If you’re a consultant, specialist, or allied clinician, we’ll support you with high-quality instructions,
clear briefing, and efficient report workflows—aligned with CPR Part 35 standards.
Birth injury CP claims turn on detail: what happened during pregnancy, labour, delivery and immediate neonatal care,
and whether avoidable delay or substandard management caused permanent neurological harm. A well-built report does not simply describe
events; it reconstructs decision points, compares actions to reasonable standards, and explains causation in a way the court can use.
We support solicitors with expert evidence focused on fetal monitoring, obstetric management, neonatal resuscitation, and the clinical
pathway to hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) and Cerebral Palsy.
When solicitors instruct a birth injury CP expert
A birth injury CP report is commonly required where there is concern that fetal distress was missed or responded to too
late, where an emergency Caesarean section was delayed, or where complications such as shoulder dystocia and instrumental delivery were
poorly managed. Instructions also arise when neonatal resuscitation is questioned, when early neonatal observations are inconsistent with
the clinical picture, or where the timeline suggests a potentially avoidable hypoxic event. Solicitors typically need a clear view on what
the clinical team knew (or should have known), what should have happened next, and whether earlier intervention would probably have changed
outcome.
What a birth injury CP report assesses
A strong birth injury CP analysis will focus on the core technical issues that decide liability and causation. This often
includes CTG interpretation (patterns, escalation, documentation, and response), labour management (progress, augmentation, fetal scalp
sampling where relevant, and decision-to-delivery intervals), and whether the obstetric standard of care was met at each critical point.
The expert will also assess hypoxia and brain injury causation, including whether the evidence supports an acute intrapartum event versus
alternative explanations, and whether neonatal resuscitation and immediate postnatal management met expected standards.
CTG interpretation and escalation: where cases are won or lost
In many birth injury CP cases, CTG traces and the response to them are central. The court will want to know whether the trace
was interpreted reasonably, whether abnormal features were recognised, whether there was timely senior review, and whether the team acted
decisively when the clinical picture deteriorated. A useful report lays out the timeline clearly: what the CTG showed, what was recorded,
what actions were taken, and what a competent team would likely have done. It should also deal with real-world context—staffing, handover
decisions, and whether documentation matches events—without becoming speculative.
Causation for HIE and Cerebral Palsy
Proving breach is not enough; the report must address whether breach caused the injury. For a birth injury CP instruction,
the causation section should explain the likely mechanism of injury, the timing of insult, and how the neonatal course supports or undermines
the proposed causal pathway. The expert may consider Apgar scores, cord gases where available, neonatal encephalopathy features, early imaging,
and the broader clinical picture. The goal is a balanced opinion on whether earlier delivery or different management would probably have avoided
or materially reduced the neurological outcome.
How we keep the instruction efficient for busy clinical negligence teams
To move quickly, we recommend sending a focused document pack and a clear question set. Useful materials typically include maternity records
(antenatal, intrapartum and postnatal), CTG traces, theatre and anaesthetic notes, neonatal records (including resus documentation), and any
later neurology and developmental assessments relevant to Cerebral Palsy. A short chronology helps the expert identify the decisive windows:
onset of concern, escalation steps, decision-making, and delivery. With these in place, the birth injury CP report can be built
around concrete facts, reducing addenda and preventing drift into irrelevant narrative.
Specialists used for birth injury CP instructions
These cases often require more than one lens. We commonly involve consultant obstetricians for labour and delivery management, experienced
midwives for intrapartum care and monitoring practice, and paediatric neurologists to address the neurological outcome, prognosis, and
consistency of findings with the alleged mechanism of injury. Our case managers review the instruction and match the right combination so
the birth injury CP opinion is coherent, proportionate, and defensible under examination.
Format, compliance, and what the court needs
Courts expect clarity and independence. Reports should be structured, use short paragraphs, and answer the legal questions directly:
breach of duty, causation, and the reasoning connecting evidence to conclusions. Where required, the report can be produced in a CPR Part 35
compliant format so it is court-ready for High Court and County Court proceedings. The aim is a document that supports settlement discussions
where appropriate, and stands up if the case proceeds to trial.
If you need urgent review, send brief case details and key records, and we will propose suitable experts and realistic timescales for a
birth injury CP instruction, including desktop review and clinical examination where required.
A birth injury assessment expert evaluation provides a detailed analysis of obstetric and neonatal care provided during pregnancy, labour, and delivery. These reports determine if substandard management, such as a failure to monitor fetal distress or delayed intervention, resulted in permanent neurological damage or Cerebral Palsy.
Overview
When this report is required
To investigate if a failure to monitor the fetal heart rate led to hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy
To determine if delays in performing an emergency Caesarean section constituted a breach of duty
To evaluate the management of physical birth complications such as shoulder dystocia or instrumental delivery
To assess whether neonatal resuscitation was performed to the required clinical standards
What the expert assesses
CTG Interpretation
Labour Management
Obstetric Standard of Care
Hypoxia and Brain Injury Causation
Neonatal Resuscitation Protocols
Report specification
Element
Detail
Assessment Setting
Desktop Review, Clinical Examination
Court Acceptance
High Court, County Court
Compliance
CPR Part 35
CPR Part 35 Compliant
Digital Delivery
Urgent Instructions
While these are the primary specialists engaged for this instruction type, please note that every case turns on
its own facts. Complex or multi-disciplinary cases may require a bespoke team of experts. Our case managers will
review your specific instruction to ensure the correct clinical match.