Why You Should Consider a Medical Malpractice Claim
Filing a claim can provide compensation for medical costs, lost income, rehabilitation, and non-economic harm. It also holds providers accountable and can lead to improvements in patient safety across the health care system.
Even if a claim does not result in a full award, pursuing legal options often brings a clearer understanding of what happened and can secure resources needed for recovery and future care.
Common Situations That Lead to Medical Malpractice Claims
Many claims stem from surgical mistakes, misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis, medication and anesthesia errors, birth injuries, hospital-acquired infections, and failures in follow-up care or monitoring. Each situation requires careful review of records and medical facts.
Surgical Errors and Complications
Incidents such as wrong-site surgery, retained instruments, or negligent surgical technique can cause significant harm and may form the basis for a malpractice claim when tied to substandard care.
Misdiagnosis and Delayed Diagnosis
When a condition is missed or diagnosis is delayed, necessary treatment may be postponed, worsening outcomes. Claims often focus on whether timely diagnosis would have prevented harm.
Medication and Anesthesia Mistakes
Medication errors, dosing mistakes, and anesthesia complications can cause serious injury. Documentation and review of prescribing, administration, and monitoring practices are critical in these matters.