September 9, 2022 | Medical Malpractice
When a health care professional, doctor, or a hospital causes injury to a patient through negligent omissions or actions, it is considered medical malpractice. The negligence can be the result of health management, aftercare, treatment, or errors in diagnosis.
According to the laws, in order for you to file a medical malpractice claim, these characteristics must be present:
Your injury has to have been caused by negligence- In order for a medical malpractice claim to be justifiable, it cannot be due to someone involved with your health care having violated your standard of care. It must also be proven an injury happened because of this negligence. If the medical professional receives an unfavorable outcome from a charge of not providing ‘standard of care,’ it is not malpractice by itself. You would have to prove that negligence is why you’ve experienced an injury. If you’ve sustained an injury without negligence, or you can show negligence that did not cause an injury, neither scenario can be claimed as medical malpractice under the law.
A violation of your standard of care- Under the law, there are medical standards recognized in the medical profession as being acceptable medical treatment. The medical treatment must be provided by reasonable prudent health professionals under similar or like circumstances. This type of medical treatment is known as the ‘standard of care.’ As a patient, you have the right to expect your health care professionals to care for you in a manner that is consistent with these standards. If it is proven you did not receive a ‘standard of care,’ you may be able to establish negligence in your case.
Your injury has caused significant damages- You will have to prove or show your injury or harm suffered was caused by medical negligence. The harm or injury has to have resulted in considerable damage, such as:
Some of the cases where negligence can be proven and could result in a lawsuit include:
If you have not given informed consent to a medical procedure, your health care provider or physician can be liable if this procedure results in injury or harm. A malpractice lawsuit may be legitimate in this case even if the procedure was done perfectly.
If your surgeon does not inform you a procedure involves a thirty percent risk of losing a limb, and this happens during the surgery, your doctor will be held liable. This liability is present even if the operation was done perfectly. The reasoning behind this liability is that you might have chosen not to do the surgery with this risk possible.
The plaintiff, you, have to prove there were four elements present in order to be successful in a medical malpractice lawsuit:
The Daniels Law Firm has a proven track record for providing aggressive representation. If you have suffered injury or harm from a medical professional, call our office and learn how we can help get the compensation you deserve.
Millicent Daniels the Peoples Attorney