When Delay or Surgical Negligence Changes a Family’s Future
In obstetrics, minutes matter. When fetal distress is detected, a delayed or mismanaged cesarean section can mean the difference between a healthy baby and a lifetime of disability.
For nearly 50 years, Vincent Petrucelli and the trial team at Petrucelli & Petrucelli have held hospitals across Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin accountable for failing to act when every second counted.
The Standard of Care: “Decision-to-Incision” Time
National obstetric-safety guidelines require that once an emergency C-section is ordered, the surgery must begin within 30 minutes—often sooner if continuous fetal monitoring shows late decelerations or absent variability.
Delays occur when:
- The obstetrician isn’t immediately available in the hospital
- Operating-room staff or anesthesiology are unprepared
- Consent discussions or paperwork stall the process
- Miscommunication occurs between nursing and medical staff
Each of these systemic breakdowns represents a preventable failure.
What a Delay Can Cause
When oxygen and blood flow are cut off, the baby’s brain and organs begin to suffer irreversible damage. Common outcomes include:
- Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE)
- Cerebral Palsy or global developmental delay
- Seizure disorders and feeding difficulties
- Paralysis or multi-organ injury
- Stillbirth or neonatal death
Our firm reconstructs the delivery timeline minute-by-minute to show exactly when fetal distress began and how long the medical team waited before surgical intervention.
Surgical Delivery Errors
Even when a C-section is performed, negligence inside the operating room can still injure both mother and child. We regularly litigate:
- Improper uterine incision causing hemorrhage or rupture in later pregnancies
- Laceration of the bladder, bowel, or uterine artery due to poor visualization
- Failure to control bleeding leading to hypovolemic shock
- Retained surgical instruments or sponges causing infection
- Anesthesia errors and inadequate maternal monitoring
Each case requires careful review of surgical reports, anesthesia charts, and postoperative notes to expose deviations from accepted technique.
How Petrucelli & Petrucelli Builds the Case
- Obtain the Full Surgical Record – OR logs, anesthesia records, and fetal-monitoring strips establish a precise timeline.
- Consult Board-Certified Experts – Maternal-fetal specialists and obstetric anesthesiologists identify where protocol failed.
- Analyze Communication Chains – Paging logs and nurse call sheets often reveal fatal delays.
- Model the Causation Sequence – We connect each moment of delay to the child’s injury using expert neuro-radiology and cord-blood analysis.
Our evidence packages leave no ambiguity about what should have happened and when.
Proven Results & Unmatched Experience
Vincent Petrucelli, a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and Super Lawyers® honoree since 2007, has recovered multi-million-dollar verdicts and settlements in C-section and surgical-delivery cases across the Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin. His success in Ferdon v. Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund—which overturned unconstitutional damage caps—continues to shape how justice is delivered for birth-injury victims today.
Families from Marquette, Iron Mountain, Escanaba, Menominee, Houghton, and Green Bay rely on our firm because we combine medical sophistication with relentless courtroom advocacy. Contact Vincent Petrucelli today at (906) 265-6173 or vincent@truthfinders.com.
Petrucelli & Petrucelli — Fighting for Justice Across Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin
