
The use of forceps or a vacuum extractor during childbirth can be medically appropriate in certain situations. These tools may help deliver a baby when labor has stalled, when the baby is showing signs of distress, or when a mother cannot safely continue pushing.
But when forceps or vacuum extraction are used improperly, applied with excessive force, used for too long, or chosen when a C-section would have been safer, the result can be serious harm to the baby or mother.
At Salenger, Sack, Kimmel & Bavaro, LLP, our New York birth injury lawyers review cases involving forceps delivery injuries, vacuum extraction injuries, newborn head trauma, brain bleeds, skull fractures, facial nerve injuries, brachial plexus injuries, Erb’s palsy, and other delivery-related trauma.
If your child was injured during a difficult delivery in New York, Long Island, Nassau County, Suffolk County, Queens, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Staten Island, Manhattan, Westchester, Albany, Buffalo, Rochester, or Syracuse, our medical malpractice attorneys can help determine whether medical negligence may have played a role.
Call 800-675-8556 for a free, confidential case review.
Forceps and vacuum extractors are tools used in what is known as an assisted vaginal delivery or operative vaginal delivery.
Forceps are medical instruments placed around the baby’s head to help guide the baby through the birth canal. A vacuum extractor uses a suction cup attached to the baby’s head to help assist delivery while the mother pushes. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists explains that assisted vaginal delivery may be used when there are concerns about the baby’s heart rate, when the mother has pushed for a long time, when labor has stalled, or when a medical condition limits safe pushing.
Assisted delivery is not automatically malpractice. The legal issue is whether the doctor or delivery team used the tool appropriately, recognized the risks, and acted within accepted medical standards.
Forceps and vacuum devices require skill, judgment, and careful timing. A birth injury lawsuit may arise when medical providers:
The Merck Manual notes that forceps and vacuum extraction may be used when the fetus is in distress, labor is prolonged, the mother is too tired to push effectively, or maternal medical conditions make pushing risky. It also identifies possible risks, including scalp bruising, retinal hemorrhage, shoulder dystocia, jaundice, and perineal injury.
Forceps delivery injuries may affect the baby’s head, face, nerves, skull, or brain. Some injuries are temporary. Others may cause long-term developmental, neurological, or physical harm.
Cleveland Clinic notes that risks to a baby from forceps delivery are often mild and temporary, but serious complications may include skull fracture and bleeding within the skull.
Vacuum extraction may be used during the pushing stage of labor when delivery needs assistance. However, if the vacuum cup is improperly placed, suction is excessive, the device detaches repeatedly, or the procedure continues too long, the baby may suffer serious injury.
Cleveland Clinic explains that serious vacuum extraction complications are rare but may include skull fracture, intracranial hemorrhage, and subgaleal hemorrhage. (Cleveland Clinic)
Parents are often told that bruising or swelling after delivery is normal. Sometimes it is. But certain symptoms may suggest that the baby needs immediate medical evaluation.
If your child had a forceps-assisted or vacuum-assisted delivery and later developed neurological symptoms, developmental delays, cerebral palsy, Erb’s palsy, or other serious issues, the delivery records should be reviewed.
One of the most important questions in these cases is whether the doctor should have stopped the attempted vaginal delivery and performed a C-section.
A C-section may be safer in certain situations, including:
A malpractice case may exist if a doctor continued with forceps or vacuum extraction despite warning signs that assisted delivery was unsafe.
Not every forceps or vacuum injury is caused by negligence. These cases require a detailed medical review.
A lawsuit may be possible if the evidence shows that the doctor, hospital, nurse, or delivery team failed to follow accepted standards of care and that failure caused harm.
These claims often require review of fetal monitoring strips, labor and delivery notes, operative reports, NICU records, imaging studies, pediatric neurology records, and expert medical opinions.
A serious birth injury can affect a child for life. Compensation in a New York birth injury lawsuit may include damages for:
In severe cases involving brain injury, cerebral palsy, seizures, or permanent nerve damage, the cost of future care can be substantial.
Families facing a birth injury need answers, not generic legal promises.
SSKB handles serious medical malpractice and birth injury cases involving complex medical records, expert review, and long-term damages. Our attorneys investigate whether doctors, hospitals, nurses, or delivery teams failed to respond properly during labor, delivery, or newborn care.
We review cases involving:
If your child was injured after a forceps or vacuum-assisted delivery, you may have questions about what happened and whether it could have been prevented.
Salenger, Sack, Kimmel & Bavaro offers free, confidential case reviews for families throughout New York.
Call 800-675-8556 or contact us online today.
There is no fee unless we recover compensation for you.
A forceps delivery injury is harm caused to a baby or mother during a delivery where forceps are used to assist childbirth. Potential injuries may include facial bruising, facial nerve injury, skull fracture, brain bleeding, or nerve damage.
A vacuum extraction birth injury occurs when a baby is harmed during a vacuum-assisted delivery. Potential injuries include scalp lacerations, cephalohematoma, subgaleal hemorrhage, intracranial hemorrhage, skull fracture, jaundice, or brain injury.
No. Forceps and vacuum extraction can be appropriate when used correctly. A malpractice case may exist if the tool was used improperly, used when a C-section was safer, or caused injury because the medical team failed to follow accepted standards of care.
In rare cases, vacuum extraction may contribute to serious complications such as intracranial hemorrhage or subgaleal hemorrhage, which can lead to brain injury if not promptly recognized and treated. (Cleveland Clinic)
Yes. Facial nerve injury is a known possible complication of forceps delivery. Some cases are temporary, but severe trauma may lead to longer-term problems.
Signs may include seizures, abnormal swelling, bruising, poor feeding, difficulty breathing, facial drooping, lack of arm movement, weak muscle tone, NICU admission, or delayed developmental milestones.
A birth injury lawsuit may be possible if your child suffered serious harm and medical records show that a doctor, hospital, nurse, or delivery team failed to meet accepted medical standards. An attorney can review the records with medical experts.