It is essential to consult an attorney as soon as possible if you think you may have a malpractice case to pursue. However, you should know that Medical Malpractice cases are particularly difficult, and you should understand as well why your real injury may not meet the standards for suing someone.
In general, the injured party must be able to prove:
1. That care did not meet the regular professional standards;
2. That an injury was sustained, with significant/persistent consequences; and
3. That the injury was a direct result of caregiver error or negligence.
Why Are These Cases Difficult for Patients to Win?
First, studies have shown repeatedly that jury verdicts favor doctors. In real life, jurors consistently sympathize more with doctors who have been sued than with the patients who sue them.
Second, The Health Security Act requires that medical malpractice cases go through a lengthy number of hurdles before they even reach a jury. While something like a car accident case will usually go to trial in a year, it takes a minimum of two years, and more often three, to get to trial with Med Mal cases. One reason is that, about a year into filing the suit, the case must go through a “pre-litigation screening panel.” A client cannot automatically seek a jury trial without going through this screening process.
Third, the attorneys who defend medical practitioners are among the best lawyers in the state, and the process is extremely complicated. Even when they have a good chance of losing against a strong claim, practitioners and their lawyers will often fight it out and resist settling the case for reasons including defending their professional reputations and avoiding hikes in their medical malpractice insurance rates.
Fourth, it is extremely expensive. Costs can range from $10,000 to $200,000. Because most clients can’t afford to pay that kind of money up front, lawyers have to be willing to pay it out themselves. It makes
sense, then, that the lawyers will want to be convinced that they can win, and that they can win enough money to cover these upfront costs plus pay for all of the lawyer’s time, with enough left over to satisfy their clients. That’s a lot of money. That’s why, when someone says “I don’t care about the money, I just don’t want them to get away with it,” unless the client is ready to spend a fortune to make a point, they are almost certainly not going to be able to convince an attorney to take the case.
Finally, the law recognizes that medical care providers make mistakes just like everyone else, and not every mistake is medical negligence or malpractice. Not all mistakes rise to the level of a violation of medical standards of care, and not all violations of these standards cause real harm to the patient.