Work with a Legal Team Who Truly Cares
What You Need to Know Before You Bring a Medical Malpractice Case
Posted in Medical Malpractice
Summary
Medical malpractice (often called “Med Mal”) is a civil claim against a healthcare provider. A plaintiff may bring a medical malpractice claim against a healthcare provider if the healthcare provider acted negligently in their diagnosis, care, or treatment of a patient and thus caused injury to the patient.
In other words, an injured patient may be able to bring a medical malpractice claim if she feels her doctor did not meet the standard of care expected of healthcare professionals while the doctor was tending to her medical issue. This includes giving a patient the wrong medicine because the doctor was careless, not following medical procedures to assess a well-known disease that could have been cured with early treatment, or even failing to explain the risks of a procedure adequately and getting informed consent from the patient.
Elements
To bring a medical malpractice claim, a plaintiff must prove four elements.
-
The healthcare provider had a duty of care to the patient.
-
The healthcare provider breached this duty.
-
The patient suffered an injury.
-
The patient’s injury was proximately caused by the healthcare provider’s breach of duty.
Statute of Limitations
Medical malpractice claims are not available forever; the amount of time a plaintiff can bring a case has an expiration date, called the statute of limitations. Due to the timely nature and complexity of medical malpractice claims, most victims would benefit from hiring a skilled personal injury attorney who can help them navigate this process.
In Kansas, a plaintiff only has two years from the date of injury or the date on which the plaintiff should have reasonably discovered the injury to bring the medical malpractice claim.
In Missouri, a plaintiff has two years to bring a medical malpractice case, which begins when the medical error occurred. Missouri has a few exceptions to that start date. First, suppose the negligent act was negligently permitting a foreign object to remain in the living body of a person. In that case, the claim can be brought within two years from the date of the alleged negligence or from the date on which the patient, in the exercise of ordinary care, should have discovered such alleged negligence (whichever is first). In a Missouri medical malpractice case where the medical provider failed to inform the patient of the risks, the claim can be brought within two years from the date of discovery of such alleged negligent failure to disclose or from the date on which the patient, in the exercise of ordinary care, should have discovered such alleged negligence (whichever is first). The third Missouri exception applies when the person bringing the claim is a minor (less than 18 years old); that minor has until his or her twentieth birthday to get the medical malpractice action.
Do not let the statute of limitations prevent you from receiving the compensation you deserve.
Missouri only: Affidavit of Qualified Health Care Provider
Missouri requires that the medical malpractice plaintiff also file an affidavit of a qualified healthcare provider within 90 days of filing the lawsuit. This affidavit states that the medical provider failed to treat the patient reasonably and caused the plaintiff’s injuries.
Damage Caps
Kansas and Missouri require non-economic damage caps for medical malpractice cases.
Damages are compensation for a plaintiff’s suffering, harm, or injury. Economic damages, which do not have a cap for these cases, are dollar amounts that one can calculate to a precise amount. Economic damages include past or future medical bills or lost wages.
Non-economic damages are injury compensation that is not an objective dollar amount, such as pain and suffering, trouble sleeping, or depression, to name a few, that can result from a medical malpractice injury. So, a damage cap limits the amount of damages a plaintiff can receive for non-economic damage.
Hire an Attorney
Medical malpractice can be very tricky and complex. This article only summarizes some of this serious, time-consuming, and stressful type of case. If you are reading this and you think there is a chance you have a medical malpractice case, you need to hire an experienced personal injury attorney as soon as possible. Call Mark Grover today at 913-432-1000 to set up a free consultation.
The information on this website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be considered legal advice for any case or situation. This information is not intended to create; receipt or viewing does not constitute an attorney-client relationship.