At Betras, Maruca, Kopp, & Harshman, LLC, we handle claims for damages caused by negligent medical care and treatment. Most doctors, hospitals, and other people that provide medical care are highly qualified and competent. However, medical errors kill or permanently disable approximately 98,000 Americans every year. A poor result from surgery or longer than expected recovery is not always a basis for a medical malpractice claim.
For our firm to consider a medical malpractice claim, a person usually must have suffered serious and permanent injury directly caused by substandard care, treatment or evaluation by a doctor, hospital or healthcare provider. Examples of substandard care include, but are not limited to, leaving a sponge inside a person after surgery, operating on the wrong part of the body, giving a person the wrong prescription drug, birth trauma, brain trauma, failure to diagnose cancer, unnecessary operations, and defective orthopedic implants.
Medical malpractice involves a very small percentage of doctors and hospitals. However, doctors can make mistakes and be careless just like all other people. In those cases where negligence causes serious injury, we help people recover money damages.
Types of Medical Malpractice
If a medical treatment provider causes a patient to suffer a disease or injury by his or her negligent actions or failure to act, that healthcare professional may be guilty of medical malpractice. Even if a patient already suffers from a disease or injury, the treatment provider may still face liability for malpractice if his or her actions or inaction increase a patient's risk of harm or causes the condition to worsen.
Medical malpractice can occur in many different scenarios. Here are some of the more common medical mistakes:
- Failure to diagnose and properly treat medical emergencies. In emergency situations, prompt and correct treatment is essential.
- Failure to diagnose and properly treat serious medical conditions. Often symptoms are overlooked or a patient is taken for granted. Sometimes x-rays and other test results are misread.
- Surgical mistakes. A slip of a knife can cause severe problems. Sometimes medical instruments or sponges are left inside a patient after surgery by mistake.
- Errors with medication or treatment. A wrong prescription or treatment can cause serious injury or illness.
- Delays in diagnosis. Many times diagnostic delay can have dire consequences, especially in the case of various types of cancer.
- Birth injuries. Malpractice can often occur during labor. Complications arise that require immediate and proper reactions from doctors and nurses. Cerebral Palsy cases sometimes arise as a result of such medical mistakes.
- Failure to advise of diagnosis. A patient has the right to know the diagnosis so that he or she can properly assess treatment options.
- Lack of informed consent. A patient has the right to understand the risks associated with a particular type of treatment.
- Abandonment. A treatment provider cannot always simply stop treating a patient, especially in emergency situations.
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