by Marcus Boston | Mar 16, 2020 | Birth Injuries, Blog, Cerebral Palsy, HIE (Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy), How Lawsuits Work
What might you expect during your mediation? This is an important question for not only a birth injury, or medical malpractice case, but for any case that requires some sort of negotiation. In my experience, clients start to bring this issue up as we start to...
by Marcus Boston | Mar 14, 2020 | Birth Injuries, Blog, Cerebral Palsy, HIE (Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy), How Lawsuits Work
What information can I share with my birth injury attorney? To explain this issue further, the context of this question came from concerns regarding what would be shared, if anything, with other family members who might be witnesses in the case. What this issue boils...
by Marcus Boston | Mar 5, 2020 | Birth Injuries, Blog, Cerebral Palsy, HIE (Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy)
Umbilical cord prolapse and HIE, or to put the issue a different way, how can in some cases a baby with a prolapsed umbilical cord experience the medical condition HIE, or hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy? For many parents, these conditions can be a shock and are only...
by Marcus Boston | Feb 25, 2020 | Birth Injuries, Blog, Cerebral Palsy, HIE (Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy), How Lawsuits Work
Do most birth injury cases settle? This is a question that may come up during the birth injury process. For today’s birth injury educational article, I am going to discuss my experience and what I know being around these cases (talking with other attorneys in my...
by Marcus Boston | Feb 24, 2020 | Birth Injuries, Blog, Cerebral Palsy, HIE (Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy), How Lawsuits Work
One question the parents can have when their child has suffered a brain injury at birth is how did the injury happen? In the context of a HIE, or hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy diagnosis, this is an important question, especially from a medical legal standpoint....