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Illinois and Chicago Daycare Injury Statistics

Every day in Chicago, thousands of parents drop their children off at daycare centers, trusting that staff will keep them safe. From the Lincoln Park neighborhood to the South Side, families across the city rely on licensed and unlicensed facilities to care for their youngest children. But injuries happen, and when they do, the numbers behind them tell a story that every parent deserves to understand. Knowing the real statistics, the laws that apply, and your rights as a parent can make all the difference when something goes wrong.

Table of Contents

How Common Are Daycare Injuries in Illinois and Across the Country?

Child injuries in care settings are more common than most parents realize. Although injury death rates have declined over the past two decades for children ages 1 to 14, unintentional injuries remain the leading cause of death for children ages 1 to 4 and ages 5 to 14. That age range covers nearly every child enrolled in a Chicago daycare, preschool, or after-school program. Falls, suffocation, choking, and being struck by objects are among the most frequently reported mechanisms, and many of these incidents happen while children are under the supervision of paid caregivers.

Among children ages 1 to 4 and ages 5 to 14, falls were the leading cause of injury-related emergency department visits. Daycare environments, with their climbing structures, changing tables, high chairs, and hard floors, create consistent fall hazards. A child who falls from a changing table at a facility near Wicker Park or slips on a wet floor at a center in Hyde Park faces the same risks as children anywhere in the country, but Illinois law creates specific duties that daycare operators must meet to prevent those incidents.

Each state is required to produce annual data on the number of deaths, serious injuries, and cases of substantiated abuse at child care centers. Illinois is in compliance with these federal reporting requirements, which means parents here have access to inspection records and incident data that can reveal a facility’s safety history. Still, data collection does not prevent injuries. It only documents them after the fact. If your child has been hurt at a Chicago daycare, that documentation can become critical evidence in a personal injury claim.

The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) oversees licensed child care facilities throughout the state. When a facility violates licensing standards, those violations are recorded and can be accessed by parents. A facility with a pattern of citations for inadequate supervision or unsafe premises is a facility where injury risk is elevated. If your child was harmed at such a facility, an experienced Chicago abogado de lesiones personales at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can help you review those records and build a strong case.

The Illinois Laws That Protect Children in Daycare Settings

Illinois has a detailed legal framework that governs child care facilities, and understanding it is the first step toward knowing when a daycare has failed your child. A license issued by DCFS authorizes child care facilities to operate in accordance with applicable standards and the provisions of the Child Care Act of 1969. That law, codified at 225 ILCS 10, sets the baseline for what every licensed facility in Illinois must do to protect children in their care.

The DCFS licensing standards that flow from the Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 are specific and detailed. Children may not be left unattended at any time. Infants must sleep in safe, sturdy, freestanding cribs or portable cribs. Hazardous items must be inaccessible to children. Parents must be notified before pesticides are applied. Exits must be unlocked and clear of equipment and debris. Drills for fire and tornado must be conducted. These are not suggestions. They are legal requirements, and a facility that violates them may be liable when a child is hurt as a result.

For day care homes, DCFS Standard 406 sets its own requirements. No day care home operator may care for more than a total of 12 children, including the caregiver’s own children under age 12. No child may be left unattended in a vehicle. Caregivers must have 15 hours of in-service training per year. When these rules are broken and a child is hurt, the law provides a path to accountability. A civil lawsuit under Illinois negligence law can hold a daycare operator, a property owner, or an individual staff member responsible for the harm their failures caused.

It is also worth noting that the Child Care Act of 1969 excludes some facilities from the requirement to be licensed, and those exclusions can be found in Section 2.09 of the Child Care Act of 1969 at 225 ILCS 10/2.09. An unlicensed facility operating outside the law does not escape civil liability when a child is injured. If anything, the absence of a license and the required oversight that comes with it can strengthen a negligence claim.

The Illinois Childcare Crisis and Its Connection to Child Safety

Chicago families face a childcare environment that has been under serious strain for years, and that strain has direct consequences for child safety. Over the past decade, Illinois has experienced a 33% decline in licensed childcare providers, losing nearly 4,300 facilities and about 38,000 licensed slots for children. Fewer licensed options means more families turning to unlicensed or under-regulated providers, and more children placed in settings that have never been inspected by DCFS.

The statistics paint a troubling picture of childcare accessibility in Illinois, with 70% of the population living in “childcare deserts,” meaning regions without enough licensed slots for children. In Chicago, this pressure is felt in neighborhoods like Englewood, Austin, and parts of the Far South Side, where licensed daycare options are scarce and families sometimes have little choice but to use informal arrangements. Those informal arrangements carry real risk, because the safety standards that apply to licensed centers simply do not apply to unlicensed operations.

Overcrowding and understaffing compound the problem. When a facility takes in more children than its license allows, or when it operates with fewer staff than required by DCFS ratio rules, the risk of injury rises sharply. A caregiver watching too many toddlers at once cannot prevent every fall, choking incident, or altercation between children. Illinois DCFS sets strict staff-to-child ratios precisely because supervision gaps are one of the most predictable causes of daycare injuries. A facility that knowingly violates those ratios and a child is hurt as a result faces serious legal exposure under Illinois negligence law.

The decline in licensed providers also means that the facilities still operating are often handling higher enrollment than they were designed for. A center near Logan Square or Pilsen that was built for 30 children but is now caring for 50 faces a fundamentally different safety profile. If your child was injured at an overcrowded or understaffed Chicago daycare, the records DCFS maintains about that facility’s licensing status, inspection history, and citation record can be powerful evidence in your case.

The Most Common Types of Daycare Injuries in Chicago

Daycare injuries in Chicago run the full range from minor cuts to life-altering harm. Falls are the most frequently reported category, consistent with national data showing that falls are the leading cause of emergency department visits for children ages 1 to 4. A child who falls from playground equipment at a center near Grant Park, tumbles from a changing table, or slips down a wet stairway at a facility in Bridgeport can suffer broken bones, head injuries, or worse. The severity depends on the height of the fall, the surface below, and how quickly staff respond.

Choking and suffocation are among the most serious risks for infants and toddlers. Among children under one year old, unintentional injury deaths in urban areas are largely due to suffocation. A daycare that places an infant in an unsafe sleep position, leaves loose bedding in a crib, or fails to monitor a sleeping child violates both DCFS licensing standards and its basic duty of care. These incidents are preventable, and when they are not prevented, they may support a wrongful death or serious injury claim.

Burns, medication errors, allergic reactions, and injuries caused by defective toys or equipment also appear regularly in daycare injury cases. States can decide how they define serious injuries, meaning some count any instance that requires medical attention while others count only injuries that cause permanent damage. This inconsistency in reporting means the true number of daycare injuries is almost certainly higher than official counts suggest. Parents who believe their child was hurt due to negligence should not wait for a formal finding by DCFS before consulting an attorney. The civil standard of proof is different from the administrative standard, and a legal claim can proceed even when a licensing investigation produces no citation.

Physical abuse by staff, including shaken baby syndrome and abusive head trauma, represents the most serious category of daycare harm. These cases often involve criminal charges alongside civil claims. Under Illinois law, a daycare operator can be held civilly liable for the abusive acts of an employee if the operator failed to conduct proper background checks, ignored warning signs, or retained a worker despite known concerns about that person’s conduct.

What Illinois DCFS Data Tells Parents About Facility Safety

Illinois complies with federal requirements under the Child Care and Development Block Grant Act, which mandates that states publish annual data on deaths, serious injuries, and substantiated abuse cases at child care facilities. Child care has always been considered very safe overall, with the number of deaths in states each year usually in the single digits, but advocates believe that better data collection and regulations can lower the number of preventable deaths, injuries, and abuse cases. That data is publicly available through DCFS, and parents in Chicago can use it to research any licensed facility before enrollment.

DCFS conducts annual inspections of licensed day care homes and periodic inspections of licensed day care centers. When a day care home is licensed, it means that a DCFS or licensed child welfare agency licensing representative has inspected the facility and found it to meet the licensing requirements. A license is valid for three years, and licensed day care homes are inspected annually by DCFS or the supervising licensed child welfare agency. Inspection reports are public records. A facility with repeated citations for the same violations, whether related to supervision, physical safety, or staff qualifications, is one where the risk of injury is demonstrably higher.

When a child is hurt and a parent files a complaint, a DCFS licensing representative will investigate the complaint and report the results back to the parent. That investigation can produce findings that are directly relevant to a civil lawsuit. However, a DCFS investigation focuses on licensing compliance, not on compensating the injured child. Only a civil lawsuit can do that. The attorneys at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg represent families throughout Chicago and Cook County in daycare injury cases. If your child was hurt at a facility in Lincoln Square, the Near North Side, or anywhere else in the city, call us at (312) 222-0010 for a free consultation. We can review the DCFS records, the incident reports, and the facts of your case to help you understand your options.

FAQs About Illinois and Chicago Daycare Injury Statistics

What is the most common type of injury at Chicago daycares?

Falls are the most frequently reported cause of injury-related emergency department visits for children ages 1 to 4, which covers the majority of daycare-aged children. At Chicago facilities, falls from playground equipment, changing tables, cribs, and stairs are among the most common incidents reported to DCFS. Choking, burns, and injuries caused by inadequate supervision are also frequently documented.

Does Illinois law require daycares to report injuries to DCFS?

Yes. Licensed child care facilities in Illinois are required under DCFS licensing standards to document and report serious injuries and incidents. The Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 (225 ILCS 10) and the regulations that flow from it require facilities to maintain records of injuries and, in serious cases, to notify DCFS directly. Failure to report an injury can itself be a licensing violation and may be relevant evidence in a civil lawsuit.

Can I sue a Chicago daycare even if DCFS did not find a violation?

Yes. A DCFS investigation and a civil lawsuit operate under different legal standards. DCFS determines whether a facility violated its licensing requirements. A civil court determines whether the facility was negligent and whether that negligence caused your child’s injury. A finding of no licensing violation does not bar a personal injury claim. Evidence of negligence, including inadequate supervision, unsafe conditions, or failure to follow safety protocols, can support a lawsuit regardless of the DCFS outcome.

What should I do immediately after my child is injured at a Chicago daycare?

Seek medical attention right away, even if the injury appears minor. Some injuries, including head trauma and internal injuries, are not immediately obvious. Request a written incident report from the daycare, photograph your child’s injuries, and preserve any communications with the facility. Do not sign any releases or waivers presented by the daycare or its insurance company before speaking with an attorney. Contact Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010 as soon as possible to protect your child’s legal rights.

Is there a time limit for filing a daycare injury lawsuit in Illinois?

Yes. Illinois has a statute of limitations that sets a deadline for filing personal injury claims. For claims involving injuries to minors, Illinois law generally tolls, or pauses, the statute of limitations until the child turns 18, but there are exceptions and important strategic reasons to act sooner rather than later. Evidence can be lost, witnesses’ memories fade, and surveillance footage is often overwritten within days. Speaking with an attorney promptly after a daycare injury gives your family the best chance of preserving the evidence needed to support a strong claim.

This page was prepared by Briskman Briskman & Greenberg, a personal injury law firm located in Chicago, Illinois. Our office address is 351 W. Hubbard Street, Suite 810, Chicago, IL 60654. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes in future cases.

More Resources About Frequently Asked Questions and Resources About Daycare Injuries

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