Birth Injury Lawsuit Funding Print E-mail
Birth Injury
Providing legal funding for birth injuries

Birth injuries are something that no person ever plans for; however, these injuries are more common than expected. Statistics show some 27 out of 1,000 births involve some sort of birth injury with Cerebral Palsy being one of the most common.

A birth injury can be devastating to say the very least and oftentimes leave families in a disarray. While LawLeaf can’t help you through the emotional distress of such injury, we can help you secure lawsuit pre-settlement funding or structured settlement annuity payouts for birth injuries. If you currently are in a lawsuit for a birth injury and are seeking a lawsuit cash advance , LawLeaf’s network of lenders are ready to compete for your business.
 
A personal injury can be both emotionally and financially devastating to a family. There are many expenses to consider over and beyond ongoing medical expenses for such injuries. Some families are faced with loss of wages, loss of jobs, increasing debt, increased medical bills and living expenses. For some people that live paycheck to paycheck or don’t have the money to pay immediate expenses related to a birth injury, a lawsuit pre-settlement cash advance may help.

Some of the more common birth injuries that are due to the negligence or error of medical professionals include:

  • Cerebral, Erb’s, Klumpke’s and Brachial Palsy
  • Temporary paralysis
  • Skin irritations
  • Broken bones
  • Brain damage
  • Oxygen deprivation
  • Mental retardation

Most birth injuries occur during the course of delivery of a child; whether the delivery is vaginal or cesarean section (C Section). Birth injuries may occur due to various reasons. These reasons are oftentimes due to the use of obstetrical forceps, vacuum extraction, or cesarean section to achieve the delivery. Although the intentions are for safer delivery, negligence or medical error during the delivery can be the result birth injury. The negligence or medical error may occur due to the doctor’s failure to recognize fetal distress, administering inappropriate injections, inability to identifying infections, failure to diagnose and properly treat seizures after delivery.
 
At LawLeaf, we understand that a birth injury can be overwhelming. While you focus on what’s most important to you, your family, let LawLeaf focus on securing a pre-settlement lawsuit cash advance for you. When you apply with LawLeaf we process your application once. Based upon the injury and the requested payout, we send your application to our selected network of legal funding lenders that handle birth injury lawsuits. The advantage of working with LawLeaf is that you have the ability to pick and choose which pre-settlement cash advance makes sense for you. If approved for a legal funding loan our lenders will provide a payout schedule, interest rate on the loan and the payout or cash advance. You will have the leverage to shop for the best payouts and/or best interest rates for your lawsuit cash advance.

We provide funding services for birth injury for the following states: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming and the District of Columbia D.C.

Our lenders all provide non-recourse funding for all pre-settlement cash advances and most provide structured settlement loans for both partial and full payouts.

To begin the lawsuit funding process, begin by filling out our online application pre-settlement application today. If you have additional questions, please contact a LawLeaf legal cash advance representative or visit our lawsuit personal injury advancement FAQ.