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SIDS and Sleep-Related Deaths at Chicago Daycares

No parent should ever get a phone call saying their baby died at daycare. Yet it happens in Chicago. Infants placed in unsafe sleep positions, laid down on soft bedding, or left unmonitored during nap time have died in licensed and unlicensed daycare settings across Illinois. When a child dies from SIDS or a sleep-related cause at a Chicago daycare, the first question every parent deserves answered is: did someone fail my child? If the answer is yes, the law gives you the right to hold that person and that facility accountable. At Briskman Briskman & Greenberg, a Chicago abogado de lesiones personales at our firm can help your family understand what happened and what your legal options are.

Table of Contents

SUID (Sudden Unexpected Infant Death) and SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) are terms that describe the sudden and unexpected death of a baby less than one year old in which the cause was not obvious before investigation. SIDS is typically diagnosed when no other cause of death can be found after a thorough autopsy and scene review. Sleep-related deaths are broader and include deaths caused by suffocation, entrapment, or positional asphyxia during sleep, where a caregiver’s actions, or failure to act, directly contributed to the outcome.

Most sleep-related deaths happen when babies are between 1 and 4 months old, and the majority (90%) happen before a baby reaches 6 months of age. That age range lines up with the time many Chicago families first enroll their infants in daycare, whether in Wicker Park, Logan Square, or the South Side. Every 3 days, a baby in Illinois dies in their sleep. That number is not a medical inevitability. Many of those deaths are preventable.

Twenty percent of SIDS deaths occur in child care settings, and many of these deaths occur during the first week of child care. Child care related studies suggest unaccustomed tummy sleeping as a preventable risk factor, either by being placed on the tummy or by rolling over onto the tummy when this is not a usual sleep position. This means a caregiver who ignores safe sleep rules is not just bending a policy. They are creating a real and documented risk of death.

When a Chicago daycare worker places a baby face-down, puts them on a couch, or leaves them in a swing to sleep, that worker is violating both state regulations and basic standards of infant care. The death that follows is not always a mystery. Sometimes it is the direct result of negligence.

Illinois Law and Safe Sleep Rules for Chicago Daycares

Illinois has specific, enforceable rules about how daycares must put infants to sleep. These rules are not suggestions. They carry the force of law under the Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 (225 ILCS 10) and the administrative regulations that govern licensed daycare centers and homes.

Under Illinois Administrative Code Title 89, Section 407.350, to minimize the risk of sudden infant death syndrome, children shall be placed on their backs when put down to sleep. This is not optional. No infant shall be put to sleep on a sofa, soft mattress, car seat or swing. Soft bedding, bumpers, pillows, quilts, comforters, sheepskins, stuffed toys and other soft products shall not be used or stored in cribs.

Infants must sleep in safe, sturdy, freestanding cribs or portable cribs. Only new cribs manufactured on or after June 28, 2011 can be utilized. Staff must be awake at all times and in the sleeping area whenever children are sleeping. These requirements exist because lawmakers and child safety advocates know that unsupervised infant sleep is dangerous.

If caring for infants, daycare providers must have received training on sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), sudden unexpected infant death (SUID), and safe sleep. Illinois DCFS licensing requires training that covers SIDS, the behaviors that increase the risk of SIDS, safe sleeping habits, licensing standards, and resources to help providers reduce the risk of SIDS for infants in their care. A daycare that skips this training or hires staff who never received it is operating in violation of state law, and that violation can support a negligence claim if a child is harmed.

Not every SIDS death is the result of negligence. But when a daycare violates Illinois safe sleep rules and an infant dies, that violation is powerful evidence in a wrongful death case. The legal question is whether the daycare’s failure to follow the rules caused or contributed to the death.

Common examples of daycare negligence in sleep-related death cases include placing an infant face-down, using a crib filled with soft bedding, letting a baby sleep in a bouncy seat or swing, failing to monitor sleeping infants, or using an unsafe crib that does not meet federal safety standards. No infant shall be put to sleep on a sofa, soft mattress, car seat or swing. Soft bedding, bumpers, pillows, quilts, comforters, stuffed toys, laundry and other soft products shall be removed from the crib when children are napping or sleeping. When a daycare ignores these rules and a baby dies, that is not just a tragedy. It is a potential act of negligence.

Illinois wrongful death claims are governed by the Illinois Wrongful Death Act (740 ILCS 180). This law allows surviving family members to seek compensation when a person dies due to the wrongful act, neglect, or default of another. In a daycare SIDS or sleep-related death case, that could mean suing the daycare center, the individual worker, the facility owner, or even a property owner if unsafe premises contributed to the death. These cases often involve inadequate supervision claims, which are closely tied to understaffing and ratio violations that left a single worker responsible for too many sleeping infants at once.

Chicago families dealing with this loss deserve honest answers. Was the crib up to code? Were staff trained? Was anyone watching? These are questions an attorney can help investigate, and the answers often tell the real story of what happened.

Losing a baby is a grief that cannot be measured in dollars. But the law recognizes that families who lose a child due to another party’s negligence suffer real and compensable harm. Under the Illinois Wrongful Death Act (740 ILCS 180), parents can seek damages for the grief, sorrow, and mental suffering caused by the loss of their child. These are called non-economic damages, and they are separate from any economic losses the family suffers.

In a daycare sleep-related death case, recoverable damages can include funeral and burial expenses, medical costs incurred before the death, and compensation for the emotional suffering of both parents. Illinois also allows surviving family members to seek damages for the loss of companionship and society, which reflects the relationship parents expected to have with their child over a lifetime.

In cases where a daycare’s conduct was especially reckless or intentional, punitive damages may also be available under Illinois law. These are not meant to compensate the family but to punish the wrongdoer and deter others from similar conduct. If a daycare knew its cribs were unsafe, knew its staff were untrained, or repeatedly violated DCFS regulations and still did nothing, a court may find that the conduct rises to the level required for punitive damages.

It is also worth noting that DCFS investigation findings can play a role in your civil case. If DCFS substantiates a violation against the daycare after your child’s death, that record becomes important evidence. An attorney can help you obtain those records and use them effectively. The Illinois Wrongful Death Act has a two-year statute of limitations in most cases, so acting promptly protects your right to pursue a claim. Do not wait to speak with an attorney.

If your baby died at a Chicago daycare, you are in the worst moment of your life. The steps you take in the days and weeks that follow can make a significant difference in your ability to pursue justice. Here is what matters most.

First, do not sign anything the daycare or its insurance company sends you. Do not give a recorded statement to anyone. Daycare operators and their insurers often move quickly to protect themselves after a child’s death, and anything you say can be used to limit or deny your claim. Second, request all records from the daycare, including the child’s file, incident reports, staff schedules, and any written policies about infant sleep. Under Illinois law, parents have rights to access certain records related to their child’s care.

Third, contact DCFS and report what happened. Licensed day care facilities are inspected annually by DCFS licensing staff, and if a complaint has been received regarding a violation of the licensing standards of a day care center, a licensing representative will conduct a licensing complaint investigation to determine if the alleged violation should be substantiated or unsubstantiated. A DCFS investigation can produce findings that directly support your legal case.

Fourth, preserve any physical evidence. If the daycare used a crib, bedding, or sleep equipment that may have contributed to the death, do not allow that equipment to be discarded or altered. Photographs, surveillance footage from the facility, and staff witness accounts are all critical. Chicago daycares near neighborhoods like Pilsen, Bronzeville, and Humboldt Park are required to maintain records, and an attorney can help you compel their production before evidence disappears. Call Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010 for a free consultation. Our firm handles these cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for your family.

Can I sue a Chicago daycare if my infant died of SIDS?

You may have a valid wrongful death claim if the daycare violated Illinois safe sleep regulations and those violations contributed to your child’s death. Not every SIDS death involves negligence, but when a daycare placed an infant face-down, used prohibited soft bedding, failed to supervise sleeping infants, or used unsafe equipment, those failures can form the basis of a legal claim under the Illinois Wrongful Death Act (740 ILCS 180). An attorney can review the facts and help you understand whether the evidence supports a case.

What Illinois regulations govern safe sleep at daycares?

Illinois Administrative Code Title 89, Section 407.350 requires daycare centers to place infants on their backs to sleep, prohibits soft bedding and stuffed items in cribs, and bans placing infants on sofas, car seats, or swings for sleep. The Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 (225 ILCS 10) provides the broader legal framework under which DCFS enforces these rules. Staff are also required to complete SIDS and safe sleep training as a condition of daycare licensing.

How long do I have to file a wrongful death lawsuit after my child died at a Chicago daycare?

The Illinois Wrongful Death Act generally gives surviving family members two years from the date of death to file a lawsuit. Missing this deadline can permanently bar your claim. Because evidence can disappear quickly, including surveillance footage, staff records, and equipment, you should contact an attorney as soon as possible after the death, even while you are still grieving.

What if the daycare says my baby’s death was a natural SIDS death and not their fault?

A daycare saying the death was natural does not make it true. Illinois law allows families to investigate what actually happened. If the daycare violated safe sleep rules, failed to supervise the infant, or used unsafe equipment, those facts matter legally regardless of how the daycare characterizes the death. An attorney can work with medical experts and investigators to determine whether negligence played a role.

Does it matter if the daycare was licensed or unlicensed?

It matters, but you can still have a legal claim either way. Licensed daycares in Chicago are bound by DCFS regulations and can be held liable for violating them. Unlicensed daycares may face additional legal exposure because they were operating illegally in the first place. In both situations, Illinois negligence law applies. If a daycare’s failure to follow safe sleep practices caused or contributed to your child’s death, the operator can be held responsible through a civil lawsuit regardless of licensing status.

More Resources About Medical and Health-Related Harm

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Chicago lawyer, Paul A. Greenberg is a top-rated by Super Lawyers
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