New York families whose babies were hurt during a vacuum-assisted delivery may have the right to file a medical malpractice claim. Under New York law (CPLR §214-a and CPLR §208), most claims must be filed before the child's tenth birthday. Injuries such as subgaleal hemorrhage, intracranial hemorrhage, and hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy can result from improper cup placement, too many cup detachments, or the use of both vacuum and forceps in sequence. Every settlement involving a minor requires court approval at an infant compromise hearing under CPLR §1207 and §1208, and attorney fees follow the sliding scale in Judiciary Law §474-a.
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Vacuum extraction cases turn on the documentation of the procedure itself where the cup was placed, how long suction was applied, how many pop-offs occurred, what traction force was used, and whether sequential instruments were applied. ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 219 establishes specific prerequisites and operational thresholds, and when the chart shows the obstetric team exceeded any of them, the case for malpractice is generally strong. Porter Law Group has recovered more than $500 million for seriously injured clients since 2009, including multiple pediatric recoveries exceeding $8 million for children with permanent delivery-related disabilities.
Led by Harvard-educated attorney Michael S. Porter, a former U.S. Army JAG Corps Captain with over 20 years of trial experience, the firm retains maternal-fetal medicine specialists, neonatologists, neuroradiologists, pediatric neurosurgeons, and life care planners to document the mechanism of injury and the long-term cost of care. Seven of eight partner-level attorneys are recognized by Super Lawyers, a distinction earned by fewer than 5% of New York attorneys.
"Vacuum extraction cases are won on three documents: the operative note, the FDA-mandated device record, and the neonatal exam. The operative note tells us the cup placement, the suction duration, the number of pop-offs, and whether forceps were applied after vacuum failed. When those numbers exceed the published ACOG thresholds and the baby has a sub-galeal hemorrhage or intracranial bleed, we have a strong case. The defense will argue the injury was unavoidable but the chart almost always shows where the procedure went outside the standard of care."
— Michael S. Porter, J.D., Porter Law Group

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Vacuum extraction is an instrument-assisted vaginal delivery in which a suction cup is placed on the fetal scalp and gentle traction is applied to assist delivery during a contraction. Per ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 219 (April 2020, Reaffirmed 2022), operative vaginal birth (vacuum or forceps) accounted for approximately 3.3% of all U.S. deliveries in 2013. The procedure is indicated for prolonged second stage of labor, suspected fetal compromise (non-reassuring fetal heart rate), and the need to shorten the second stage for maternal benefit.
The published standard of care for vacuum extraction includes a precise cup placement, defined by the flexion point:
| Element | Standard |
| Cup placement (flexion point) | Center of cup approximately 3 cm anterior to the posterior fontanelle and 6 cm posterior to the anterior fontanelle, with the sagittal suture under the cup midline (NIH StatPearls; AAFP) |
| Pre-suction check | Sweep finger around cup to confirm no maternal tissue trapped between cup and fetal scalp |
| Vacuum pressure | Initial 100–150 mm Hg, increased to 500–600 mm Hg during traction per manufacturer guidelines |
| Maximum number of pulls | No more than three sets of pulls |
| Maximum cup detachments (pop-offs) | No more than two to three; manufacturers recommend cesarean if exceeded |
| Maximum total application time | 20 to 30 minutes |
| Sequential instrument use | Sequential vacuum-then-forceps (or vice versa) discouraged per ACOG PB 219 |
| Gestational age limit | Vacuum extraction discouraged below 34 weeks gestational age |
The fetal head must be at +2 station or lower with the cervix fully dilated and membranes ruptured, and the operating clinician must hold privileges to use the instrument with capability for emergency cesarean if the procedure fails — the ten ACOG prerequisites previously discussed in our Brain Damage practice page.
Vacuum extraction is contraindicated in fetal bone demineralization conditions (e.g., osteogenesis imperfecta), known fetal bleeding disorders (hemophilia, von Willebrand disease, alloimmune thrombocytopenia), face or breech presentation, and unknown fetal head position.
Vacuum extraction can cause a spectrum of injuries ranging from minor and self-limiting to catastrophic and fatal. The injuries most relevant to malpractice litigation are:
| Injury | Mechanism | Approximate Risk |
| Caput succedaneum | Soft-tissue scalp swelling from cup pressure | Common; resolves in 1–2 days; not pathologic |
| Cephalohematoma | Bleeding under the periosteum, contained by suture lines | Approximately 6% of vacuum extractions per peer-reviewed literature; usually self-limiting |
| Subgaleal hemorrhage | Bleeding into the subaponeurotic space; can hold up to 260 mL of blood | Approximately 0.4/1,000 spontaneous vs. 5/1,000 vacuum deliveries (figures synthesized from peer-reviewed obstetric literature including older case series); historical mortality 22–25% |
| Intracranial hemorrhage | Subdural, subarachnoid, intraparenchymal, or intraventricular bleeding | ~1 in 650–850 operative vaginal deliveries per NIH StatPearls |
| Skull fracture | Linear or depressed fracture from excessive force | Rare but documented |
| Retinal hemorrhage | Pressure-related vascular injury to retina | Common with vacuum (often resolves); persistent cases warrant ophthalmologic follow-up |
| Hyperbilirubinemia / kernicterus | Resorption of cephalohematoma blood breakdown products elevates bilirubin | Variable; severe untreated jaundice can cause permanent brain damage |
| Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy | Prolonged delivery time in compromised fetus | Variable based on indication and time |
| Brachial plexus injury | Vacuum-assisted delivery elevates shoulder dystocia risk | Indirect mechanism |
| Scalp lacerations and abrasions | Cup edge or sliding contact with scalp | Approximately 12.6% in older series |
The most dangerous of these subgaleal hemorrhage deserves separate attention. The subgaleal (subaponeurotic) space extends across the entire top and sides of the infant's head and can hold a clinically significant volume of blood relative to a newborn's total blood volume. A 2024 retrospective cohort study cited in Diagnostics (MDPI) reports that cup detachment is associated with subgaleal hematoma rates of 8.9% versus 3.5% in non-detachment cases, meaning each pop-off significantly elevates the risk. Historically, mortality from subgaleal hemorrhage requiring intensive care is approximately 22-25%, and recognition can be delayed because the early signs mimic the more benign cephalohematoma.
Vacuum extraction itself is not malpractice, it is a recognized obstetric technique that, when used appropriately, can avoid cesarean delivery and reduce maternal morbidity. The malpractice analysis turns on whether the procedure complied with the published standard of care. Five recurring failure patterns establish liability:
Failure 1 — Cup misplacement (off the flexion point). Placement over the anterior fontanelle, paramedian (off the sagittal suture), or otherwise off the flexion point produces shearing forces on the scalp that rupture emissary veins and cause subgaleal hemorrhage. A peer-reviewed prospective study of 134 vacuum deliveries identified paramedian cup placement as one of the strongest predictors of scalp injury, after duration of vacuum application and duration of second-stage labor.
Failure 2 — Excessive duration of vacuum application. Per NIH StatPearls, total vacuum application time should be limited to 20 to 30 minutes. Charts documenting application beyond 30 minutes particularly without descent of the fetal head are a recognized basis for malpractice.
Failure 3 — Excessive number of cup detachments (pop-offs). Manufacturers and clinical guidelines recommend abandoning vacuum extraction after two to three pop-offs and proceeding to cesarean. Each pop-off produces shearing forces on the scalp and substantially elevates the risk of subgaleal hemorrhage. Charts documenting more than three detachments before delivery are a strong indicator of departure from the standard of care.
Failure 4 — Sequential vacuum then forceps (or forceps then vacuum). Per ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 219 and consistent peer-reviewed literature, sequential instrument use is associated with intracranial hemorrhage rates approaching 1 in 256 substantially higher than vacuum or forceps alone. ACOG advises against sequential use except in emergencies in which cesarean is not readily available.
Failure 5 — Failure to monitor for and recognize subgaleal hemorrhage. Both the FDA (1998 Public Health Advisory) and Health Canada have warned that all healthcare professionals responsible for the postnatal care of infants delivered by vacuum must monitor the infant for signs of subgaleal hemorrhage. The recommended protocol includes a minimum of 8 hours' observation following difficult vacuum extraction, with hourly head circumference measurements and vital sign assessment. Failure to follow this monitoring protocol — and the resulting delayed recognition of progressive subgaleal bleeding is a separate basis for malpractice independent of the obstetric negligence that caused the injury.
A sixth pattern — failure to obtain informed consent is increasingly recognized in vacuum extraction litigation. Per Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority guidance and consistent clinical practice, parents should be informed of the specific risks of vacuum-assisted delivery (including subgaleal hemorrhage, intracranial hemorrhage, retinal hemorrhage, and skull fracture) before the procedure begins. Failure to engage in this discussion may support an additional claim for lack of informed consent.
New York places no statutory cap on damages in medical malpractice or birth injury cases. Damages depend on the resulting injury minor scalp injuries that resolve produce limited damages; subgaleal hemorrhage with hypovolemic shock or intracranial hemorrhage with permanent neurological injury produces substantial damages.
Future medical and surgical care. For permanent neurological injury (HIE, intracranial hemorrhage with sequelae, kernicterus), life care plans cover physical, occupational, and speech therapy, durable medical equipment, surgical interventions, and lifelong rehabilitation. Where the resulting injury produces cerebral palsy, the CDC estimates the lifetime cost of care at approximately $1 million in 2003 dollars, with medical costs running roughly 10 times higher than for children without CP meaning catastrophic cases routinely run to seven and eight figures.
Lost future earning capacity. A child with permanent cognitive or motor impairment from a vacuum-related brain injury can recover the full projected lifetime earnings of a comparable uninjured peer.
Pain and suffering damages are not capped in New York. Juries consider the permanence of the injury, the child's life expectancy, and the loss of normal childhood, adolescent, and adult experiences.
Wrongful death. Catastrophic subgaleal hemorrhage or massive intracranial hemorrhage can result in neonatal death; parents may pursue a wrongful death claim under EPTL §5-4.1 within two years of the death.
Parents' derivative claim. Parents can recover medical expenses they paid on the child's behalf and damages for loss of the child's services — but under their own 2.5-year CPLR §214-a statute, which is not tolled by the child's infancy.
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Porter Law Group's published catastrophic case results include three pediatric birth injury settlements — each from a distinct fact pattern — that demonstrate the firm's track record in complex delivery-related injury cases:
$8,120,000 Settlement: An infant suffered permanent delivery-related injuries caused by mismanaged labor and delivery. The recovery funded a life-care plan built with the family's physicians and therapists.
$8,300,000 Settlement: A premature infant suffered profound permanent disabilities, including cerebral palsy, after physicians failed to properly manage the mother's pre-gestational diabetes. The structured settlement provides lifetime care and therapy funding.
$8,250,000 Settlement: An infant sustained permanent physical and cognitive disabilities after delayed response to fetal distress during labor. Proceeds covered lifetime medical and educational needs.
Every case is different. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Vacuum extraction injury claims are medical malpractice cases, so the deadline is shorter than a general child injury claim and is subject to a hard 10-year cap that ordinary personal injury cases do not face.
| Category of Defendant | Statute of Limitations | Infancy Toll | Effective Deadline | Primary Statute |
| Private hospital / private physician | 2.5 years | Yes — but capped at 10 years from malpractice | Child's 10th birthday in most cases | CPLR §214-a + CPLR §208 |
| Public hospital (NYC Health + Hospitals, SUNY Upstate, SUNY Downstate, Stony Brook, county hospitals) | 1 year and 90 days after Notice of Claim | No — 90-day Notice of Claim NOT tolled by infancy | 90 days from injury to file Notice of Claim | GML §50-e |
| Wrongful death of infant | 2 years from date of death | N/A | 2 years from death | EPTL §5-4.1 |
| Parents' derivative claim | 2.5 years | No — not tolled by child's infancy | 2.5 years from malpractice | CPLR §214-a |
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Was Vacuum Extraction Misused During Delivery?
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1. Request the complete labor-and-delivery operative note. Under New York Public Health Law §18, you are entitled to your and your child's complete medical records within a reasonable time of a written request. The operative note for a vacuum delivery should specifically document: indication for vacuum, fetal station and position before application, cup type and size, cup placement location (relative to the fontanelles and sagittal suture), vacuum pressure used, number of pulls, number of detachments (pop-offs), total application time, and whether forceps were applied sequentially.
2. Request the FDA-mandated device record. The Safe Medical Devices Act of 1990 requires hospitals to track and report adverse events associated with medical devices, including vacuum extractors. Hospitals typically maintain device-specific records — request these alongside the obstetric operative note.
3. Preserve all neonatal imaging. Cranial ultrasound, CT, and brain MRI obtained in the first weeks of life can document subgaleal hemorrhage, intracranial hemorrhage, and skull fracture. Request copies on disc and ensure they are preserved indefinitely.
4. Document head circumference measurements over time. Per FDA and Health Canada guidance, infants delivered by vacuum should have hourly head circumference measurements for at least 8 hours postpartum. The trajectory of head circumference is critical evidence in subgaleal hemorrhage cases — a rapidly enlarging head circumference indicates progressive bleeding.
5. Document developmental milestones and therapy progress. Keep a dated log of every pediatric, neurology, developmental pediatrics, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and ophthalmology visit. The trajectory of motor function, cognitive development, and visual function over the first year is core evidence.
6. Act immediately if your child was born at a public hospital. Births at NYC Health + Hospitals facilities, SUNY Upstate, SUNY Downstate, Stony Brook, or any county-run facility require a Notice of Claim within 90 days under GML §50-e. Missing this deadline can bar the claim entirely.
7. Contact a New York vacuum extraction injury attorney. Porter Law Group offers free consultations on a contingency-fee basis and handles every stage of the case, from record collection through expert review, litigation, infant compromise approval, and trial.
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Porter Law Group represents families in vacuum extraction and related birth injury malpractice cases throughout New York State, with a statewide practice reaching every county and jurisdiction. Our Syracuse headquarters serves Central and Upstate New York, while attorneys travel regularly to downstate courthouses for cases in the five boroughs, Westchester, and Long Island.
Serving Clients statewide, including HIE Attorney in Syracuse, New York City, Manhattan, Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, Yonkers, White Plains, Utica, Binghamton, Long Island (Nassau and Suffolk Counties), Saratoga Springs, Ithaca.
Wherever your child was injured in New York, call (833) PORTER-9 for a free consultation with an experienced HIE attorney.

No. Vacuum extraction is a legitimate medical tool that doctors have used safely for decades. When a baby is in distress or labor has stalled, using a vacuum can be the right call and can even prevent the need for an emergency C-section. The procedure is not malpractice just because it was used.
What matters is how it was used. Medical guidelines set clear rules: the cup must be placed in a specific spot on the baby's head, the suction should not go on for more than 20 to 30 minutes, the doctor should stop and move to a C-section after two or three failed attempts, and vacuum should not be followed by forceps. When a doctor breaks those rules and the baby is hurt as a result, that is where malpractice begins. The birth record will show exactly what happened, and that is the first document an attorney will request.
A subgaleal hemorrhage is internal bleeding between a baby's scalp and skull. Picture a large, loose pocket of space that runs across the entire top and sides of a newborn's head. When the vacuum cup tears small veins during delivery, blood can fill that entire space quickly, and a newborn's total blood supply is very small. A baby with a subgaleal hemorrhage can lose 20 to 40 percent of their blood volume as the bleeding spreads. That level of blood loss can cause shock, organ failure, and death.
Each pop-off is not just a failed attempt. The cup pulling away from the scalp tears at the small veins under the skin and significantly raises the risk of the type of internal bleeding described above. Medical guidelines say that after two to three pop-offs, the doctor should stop and move to a C-section. Potentially harmful usage of a vacuum extractor includes placing the suction cup on the wrong part of the baby's head, applying too much pressure or force, keeping the cup suctioned for an extended period of time, or making too many attempts. If a birth record shows more than three pop-offs before the baby was finally delivered, that is a recognized sign that the doctor exceeded the standard of care.
The flexion point is simply the correct spot on a baby's head where the vacuum cup must be placed. There is one right location, and it is small. When the cup is placed there correctly, the baby's head naturally tucks and descends through the birth canal with each pull. When the cup is placed in the wrong spot, even slightly off, every pull shears against the scalp instead of guiding the head. That shearing force is what tears the veins that cause subgaleal hemorrhage.
Possibly, and this is one of the most serious combinations in birth injury litigation. Vacuum and forceps are each tools with their own risks. Using both on the same baby, one after the other, does not simply combine those risks, it multiplies them.
The deadline depends on where your baby was born.
If your baby was born at a private hospital or with a private doctor, you generally have until your child's tenth birthday to file. New York law gives children extra time because they cannot take legal action themselves, but that protection has a hard cutoff at ten years from the date of the injury.
If your baby was born at a public hospital, such as any NYC Health + Hospitals facility, SUNY Upstate, SUNY Downstate, Stony Brook, or a county hospital, the deadline is much shorter. You must file a formal Notice of Claim within 90 days of the birth. This 90-day deadline is not extended because your child is a minor. Missing it can permanently bar the claim.
Parents who want to file their own separate claim for out-of-pocket medical costs have a 2.5-year deadline that also does not extend for the child's age.
If you are unsure which category applies, call a birth injury attorney now. The 90-day window moves fast.

Michael S. Porter is the founder and managing partner of Porter Law Group, representing New York families in vacuum extraction, birth injury, medical malpractice, and catastrophic injury cases. A graduate of Harvard University (B.A., 1994) and Syracuse University College of Law (J.D., 1997), Porter served four years as a Captain in the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General's Corps. Selected to Super Lawyers for 14 consecutive years (2012–2025), he holds a 10.0 Superb rating on Avvo and a Distinguished rating from Martindale-Hubbell.
Bar Admissions: New York State Bar | U.S. District Court, Northern and Western Districts of New York
Memberships: New York State Bar Association, Onondaga County Bar Association, New York State Academy of Trial Lawyers, Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum
If your child suffered a vacuum extraction injury during a New York delivery, critical deadlines may run faster than you expect: public-hospital cases require a Notice of Claim within 90 days, parents' derivative claims are not tolled by the child's infancy, and the 10-year cap under CPLR §208 closes most birth injury windows before a child's 10th birthday.
Contact Porter Law Group today at (833) PORTER-9 for a free, no-obligation consultation. We operate on a contingency-fee basis, so you pay nothing unless you win.
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