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Photographing Injuries and Preserving Medical Records

When your child is hurt at a Chicago daycare, your first instinct is to hold someone accountable. But accountability requires proof, and proof starts the moment after the injury occurs. Photographing your child’s injuries and preserving every piece of medical documentation are two of the most powerful steps you can take to protect your family’s legal rights. Whether the harm happened near Wicker Park, in a facility off Michigan Avenue, or at a center tucked into a Logan Square neighborhood, the steps you take in the first hours and days can shape the entire outcome of your claim. As a Chicago abogado de lesiones personales team that handles daycare injury cases, Briskman Briskman & Greenberg knows exactly what evidence matters most, and we are here to help you gather it.

Table of Contents

Why Documenting Injuries Right Away Makes a Difference

Bruises fade. Swelling goes down. Cuts heal. The physical evidence of a child’s injury can disappear within days, sometimes hours. If you do not photograph the injury quickly, you lose a visual record that no medical report can fully replace. A photograph taken at the emergency room at Northwestern Memorial Hospital or at a Lurie Children’s urgent care clinic captures the raw reality of what happened to your child. That image can speak directly to a jury or an insurance adjuster in a way that a written description simply cannot.

Illinois law places the burden of proof on the injured party. Under the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure, you must show that the daycare’s negligence caused your child’s harm. Clear, dated photographs create a timeline that supports your claim. They show the severity of the injury on day one, day three, and day ten, giving the court a full picture of how serious the harm actually was. If your child suffered a skull fracture, a burn, or a dislocated joint at a Chicago daycare, the visual progression of that injury tells a story that medical language alone cannot convey.

Take photos from multiple angles. Use natural light when possible. Include a reference object for scale, like a coin or a ruler. Photograph the injury every day or two as it changes. Save these images in multiple locations, including a cloud backup, so they cannot be lost. Write the date and time on each photo or rely on the metadata your phone automatically records. These small steps cost nothing but can be worth everything when your case goes to settlement negotiations or to trial at the Daley Center courthouse downtown.

What Medical Records to Collect and Why They Matter in Illinois

Medical records are the backbone of any daycare injury claim in Illinois. They connect your child’s injury directly to the incident at the facility. Without them, even the most obvious case of negligence becomes harder to prove. Every record created from the moment your child receives care is a piece of evidence you need to collect and keep.

Start with the emergency room or urgent care records from the day of the injury. These documents capture the initial diagnosis, the treating physician’s observations, and the stated cause of the injury. Emergency room records from hospitals like Comer Children’s Hospital or Rush University Medical Center carry significant weight in court because they are created close in time to the incident, before any dispute about what happened has a chance to develop.

Beyond the ER visit, you need to gather follow-up appointment notes, specialist referrals, physical therapy records, prescription records, lab results, and imaging reports. Under the Illinois Examination of Health Care Records statute, 735 ILCS 5/8-2001, patients and their authorized representatives have the right to inspect and obtain copies of their health information, including history, charts, and diagnostic images. According to state law, healthcare providers are required to provide copies of medical records within 30 days of a patient’s written request. Submit that written request as soon as possible after the injury occurs.

Do not overlook billing records. Medical bills document the financial cost of the injury and support your claim for economic damages. Keep every explanation of benefits from your insurance company, every invoice from a specialist, and every receipt for out-of-pocket costs like medications or medical equipment. These records build the foundation for recovering the full scope of what your family has spent dealing with an injury that should never have happened.

Illinois Law on Medical Records as Evidence in Personal Injury Cases

Illinois law treats certified medical records as admissible evidence in personal injury proceedings. Under the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, 820 ILCS 305, records and bills kept by a treating hospital, physician, or other healthcare provider that are certified as true and correct are admissible without further proof as evidence of the medical and surgical matters stated in them. While that statute directly governs workers’ compensation proceedings, Illinois courts apply similar evidentiary principles in personal injury litigation, making certified medical records a powerful tool in daycare injury cases.

The Illinois Code of Civil Procedure also provides a framework for obtaining records through formal legal channels. If a daycare facility or another party refuses to produce records, an attorney can use the discovery process to compel their production. Courts in Cook County have the authority to enforce subpoenas and compel compliance when parties withhold relevant documents.

One critical legal concept to understand is spoliation of evidence. A plaintiff claiming spoliation of evidence must prove that the defendant owed a duty to preserve the evidence, the defendant breached that duty by losing or destroying the evidence, the loss or destruction was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s inability to prove the underlying lawsuit, and the plaintiff suffered actual damages as a result. In plain terms, if the daycare destroys records or surveillance footage after an injury, that destruction can itself become part of your legal claim. An attorney from Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can send a formal litigation hold letter to the daycare as soon as you retain legal counsel, putting them on notice that all records must be preserved.

Illinois hospitals are also required by law to retain medical records for a minimum period. Every hospital shall preserve its medical records in a format and for a duration established by hospital policy and for not less than 10 years. That retention requirement protects your ability to access records even if some time passes before you pursue a claim. However, waiting is never advisable. Records are most complete and most credible when obtained early.

Your Rights Under HIPAA and Illinois Privacy Law When Accessing Your Child’s Records

Many parents are surprised to learn they have clear legal rights to access their child’s medical records. Federal law gives you those rights, and Illinois law reinforces them. Under federal privacy law, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), as well as under Illinois law, you have certain rights regarding the privacy of your confidential health information. As a parent or legal guardian, those rights extend to your minor child’s records.

HIPAA establishes national standards to protect individuals’ medical records and other personal health information, and covered entities such as healthcare providers, health plans, and healthcare clearinghouses must follow strict rules for handling this confidential information. That means hospitals, clinics, and pediatric specialists cannot simply withhold your child’s records without legal justification.

To request records, submit a written request to the healthcare provider’s medical records department. The provider must respond within 30 days, with one 30-day extension allowed if they provide a written reason. If you believe any information in the record is incorrect, such as a wrong date or a misstatement about how the injury occurred, you have the right to request a correction. If your request is denied, you have the right to give your health care provider a written statement explaining why you disagree with their decision, your provider may reasonably limit the length of your statement, and your provider must make your statement part of your medical record.

Illinois courts have also established an important protection known as the Petrillo doctrine. Under the Petrillo doctrine, defense lawyers are prohibited from having private, off-the-record meetings with a patient’s treating physician without the patient’s consent. This means the daycare’s insurance company cannot quietly speak with your child’s doctor behind your back. Your attorney can enforce this protection on your behalf throughout the litigation process.

Practical Steps to Take After a Chicago Daycare Injury

The period right after a daycare injury is chaotic. Your child is scared and in pain. You are frightened and angry. But the steps you take in those first hours matter enormously. Here is what to do.

First, get your child medical attention immediately, even if the injury looks minor. Some injuries, like concussions, internal damage, or soft tissue injuries, do not show their full severity right away. A same-day medical visit creates a contemporaneous record that ties the injury to the daycare incident. Ask the treating provider to document the stated cause of the injury in the record.

Second, photograph the injury before treatment begins when safely possible, and continue photographing it over the following days and weeks. If the injury is to a visible area like the face, arms, or legs, photograph it daily during the acute phase. If your child has a facial injury or scarring, document the healing process over months.

Third, keep a written journal. Follow up with any recommended treatments and keep a detailed journal of your symptoms and challenges during the recovery process, because this personal record can support your claim by providing a first-hand account of the impact of the injuries on daily life. Note your child’s pain levels, sleep disruptions, behavioral changes, and missed activities. If your child normally loves playing at Millennium Park or attending soccer practice and can no longer do so because of the injury, write that down.

Fourth, request all daycare records related to the incident. Under the Illinois Child Care Act of 1969, 225 ILCS 10/1 et seq., licensed daycare facilities in Illinois are subject to regulatory oversight and record-keeping requirements. The daycare should have an incident report. Request it in writing immediately. Also request any surveillance footage from the facility, because that footage may be overwritten within days if you do not act quickly. Preserving surveillance footage after a Chicago daycare injury is a time-sensitive task that an attorney can handle on your behalf.

Fifth, contact Briskman Briskman & Greenberg. Our firm handles daycare injury cases throughout Chicago and the surrounding area. We can issue preservation letters, obtain records, work with medical experts, and build the strongest possible case for your family. Call us at (312) 222-0010 to speak with our team about what happened to your child.

FAQs About Photographing Injuries and Preserving Medical Records in Chicago, IL

How soon after a daycare injury should I start photographing my child’s injuries?

Start as soon as your child is safe and receiving or has received medical care. Injuries like bruises, burns, and swelling often look most severe in the first 24 to 72 hours. After that, they begin to heal and may not accurately reflect the initial severity. The sooner you photograph the injury, the stronger that visual evidence becomes. Continue photographing every day or two for at least the first week, then weekly after that until the injury is fully healed.

Can the daycare refuse to give me the incident report after my child was hurt?

Illinois-licensed daycare facilities are required to document injuries and maintain records under the Illinois Child Care Act of 1969. You have the right to request a copy of any incident report related to your child. If the daycare refuses or claims no report exists, that refusal is itself a red flag worth discussing with an attorney. A lawyer can use formal legal channels, including the discovery process in litigation, to compel the production of those records.

What if the hospital already discharged my child and I forgot to ask for records?

You can still request your child’s records at any time after discharge. Under 735 ILCS 5/8-2001, Illinois law gives you the right to obtain copies of your child’s health records by submitting a written request to the healthcare provider. The provider must respond within 30 days. Hospitals in Illinois are required to retain medical records for at least 10 years, so the records will still be available even if some time has passed since the injury occurred.

Does Illinois have a deadline for filing a lawsuit after a child is injured at a daycare?

Yes. Illinois has a statute of limitations that governs how long you have to file a personal injury lawsuit. For injuries to minors in Illinois, the statute of limitations is generally tolled, meaning paused, until the child turns 18. At that point, the child typically has two years to file. However, the specific deadline depends on the facts of your case, and waiting too long can create problems with evidence preservation and witness availability. Consulting with an attorney as soon as possible after the injury is always the right move.

What if the daycare’s insurance company asks to speak with my child’s doctor directly?

Do not allow it without speaking to an attorney first. Illinois courts have established the Petrillo doctrine, which prohibits defense attorneys and their clients, including insurance companies, from having private, off-the-record conversations with a patient’s treating physician without the patient’s consent. If a daycare’s insurer contacts your child’s doctor directly, that may be a violation of your rights. An attorney from Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can protect you from these tactics and ensure that all communications go through proper legal channels. Call us at (312) 222-0010.

This content is provided by Briskman Briskman & Greenberg, located at 35 E. Wacker Drive, Suite 1730, Chicago, IL 60601. This page is informational in nature and does not constitute legal advice, nor does reading it create an attorney-client relationship. Results in any legal matter depend on the specific facts and circumstances of each case.

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