A Birth Injury
Attorney To Fight Cerebral Palsy
Most of us are familiar with
the presentation of cerebral palsy. Many CP suffers are
intelligent, capable people who nonetheless are afflicted with
uncontrolled muscle movement. Because 80% of cerebral palsy
cases are the result of injures to the developing brain during
pregnancy or birth, you should engage a birth injury attorney
if your child has cerebral palsy. The birth injury attorney is
familiar with the condition from a medical point of view and
with the legal issues regarding medical malpractice during
pregnancy and birth. Care of a person with CP is enormously
expensive and a successful suit for malpractice is among your
best hopes for fiancial assistance.
As your birth injury attorney
will inform you, the cost of cerebral palsy over the course of
your child's lifetime will be enormous. CP is the result of
damage to the motor control system. In addition to the spastic
movements, CP is sometimes accompanied by epilepsy.
Additionally, secondary problems can arise due to the
interference the condition places on the development of other
body systems, including the development of the skeleton,
including the spine.
Cerebral palsy is permanent.
There is no cure. The condition can only be managed, and
management includes ongoing physical therapy and likely medical
interventions. Other possible complications include the
aforementioned epilepsy as well as cognition and communication
problems and behavioral disorders. These are sometimes
alleviated with therapy aimed at increasing communications
skills.
You can find a birth injury
attorney in your area by contacting your state bar association.
A birth injury attorney will need to know the entire story, so
get all your information together before your initial meeting.
If you aren't keeping a journal of your child's development
issues and milestones, start one now.
The financial cost of care and
lost income in caring for a person with mild CP over the course
of their lifetime is nearly $1,000,000, according to a study
done in 2003. For severe cases, that figure can
triple.
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