How Do You Know If You Have a Case for Medical Malpractice?
- StewartWood Injury Lawyers
The most recent data from the Indiana Medical Error Reporting shows that health care professionals made 108 surgical and hospital neglect errors in 2018. Who knows what this number has become in a post-pandemic, post-traumatized society.
Such findings clearly show medical malpractice claims have a basis, and a substantial one. So, how do you know if you have a case? Let StewartWood Injury Lawyers help you to determine that; we have decades of experience handling different types of medical malpractice cases.
Review the case types below for more information on how you could have been unwarrantedly wronged in one or more of these medical contexts and contact our Indianapolis medical malpractice attorneys for legal advice if you need assistance with your claim.
Surgical Cases
Most surgeries mandate a person sign an “informed consent” form attesting that he or she understands the risks of surgery, as all surgeries have a degree of risk. However, sometimes a surgeon makes a mistake beyond the scope of those defined risks. So, a surgical medical malpractice case involves a mistake during surgery that could have otherwise been prevented, no matter how minor or major the surgery.
Cause of Errors
Each surgery medical malpractice case has a unique footprint, but those footprints have underlying structures that can be categorized. There are myriad reasons for surgical errors: lethargy, negligence, ineptitude, an inadequate preoperative outline, imprudent surgical steps, drug and alcohol use, and ineffective communication strategies. Determining which category your case falls under is the first step in a surgical malpractice case investigation.
Types of Errors
From surgery on the wrong body part or even on the wrong person, to leaving a surgical instrument behind in the patient’s body, to incisions that cause nerve damage, or to inadequate surgery protocols, there are many mistakes a surgeon can make during the line of duty. Call StewartWood today if your case sounds like this; we can help you recover from the lasting trauma of your surgery.
Anesthesia Cases
For a patient to undergo surgery, anesthesia is frequently administered to make sure the patient does not experience pain during surgery. Types of anesthesia include general anesthesia, local anesthesia, and regional anesthesia. An anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist is present during surgery to administer these different types of anesthesia. If this person makes a careless anesthesia mistake during surgery that causes injury, then there may be grounds for a medical malpractice case.
Cause of Errors
There is a check-and-balance system for hospitals or surgical centers to ensure medication is prescribed and administered safely. However, in an actual surgical context, those security measures aren’t as strong. The surgery room is an intense environment, with life and death decisions on the line. It is all too easy to get caught up in the fervor of it all, which weakens the anesthesiologist’s ability to double-check for mistakes and it’s this negligence that leads to serious errors.
Types of Errors
Errors made while administering anesthesia are complex, as they can happen before surgery, during surgery, and after surgery. Pre-surgical errors include neglecting to check a patient’s anesthetic-reaction history or failing to inform the patient about risks or restrictions. During-surgery errors include inaccurate timing or dosing of anesthesia, improperly monitoring of patient vital signs, or inappropriate positioning of the patient’s body while under anesthesia. Post-surgical errors include keeping the patient under for too long, leaving the patient alone while he or she is still anesthetized, or not providing the patient with the proper postoperative information. There are many ways anesthesiologists can misstep while performing their duties. Call StewartWood today if your case sounds like this; you can benefit from our expertise with anesthesia cases.
Diagnosis Cases
Most people go to health care professionals because they become alarmed by what their body is experiencing. It is the legal duty of doctors and others in the medical field to accurately assess these signs and symptoms and to properly diagnose the patient based on these evaluations. When a medical professional makes an erroneous assessment of a patient’s symptoms, leading to a subsequent misdiagnosis, a patient can suffer needlessly. This is when there is a basis for a medical malpractice suit.
Cause of Errors
Doctors misread symptoms because of job fatigue, lack of education or experience, drug or alcohol influence, or even hubris. These factors contribute to a doctor being at fault. When these three causes are in play, doctors can misdiagnose a patient based on a false-positive lab, despite other factors suggesting otherwise. Similarly, doctors can misdiagnose a patient based on a false-negative lab, despite symptoms that all point in that direction. Finally, a doctor’s ambivalence about test findings can cause harmful delays in proper treatment.
Types of Errors
From failure to perform a full physical exam or to check a patient’s medical history, to ordering the wrong diagnostic tests, to inaccurate lab conclusions, or to the dismissal of patient concerns, there are many avenues' doctors can take which can lead to diagnosis mistakes and to serious health consequences. Contact StewartWood Injury Lawyers today if your case sounds like this; we can properly diagnose and treat your diagnosis claim case.
Emergency Room Cases
People of all ages frequent emergency rooms (ERs) for chest pains, broken bones, breathing problems, excessive vomiting, serious cuts or burns, bodily injury, or weakness and dizziness. An ER doctor must accurately assess these conditions and administer the proper emergency treatment. When an ER doctor fails to do this properly and a patient is subsequently injured, a medical malpractice claim is warranted.
Cause of Errors
Over the past two decades, emergency room visits have increased by 61%. This increase suggests emergency rooms have become more and more crowded and ER doctors have become more and more burdened. Fatigue, sensory overload, miscommunication, and lack of staff and resources are all factors why ER mistakes occur. The reason for an ER misstep is usually unearthed in a medical malpractice investigation.
Types of Errors
From disorganization of patient charts, to rushed patient histories and labs, to defects in ER machinery, to errors in drug prescription or dosing, to performance of unnecessary tests, or even to substandard sanitary efforts, there are many issues with ER-doctor care that can give rise to patient injury. Call StewartWood Injury Lawyers today if your case sounds like this; we can offer you the guidance you seek on your emergency room suit.
Hospital Neglect Cases
Hospital neglect is a general claim category for hospital employees who neglect to perform at the legally required standard of care. It offers an expansive list of who could be at fault. Doctors’ assistants, nurses, aides, technicians, or other hospital staff all have a responsibility to keep patients safe and well. A hospital neglect medical malpractice case involves an injurious mistake by any of the above parties that could have otherwise been prevented.
Causes of Errors
Hospital neglect stems from fundamental weaknesses in a hospital’s foundational system. Failure to update staff on the newest policies and procedures, inattention to out-of-date hospital equipment and machinery, inadequate training and supervision of hospital employees, or even false advertisement of hospital ability and resources are all reasons why hospital negligence is part of the medical malpractice world.
Types of Errors
From failure to monitor patients or execute doctors’ orders, to inaccurate reporting, to patient neglect or abuse, to drug administration errors, to procedural mistakes, or to the neglect in following hospital hierarchy, there are many ways hospital employees can perpetrate injury to patients. Call StewartWood Injury Lawyers today if your case sounds like this; we are here to serve you in ways you were not served at your hospital.
Birth Injury Cases
Obstetrics is a medical field that offers care throughout a woman’s pregnancy, during delivery, and after delivery, in the postpartum period. When obstetricians, nurses, or other obstetric medical personnel make a negligent mistake, the mother or her baby can suffer serious, life-threatening complications. So, a birth injury medical malpractice case involves the negative health repercussions of an infant or mother due to an employee oversight.
Causes of Errors
There are three main causes for pregnancy and birth errors. The first cause is a lack of communication training for OB staff, which results in employees staying silent when a concerning event is unfolding. Similarly, staff should undergo safety bundle education, but many times corners are cut regarding these sessions.
These bundles teach staff members the protocol for risky obstetrics situations like opioid use, hemorrhages, cesarean birth, hypertension issues, cardiac issues, and postpartum depression. Without the proper education on these scenarios, employees can make the wrong calls, causing severe or deadly consequences to mother and child alike.
The final cause lies in the number of cesarean deliveries performed by an OB practice. According to the CDC, over 30% of all deliveries in the United States were C-sections in 2019, which is problematic because a C-section is serious abdominal surgery. As such, they run the risk of greater health consequences for baby and mother than vaginal deliveries. Many C-sections are performed because of convenient scheduling and larger billing. Practices that don’t try to limit cesarean deliveries, run the risk of preventable injury to mother and baby.
Types of Errors
From misdiagnosis of pregnancy or pregnancy conditions, to c-section surgical errors or vaginal birth technique mistakes, to improper monitoring of mother and child during delivery, to inappropriate medication prescription or administration, there are many ways an obstetrician or OB staff can induce a life-threatening injury. StewartWood Injury Lawyers today if your case sounds like this; we help you get the justice you deserve on behalf of yourself and your child.
Medical Device Cases
The FDA approves all new medical devices and many times these innovative tools save lives that were once lost. However, sometimes medical devices slip through FDA cracks and fail patients who need them the most. When there are failures in medical device functionality or defects in design, patients are the ones who suffer. This becomes grounds for a medical device malpractice claim.
Causes of Errors
There are two main causes for medical device failure, the first of which is a flaw in design or production. Inappropriate material or molding, poor design and functionality, and manufacturing contamination are all common reasons for a defective medical device.
These defects are not noticed because medical devices do not have as rigorous safeguards as their drug counterparts, which brings us to the second cause of medical device failure. Clinical studies and scientific review standards are lacking in this realm, which means devices are approved for the market when they might pose risks to patients. If a patient is injured by a defective medical device, he or she has cause to file a medical malpractice suit.
Types of Errors
From dangerous bone replacements or grafts, to ineffective surgical mesh, to explosive implants, to ill-timed pacemakers, to risky surgical robots, or to outdated hospital machinery, there are plenty of medical devices that fail patients, the errors of which subsequently injure the patient they are meant to help. StewartWood Injury Lawyers today if your case sounds like this; we can provide expert advice on how to move forward with your medical device claim.
Medication/Pharmaceutical Cases
1.5 million people are injured each year due to medication errors, which suggests that despite the widespread availability of pharmaceutical drugs, many are not safe for people to take. Health care professionals and pharmacists have a legal responsibility to prescribe, administer, and monitor drugs responsibly. When shortcuts are taken and negligence wins out, a medical malpractice claim is just around the corner.
Causes of Errors
There are two main reasons why medication or pharmaceutical malpractice cases exist. The first reason for medication errors is simply because some drugs are so similar, both in name and appearance. In the middle of a bustling pharmacy or a chaotic emergency room, it is all too easy to grab the wrong medication because of inattention to what the drug is called, especially if the name is abbreviated, or to what it looks like. The next reason for medication errors is doctor-to-doctor communication or a lack thereof. Many patients have multiple attending nurses and doctors and if they do not communicate with one another about drug decisions regularly, mistakes can inadvertently happen and tragedies can unjustly unfold.
Types of Errors
From drug and dosage misallocation, to patient mis-instruction, to drug confusion, to drug mislabeling, or to improper drug combination, there are many ways the ill-judgment of a doctor or pharmacist can lead to serious injury. StewartWood Injury Lawyers today if your case sounds like this; we can help you receive the compensation you deserve!