The delivery room went silent. No cry. No movement. A team of people rushed in, and suddenly your baby was somewhere you could not reach. If this is your story, or something close to it, you deserve answers. Here is what “unresponsive at birth” means medically, what the resuscitation team is doing, and what happens in the critical hours and days that follow.

What “Unresponsive at Birth” Means Clinically

When medical professionals describe a baby as “unresponsive at birth,” they are describing a baby who did not begin breathing on their own, did not cry, and showed little or no movement or muscle tone when delivered. In the most severe cases, the baby may have had no detectable heartbeat.

This can happen for a range of reasons, including:

  • Umbilical cord problems – the cord was compressed, wrapped around the neck (nuchal cord), or prolapsed during delivery
  • Placental failure – the placenta separated from the uterine wall (abruption) or stopped functioning adequately during labor
  • Prolonged or difficult labor – especially when fetal heart rate monitoring showed signs of distress that were not acted on quickly enough
  • Shoulder dystocia – the baby’s shoulders became stuck during delivery, delaying birth and oxygen supply
  • Meconium aspiration – the baby inhaled meconium (first stool) into the lungs before or during delivery
  • Maternal complications – severe bleeding, uterine rupture, or dangerously low blood pressure during labor
Important distinction: A baby who is unresponsive at birth is not the same as a stillborn baby. An unresponsive baby may still have a heartbeat (even a faint one) and can often be resuscitated. The medical team’s immediate response in those first seconds and minutes is what makes the difference.

APGAR Scores Explained Simply

Within the first minute of your baby’s life, and again at 5 minutes, the medical team assigns an APGAR score. This is one of the first things you will hear about, and understanding it can help cut through some of the fear.

APGAR stands for five things, each scored from 0 to 2:

CategoryScore 0Score 1Score 2
Appearance (skin color)Blue or pale all overBody pink, extremities blueCompletely pink
Pulse (heart rate)Absent (no heartbeat)Below 100 bpmAbove 100 bpm
Grimace (reflex response)No responseGrimace onlyCry, cough, or sneeze
Activity (muscle tone)Limp, no movementSome flexionActive movement
Respiration (breathing)Not breathingWeak or irregularStrong cry

A total score of 7 to 10 is considered normal. A score of 4 to 6 means the baby needs some help. A score of 0 to 3 is critically low and means the baby requires immediate, aggressive resuscitation.

A low 1-minute APGAR is not a life sentence. Many babies who score 0 to 3 at 1 minute improve significantly by 5 minutes once resuscitation is underway. What matters more for long-term outcomes is the 5-minute and 10-minute APGAR scores, combined with other tests like blood gases and brain imaging.
Was Your Baby’s Birth Injury Preventable?

If warning signs were missed during labor, your family may have options. Get a free, confidential case review.

Get a Free Case Review
CP Family Help
Get a Free Case Review
Was your baby unresponsive or not breathing at birth?
Confidential · No obligation · Takes 2 min

The Resuscitation Process Step by Step

When a baby is born unresponsive, the delivery team follows the Neonatal Resuscitation Program (NRP) protocol, a standardized set of steps designed to restore breathing and circulation as quickly as possible. Here is what happens, in order:

1
Dry, stimulate, and position. The baby is dried with warm towels and gently stimulated (rubbing the back, flicking the feet). The head is positioned to open the airway. This alone is enough to restart breathing in many babies.
2
Clear the airway. If needed, the mouth and nose are suctioned to remove fluid or meconium that may be blocking the airway.
3
Positive pressure ventilation (PPV). If the baby is still not breathing or the heart rate is below 100 bpm, the team uses a bag and mask to push air into the lungs. This is the most critical step and resolves the problem in the majority of cases.
4
Intubation. If PPV through a mask is not effective, a breathing tube (endotracheal tube) is placed directly into the baby’s airway for more efficient ventilation.
5
Chest compressions. If the heart rate remains below 60 bpm despite ventilation, chest compressions are started: three compressions followed by one breath, in a coordinated rhythm.
6
Epinephrine and medications. In the most severe cases, epinephrine (adrenaline) is given through an umbilical vein catheter or the endotracheal tube to stimulate the heart. IV fluids may also be given if blood loss is suspected.

Most babies who need resuscitation respond within the first two steps. Only about 1 in 1,000 newborns requires chest compressions or medications. The speed, skill, and coordination of the resuscitation team are among the most important factors in determining outcomes.

What Brain Monitoring Tells Doctors

Once your baby is stabilized in the NICU, the medical team shifts focus from resuscitation to assessment. One of the most important tools in those first hours is brain monitoring.

Most NICUs will place a continuous aEEG (amplitude-integrated electroencephalography) or full EEG on your baby’s scalp shortly after admission. This monitors the brain’s electrical activity in real time. Here is what doctors are looking for:

  • Background pattern. A normal brain shows continuous electrical activity. A suppressed, flat, or burst-suppression pattern suggests significant brain injury.
  • Seizures. Many babies with brain injury from oxygen deprivation develop seizures within the first 24 to 48 hours. Some seizures are visible (jerking, stiffening), but many are “subclinical,” meaning they only show on the EEG. This is why continuous monitoring is essential.
  • Recovery trajectory. Doctors watch how the brain activity changes over hours and days. Improvement in the background pattern is a positive sign.

The EEG results are also one of the key factors in deciding whether your baby is a candidate for cooling treatment (therapeutic hypothermia), which must be started within 6 hours of birth to be effective.

Have Questions About Your Baby’s Brain Monitoring Results?

Our team helps families understand what happened during delivery and what the medical evidence shows.

Talk to Our Team
CP Family Help
Get a Free Case Review
Was your baby unresponsive or not breathing at birth?
Confidential · No obligation · Takes 2 min

HIE: The Diagnosis You May Be About to Receive

If your baby was born unresponsive due to oxygen deprivation, the diagnosis you are most likely to hear in the next few hours or days is HIE, or hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. This is the medical term for brain injury caused by a lack of oxygen and blood flow to the brain around the time of birth.

HIE is graded on a scale of severity:

GradeClinical SignsGeneral Outlook
Mild (Grade I)Slightly increased tone, jitteriness, poor feeding, hyperalert state. Usually resolves within 24-48 hours.Most babies recover fully without long-term effects.
Moderate (Grade II)Reduced tone, lethargy, seizures possible, poor reflexes. Requires close monitoring and typically qualifies for cooling treatment.Outcomes vary widely. Cooling treatment significantly improves prognosis. Some babies recover fully; others develop cerebral palsy or learning difficulties.
Severe (Grade III)Absent reflexes, no spontaneous movement, prolonged seizures, reduced consciousness. Often requires ventilator support.Higher risk of significant long-term neurological challenges, including cerebral palsy, epilepsy, and developmental delays.

The grade of HIE is an important starting point, but it is not the final word. An MRI done at 4 to 7 days gives a much clearer picture of the actual brain injury, which brain regions are affected, and what the long-term outlook may be.

How to Advocate for Your Baby in the NICU

You may feel powerless right now, but you are your baby’s most important advocate. Here are concrete things you can do in the first hours and days:

  • Ask about cooling treatment immediately. If your baby shows signs of moderate or severe HIE, ask whether they are a candidate for therapeutic hypothermia. The 6-hour window is non-negotiable. If your hospital does not offer cooling, ask about emergency transfer to one that does.
  • Request a copy of the fetal heart rate tracings. These are the monitoring strips from labor and delivery. They are part of your medical record and may be important later.
  • Ask about the cord blood gas results. The pH and base deficit from the umbilical cord blood at birth tell doctors how much oxygen deprivation occurred. You have a right to know these numbers.
  • Be present for rounds. Most NICUs hold daily rounds where the medical team reviews each baby’s progress. Ask what time they happen and be there. Write down what you hear.
  • Ask for a neurology consultation. If one has not been ordered, request that a pediatric neurologist evaluate your baby. They specialize in brain injury and can give you the most informed prognosis.
Trust your instincts. If something feels wrong, if you feel like your concerns are being dismissed, or if the answers you are getting do not make sense, keep asking. You can request a second opinion. You can ask for a meeting with the attending neonatologist. You are not being difficult. You are being a parent.

Processing Trauma While Being Present

Watching your baby be resuscitated is one of the most terrifying things a human being can experience. The silence where a cry should have been. The rush of people. The machines. The waiting. This is trauma, and your body and mind are responding to it right now in ways that are completely normal.

You may feel numb. You may feel like you are watching everything from outside your own body. You may replay the delivery over and over in your mind, looking for the moment where things went wrong. You may feel guilt, even though none of this is your fault. All of these responses are normal.

What You Can Do Right Now

  • Eat and drink something. Your body is running on adrenaline and stress hormones. Force yourself to have a meal and stay hydrated, even if you have no appetite.
  • Ask the NICU for a social worker. Every NICU has one. They can help you navigate the medical system, connect you with financial resources, and provide emotional support or a therapy referral.
  • Let someone help. If family or friends are offering, say yes. Let them bring you food, take care of things at home, or simply sit with you.
  • Talk about what happened. Whether it is with your partner, a friend, a chaplain, or a therapist, putting the experience into words can help your brain start to process it.
  • Do not make long-term decisions yet. You do not have to figure everything out today. Focus on the next hour, the next feeding, the next update from the medical team.
You are not alone in this. Thousands of families have walked this same hallway, sat in this same chair, and felt this same fear. Many of them found their way through, and so will you. For support from families who have been where you are, visit our guide to processing a traumatic birth.
Get a Free, Confidential Case Review

Our team works with families across all 38 states. No cost, no commitment – just answers.

Start Here