawsuit in Ohio is the child’s 19th birthday, but you must start the investigation quickly because medical records are the best evidence, and they can disappear or be altered over time.
  2. It’s About Negligence: A birth injury is only malpractice if a healthcare provider breached the standard of care (made a mistake) and that mistake caused the injury.
  3. Ohio is Strict: Ohio requires an Affidavit of Merit (a doctor’s written statement of negligence) just to file the lawsuit, proving the case requires immediate expert review.
  4. Causation is Key: A crucial piece of evidence is often the fetal monitoring strip, which reveals the timeline of distress and the doctor’s delayed response.
  5. Compensation is Lifelong: A successful lawsuit is necessary to cover the enormous, multi-million dollar costs for the child’s future medical care, therapy, and lost lifetime earnings. 

The Ohio Birth Map: Where Most Deliveries Happen

When investigating medical malpractice, our Team of Lawyers must understand the procedures and staff at the hospitals where the most babies are delivered. Higher volume often means higher pressure, which can sometimes lead to preventable errors.

These hospitals consistently rank among the best and busiest labor and delivery centers in Ohio, especially in the major metro areas:

Hospital Name Primary Location Approximate Annual Births Link
OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus (Central Ohio) 6,000+ https://www.ohiohealth.com/locations/hospitals/riverside-methodist-hospital/
TriHealth Good Samaritan Hospital Cincinnati (Southwest Ohio) 6,500+ https://www.trihealth.com/maternity
Mount Carmel Health System Columbus (Central Ohio) 6,400+ (System-wide) https://www.mountcarmelhealth.com/
The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center Columbus (Central Ohio) 5,300+ https://wexnermedical.osu.edu/
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center Cleveland (Northeast Ohio) High Volume https://www.uhhospitals.org/locations/uh-cleveland-medical-center/
MetroHealth Medical Center Cleveland (Northeast Ohio) High Volume https://www.metrohealth.org/

Note: These hospitals often operate Level III or Level IV Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs), meaning they have the capacity to handle the most complicated and highest-risk deliveries, but this also means they are dealing with the most challenging cases.

Ohio Resources for Families Living with a Birth Injury

Caring for a child with a birth injury—whether it’s Cerebral Palsy or Erb’s Palsy—is a marathon, not a sprint. The emotional and financial burden is huge. Our Team of Lawyers at The Child and Birth Injury Firm knows that securing compensation is only one part of the solution; connecting you with the best local support is another.

Here are major statewide and local resources available for families in Ohio: 

Statewide and Developmental Support

  • Ohio Early Intervention (EI): This statewide system provides coordinated services, including therapy and resources, for infants and toddlers (birth to age 3) with disabilities or developmental delays. This is often the first and best resource for a new diagnosis.
  • Ohio Coalition for the Education of Children with Disabilities (OCECD): This is a critical statewide nonprofit organization that serves as Ohio’s Parent Training and Information Center. They help families navigate the complex world of special education and obtain the services their child needs in school.
  • The Arc of Ohio: A grassroots organization that advocates for the rights and full community participation of all children and adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities. They are essential for long-term advocacy.
  • Link: (Search for “The Arc of Ohio” for the main chapter page).
  • Ohio Department of Developmental Disabilities (DODD): This state agency oversees a massive system of supportive services across the lifespan of people with developmental disabilities, helping with everything from health and safety to community participation.

 

Finding the best combination of state services, therapeutic programs, and emotional support near me is vital for the holistic well-being of a child with a birth injury, and these groups are the foundation of that support network. 

Common Questions Asked to Our Birth Injury Lawyers

When parents contact our Team of Lawyers at The Child and Birth Injury Firm, their questions center on two things: time (deadlines) and proof (how to win the case). Here are the five most common and critical questions we answer for Ohio families:

What is the deadline (Statute of Limitations) to file a Birth Injury lawsuit for a child in Ohio?

This is one of the most important facts in Ohio law, and it is thankfully long. The deadline for filing a claim on behalf of the injured child is generally “tolled” (put on hold) until the child turns 18 years old. This means the child typically has until their 19th birthday to file a medical malpractice lawsuit (Ohio Revised Code S 2305.16).

  • Crucial Note: vidence is the best when it is fresh, we urge parents to investigate immediately, even with the long deadline.
What kind of financial compensation is covered in a successful Ohio Birth Injury lawsuit?

The goal of the lawsuit is to secure money to cover the child’s lifetime of needs. Compensation (called “damages”) is divided into two parts:

  1. Economic Damages (The Largest Part): This covers the calculable costs, including all future medical expenses (surgeries, medications), rehabilitation and therapy (physical, occupational, speech), the cost of specialized equipment (wheelchairs, lifts), home modifications, and the child’s projected loss of earning capacity over their lifetime.
  2. Non-Economic Damages: This covers the child’s pain, suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life. Ohio law, however, has caps on these non-economic damages, limiting the amount that can be recovered (Ohio Revised Code S 2323.43).
Do I have to pay my own doctor to testify against the hospital for my case to even start?

No, this is one of the biggest hurdles in Ohio. To initiate a medical malpractice lawsuit, you must file an Affidavit of Merit (Ohio Revised Code S 2323.451). This is a sworn statement from a qualified medical doctor confirming that:

  1. They reviewed the records.
  2. They believe the healthcare provider breached the accepted standard of care.
  3. They believe that breach caused your child’s injury.

This means our Team of Lawyers must invest significant resources upfront to hire and consult with the best medical experts before the case can legally proceed in an Ohio court.

What is an important piece of evidence in an Ohio Birth Injury case?

Animportant piece of evidence is the Fetal Monitoring Strip. This long strip of paper, generated by the heart rate monitor during labor, provides a minute-by-minute timeline of the baby’s vital signs.

  • Our investigation focuses on this strip to pinpoint the exact moment the baby began showing signs of fetal distress (like a dangerously low heart rate) and then compares that time stamp to the nurse’s notes and the doctor’s orders. If the medical team waited too long to order an intervention (like an emergency C-section) after clear signs of distress appeared, that documented delay is the best proof of negligence.
The hospital told us they conducted an "Internal Investigation" or "Root Cause Analysis" after the birth. Can we see that report?

In Ohio, the answer is almost always No. Clients often assume that the “incident report” created by the hospital will be the smoking gun. However, Ohio has a strict law called the “Peer Review Privilege” (O.R.C. 2305.252).

  • The Law: This statute allows hospitals to keep their internal quality assurance discussions completely confidential. They do not have to give them to you or your lawyer.
  • Why this matters: It means we cannot rely on the hospital to tell on themselves. We have to build the case entirely from the raw medical records (fetal monitor strips and nursing notes) to prove negligence from the outside looking in.
If we win, can we just put the money in a savings account for our child?

No. Ohio Probate Court will likely step in. Because the victim is a minor, you cannot simply “take” the money, even as their parent. Ohio law requires settlements for minors to be approved by the Probate Court.

  • The Guardianship: The court may require you to apply to be the “Guardian of the Estate.” This means you must report to the court every year on how the money is being spent.
  • The Restriction: You typically cannot spend a dime of the settlement money—even for the child’s needs—without prior approval from a Probate Judge. This is designed to protect the child’s funds until they are adults, but it can be a bureaucratic headache that parents aren’t expecting. We help set up the trusts and guardianships to make this process smoother.
I heard about a new Ohio law called "Everhart" that hurts families. What is it?

In December 2023, the Ohio Supreme Court made a harsh ruling in a case called Everhart v. Coshocton County Memorial Hospital. They decided that the 4-Year Statute of Repose (a strict deadline) applies to Wrongful Death lawsuits.

Here is what that means in plain English: If a doctor makes a mistake, you generally have 4 years to sue. If the patient dies after those 4 years have passed, the family is barred from suing for wrongful death—even if they filed the lawsuit the very next day.

Resources and Further Reading

We recommend reviewing these official, resources for medical and legal information in Ohio:

  • Ohio Revised Code (O.R.C.) – Medical Malpractice Statute of Limitations (for Minors): https://codes.ohio.gov/orc/2305.11 (Check the latest version of O.R.C. § 2305.113 for the Affidavit of Merit and Statute of Limitations details.)
  • Ohio Revised Code (O.R.C.) – Wrongful Death Statute: https://codes.ohio.gov/orc/2125 (The state law governing who can file a wrongful death claim and the time limit.)

 

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For over 2 decades, Jeffrey Killino and his team have secured life-changing results for babies and children facing catastrophic injuries. Our clients gain access to the best medical care, financial security, and peace of mind, knowing their futures are protected.

Ongoing Client Support and Protection

Jeffrey Killino and his team of child and birth injury lawyers are committed to go beyond securing multi-million dollar settlements and verdicts. We measure our success by our positive impact on our clients’ lives. We’re dedicated to supporting them throughout their journey, even after their case is resolved.

Caring for Clients and the Community

Jeffrey Killino and his team of child and birth injury lawyers are committed to more than just securing multi-million dollar settlements and verdicts. We measure our success by our positive impact on our clients’ lives, helping them access the best medical care, achieve financial security, and find peace of mind. We also actively work to prevent injuries and promote safety for everyone.

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