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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Wednesday, January 19th, 2011
1. You should be prepared to show that you suffered a genuine emotional upset.
You should be seen by a psychiatrist or psychologist, who can confirm that you are not faking. The doctor should order a complete medical work-up, in addition to the psychological consultation. Otherwise, the defense lawyer may convince the jury you are faking, or your condition is due to some other cause.
2. You must show that it was more than a temporary upset.
You should maintain contact with your doctor or psychiatrist, while your case is in progress, especially if you continue to feel the emotional effects of your insult or injury. If you are actually under treatment by a psychiatrist, your case is stronger. Your testimony that you have had psychological problems, since your injury, is not nearly as convincing to a jury as your treating physician’s testimony that you have required ongoing care.
3. You must show that it had an adverse effect on your life.
You should keep a diary of your problems and relations with others. This helps to document the adverse changes that have occurred in your family, social, and business relationships. Letters, documents, or written comments about your condition are also helpful to your lawyer; however, they should be spontaneous. You should never solicit them from other people. The courts will not admit written evidence, which has been prepared in anticipation of litigation. In other words, the judge probably will not let your lawyer show the jury a document that has been written at your request because of the chance that it is phony or misleading.
A California woman sued a plastic surgeon, because he located her umbilicus (belly button) an inch to one side, while removing fat from her abdomen. The jury gave her an award for a little displacement of her belly button. She won because she first established malpractice by bringing in a professor of Plastic Surgery as her medical expert witness. But, she also brought in a psychiatrist, who testified the plaintiff was so upset by bad results of the surgery that she had been under his care since it happened, and her career, marriage, and social life had suffered.
4. You have to establish that confidential information was leaked.
A medical malpractice case is not a criminal case, so you do not have to prove exactly who did it or how it was done, although it helps if you can produce a reliable witness, who heard the doctor talking openly about your condition. But, it is not absolutely necessary. The fact that confidential information, only the doctor heard from you in the privacy of his office, has become public knowledge is enough in some states.
A celebrity was in a New York hospital with a heart condition. Some reporters have contacts inside hospitals and pay hospital employees for information about famous patients. Every morning the New York newspapers reported on what had happened to the celebrity in the hospital. His cardiologist said he first learned the results of his patient’s ECG (electrocardiogram) when he read it in the morning paper. The celebrity sued the hospital for invasion of privacy and won.
Tags: adverse effect, confidential information, emotional damages, invasion of privacy, malpractice, medical expert witness, medical malpractice, psychological problems Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, January 6th, 2011
When you go to the doctor, you have the right to expect him, and his employees, to keep information about you confidential. If he leaks information about your medical condition, it can damage your business, personal, emotional life, and your relationships and standing in the community.
What if an employee of the doctor, or the hospital, leaks confidential information about you? The employer is supposed to take due precautions to see that his employees respect the confidentiality of what goes on in the doctor’s office, or the hospital, and do not “talk out of school.” They are responsible for their indiscretions, if they do. If your doctor’s secretary tells her husband that you have tuberculosis, and he spreads it around the community, you would sue the doctor.
What if you find out the doctor, or the hospital, took pictures of you, without your consent, while you were undressed, under anesthesia, or in some other embarrassing situation and have shown them at a medical meeting or allowed them to be published? What if they allowed some outsider to watch? All those things would be grounds for a lawsuit.
What if the doctor, or his employee, puts out a story that you have a disease that would expose you to discrimination, ridicule, or contempt in your community? That is known as defamation, and the doctor really has no defense. He is responsible, and you may not even have to show you suffered any actual damages. Like the New Jersey woman with breast cancer, your justifiable apprehension of repercussions is enough to justify an award or settlement.
Outrageous Conduct: Earlier in the blog, it was noted that mere bad manners and crude language do not constitute malpractice, and generally they do not. Probably the most common cause of unsuccessful lawsuits is resentment at unfriendly or unfeeling actions by doctors or nurses. But, there is an exception. If the conduct of the doctor or hospital employee is so outrageous or offensive by normal standards, that it seriously disturbs your peace of mind, and is directed at you or a close relative, you may have grounds for a lawsuit.
The Rule Is: What constitutes outrageous behavior depends on the individuals involved in each particular case. However, there is one requirement you must meet. The words or actions must have been deliberate and intentional.
Tags: defamation, invasion of privacy, medical malpractice, outrageous conduct, slander Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, November 11th, 2010
Nothing in medical malpractice is so misunderstood as mental distress and psychological injuries. We see newspaper accounts of people who have received awards for pain and suffering or emotional distress. A sympathetic jury has decided to compensate someone for their terrible and frightening ordeal, in addition to their financial loss. It is true that mental distress can bring awards, but it can also be very difficult to prove. Judges can set aside what they consider to be excessive awards for claims of mental suffering with no reasonable basis, and some states have put limits on the amounts juries can give for “pain and suffering.”
So, how do you receive adequate compensation for your pain and suffering? Just saying that you are suffering and very upset, or shedding a few tears, will not get you very far. You have to show that: you required psychiatric treatment, you lost your job, your marriage fell apart, or you suffered some other demonstrable loss.
The Rule Is: You have to show that you actually did receive a shock that would have profoundly disturbed the average juror, and you suffered some real disturbance in your personal, emotional, or business life.
Types of Emotional Distress
Personal Suffering: Because of a doctor’s malpractice, you have to undergo painful surgery or will spend the rest of your life in a wheelchair. You hurt every time you move or maybe you cannot move at all. That is usually self evident and easy to prove.
Disfigurement: This ranks with physical pain in its appeal to juries, provided it was due to a doctor’s negligence and not some other cause. But, if you have been disfigured by an accident or a disease like cancer, you will not get much sympathy, if you sue the doctor, who did his best to correct it. To make a strong case, you have to show two things:
1. You looked normal before his treatment, and your disfigurement was entirely due to the doctor’s negligence.
2. It is permanent and cannot be completely repaired by existing surgical techniques.
Fear and Apprehension: This comes from knowing that you are in danger of death or disability because of the malpractice. A New Jersey gynecologist failed to diagnose a woman’s breast cancer in its early stages, when the chance for cure was good. When the cancer was removed by another surgeon two years later, the chance of a fatal recurrence was much greater because of the delay. The court ruled that the woman did not have to show the cancer had come back as a result of the delay or that she had actually suffered any physical harm. The court said her justifiable fear of a fatal recurrence, and the increased chance of such an outcome, justified the award against the gynecologist.
Emotional Shock: This comes from seeing someone near and dear to you seriously injured or killed. If you witness malpractice, which results in the death or serious injury of a member of your immediate family, the shock you suffer may justify a claim. In most states, you must actually witness the event, although some states will let you file a claim if you can show a genuine, emotional upset just from hearing the news. Your lawyer will have to advise you as to the exact law in your state.
Tags: disfigurement, emotional shock, fear and apprehension, medical malpractice, mental distress, personal suffering, psychological injuries Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, October 18th, 2010
Let’s say you have a condition that has not bothered you for a long time but flares up due to malpractice. For example, you have an old back injury, which has finally quieted down after giving you trouble for many years. While you are in the hospital for another condition, you are allowed to fall off an examining table. Subsequently, your back condition flares up again. Can the hospital claim that it was not responsible, because you already had a bad back? The answer is no. There is an old legal rule that the wrongdoer takes his victim as he finds him.
Imagine that somebody hits you lightly on the head, just a bump that would not injure a normal person. But, you have a hole in your skull from an old injury and suffer a serious brain injury with permanent disability. Can your attacker get away with it by pleading that he did not know you were abnormal and that what he did would not have hurt a normal person? No, he cannot. There actually was such a case, and it gave rise to the legal theory know as the Thin-Skulled Plaintiff.
Anything that causes a quiescent condition to flare up, or a chronic condition to become worse, is considered exactly the same as an original injury. The fact that the doctor did not know does not excuse him.
It is important for you to realize that this applies only to medical malpractice and dental malpractice. If a doctor gives you some treatment, which causes you to have a bad reaction, without committing any malpractice, he is not to blame unless he knew beforehand you were likely to have the reaction. For example, if a doctor gives you penicillin, and you have an allergic reaction, that is your fault. If he gives you penicillin when he knows, or should have known, you are allergic, that is his fault.
You can set down three rules for a flare up of a preexisting condition or an unusual reaction:
1. If it is because of medical malpractice or dental malpractice, the doctor is responsible.
2. If there is no malpractice, and the doctor did not know about your particular problem, he is not liable.
3. If there is no malpractice, but the doctor knew, or should have known, about your special condition and did something that caused it to flare up or become worse, he is liable.
Tags: back injury, brain injury, dental malpractice, malpractice, medical malpractice, preexisting condition, quiescent condition, thin-skulled plaintiff, unusual reaction Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, September 30th, 2010
The courts in each state decide how much probability you have to show in order for the judge to let the jury decide your medical malpractice or dental malpractice case. In some states, you have to show that it was more likely than not (better than a 50% chance) that you would have gotten a different result. Other states only require you to show the malpractice was a substantial factor in producing the bad result and leave it up to the judge to decide what a substantial factor is in each case. In some states, you only have to show there was a remote possibility of a better result in order to get to the jury. A Texas lady won a case when she showed that she suffered anxiety because of a remote possibility of cancer resulting from a burn, and a Virginia man won a verdict for failure to diagnose his cancer of the esophagus, even though his chance of survival with the best treatment was only 9%.
The Rule Is: Your medical expert witness or dental expert witness should be able to testify that it is more likely than not (better than 50%) you would have received a better result, if you had not been the victim of malpractice. But, the Loss-of-Chance Theory only applies to the effects of malpractice and does not relieve you of the obligation of showing that the doctor committed a departure from good and accepted practice.
How Does This Affect Your Award?
While the possibility that your injury was due to other factors probably cannot be used as a defense by the doctor, it can be used in determining the amount of your award. For example, if the Virginia jury had decided the patient with cancer of the esophagus should get $100,000.00, the award would have been reduced to 9% or $9,000.00. If the court had decided the lady with breast cancer had only a 50% chance of success with early treatment, she would have received 50% of the award. Theoretically, the court will adjust the amount of the award in proportion to the probable effect of the malpractice on your injury.
In real life, it is rare for a jury to reduce the amount of its award much if the doctor was only 50% or 60% liable. As already explained, many courts and jurors see malpractice awards as Loss Allocation, which is another way of saying that they use whatever funds available to help people, who have been injured or suffered a serious loss through a physician’s or a dentist’s carelessness or neglect.
Tags: dental expert witness, dental malpractice case, loss allocation, loss of chance theory, medical expert witness, medical malpractice, remote possibility, substantial factor rule, victim of malpractice Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, September 9th, 2010
Obviously, the old But For Rule that was discussed earlier was unfair, so about 75 years ago, a legal theory called the Substantial Factor Test was introduced. This says you do not have to rule out other possible causes of your injury. If you can show the doctor’s conduct was the probable cause of what happened, or was a substantial factor in contributing to the bad result, you have a case.
The Rule Is: If the doctor’s actions made a good result less likely, or a bad result more likely, he is responsible for the final results, especially if you can show that, if it had not been for the doctor’s negligence, the chances of a different outcome were better than 50%. The Substantial Factor Theory is also referred to as the Loss-of-Chance Theory, because it holds that anyone who deprived you of the chance of a cure or a happy life is liable. You do not have to rule out other possible causes of your bad results, as long as you can show there was a chance of a better result, and that chance was destroyed by someone’s malpractice. If the doctor’s actions made a bad result more likely, or a good result less likely, you have a valid complaint.
You can see that the Substantial Factor Theory or Loss-of-Chance Theory evens the odds and keeps the doctor honest. If he wants to claim that your infant’s cerebral palsy was due to a virus, and not to a birth injury, he has to produce evidence to prove that it was a virus; you do not have to prove that it was not a virus. The doctor cannot give you the impossible job of trying to “prove a negative.”
This prevents the doctor from raising a smoke screen of conjectures about other possible causes of your injuries. In a North Carolina case, the court said, “When a defendant’s negligence has effectively terminated a person’s chance for survival, it does not lie in the mouth of the defendant to raise conjecture as to the chances he put beyond the possibility of realization. If there was any substantial possibility of survival, and the defendant destroyed it, he is answerable.” No matter what some people may say, our system of justice is based upon the notion of fair play.
You do not have to prove your medical malpractice case 100%, or beyond a reasonable doubt, as in a criminal case. You do not have to rule out the possibility that the doctor’s conduct was not the cause. All you have to do is produce evidence from which the average juror may conclude that you were probably the victim of medical malpractice or dental malpractice.
Instead of you having to show that the doctor was entirely responsible, he has to show that he had no part in causing the bad result. He cannot hide behind conjecture and has to come forward with evidence to show that he was not even partly responsible. As a New York court put it, “One who has negligently forwarded a diseased condition and thereby hastened and prematurely caused death, cannot escape responsibility, even though the disease would probably have resulted in death at a later time. The probability of death from existing causes, for which the defendant was not responsible, would be important in fixing damages - but not a defense.”
How about the hypothetical cases listed in our previous post? The widow of the heart attack victim can certainly sue on the grounds that her husband’s chances of survival would have been much better, if he had been in the cardiac care unit (CCU) of the hospital. Failure to give him proper care reduced his chances of survival. The patient, who developed a wound infection and meningitis, can say that the infection of a clean wound was due to a break in good sterile technique. There was not any infection before the doctors cut on him, so someone must have contaminated the wound during or after surgery. If everything had been done right and according to the book, no germs would have gotten into the wound, and there would not have been an infection.
Postoperative infection of a clean wound is a question defense lawyers do not have any answer for. They cite all kinds of medical articles, like the booklet we talked about earlier that says a certain percentage of wounds become infected. But, none of them can explain how it happens without someone breaking sterile technique and contaminating the wound. Over 100 years ago, Louis Pasteur, the great French bacteriologist, proved that germs can only be produced by other germs, and infection cannot occur in a sterile space without outside contamination. Yet, we still hear defense lawyers stating theories about how wound infections just happen without any contamination at all.
The parents of a brain damaged baby can make a claim because good and careful doctors take care not to injure the baby’s head, and it was more likely than not that the injury was due to improper delivery technique, or to the baby having been dropped. Other conditions may have played a role. No one can say for certain. But, the head injury was certainly a substantial, if not the only cause, in producing the brain damage.
There is no doubt that early diagnosis and surgery of the breast cancer would have greatly improved the patient’s chances for survival. Failure to do adequate testing, such as mammography, and to remove the cancer while it was still small and curable was a substantial factor in the final outcome and greatly reduced her chances of a cure.
A New Jersey gynecologist treated a lump in a patient’s breast for two years but failed to do any of the routine tests that would have diagnosed her cancer. She subsequently went to another doctor who removed the breast. When she sued, the gynecologist said that she had not suffered any damages. The tumor had apparently been completely removed by the other doctor; there were no signs of recurrence, and she would have had to have the surgery anyway. He maintained that, even if he had diagnosed it two years earlier, she would have had the same surgery and gotten the same result. Do you agree with that defense?
The case was appealed to the New Jersey Supreme Court, which said the gynecologist was guilty of malpractice and had to pay damages, because his negligence had decreased the chances of a successful cure, and his patient had suffered emotionally from the fear that her cancer might have spread and become incurable. The important thing is she did not have to show that the cancer actually had become inoperable or had spread or returned. Just the increased chance of a bad result, and her emotional suffering entitled her to an award.
Tags: breast cancer, but for rule, cerebral palsy, heart attack, loss of chance theory, Louis Pasteur, malpractice, medical malpractice case, meningitis, postoperative infection, probable cause, substantial factor test, substantial factor theory, wound infections Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, August 23rd, 2010
If you are going to file a medical malpractice lawsuit or a dental malpractice lawsuit, you have to show that you were injured. Otherwise, the court cannot give you anything, no matter what the doctor did to you. The question is whether you have to prove that what happened was the doctor’s fault, beyond a reasonable doubt, and rule out all other possibilities.
Let us assume you had a baby in a hospital and the infant suffered a subdural (brain) hemorrhage. The hemorrhage clears up, but as your child grows, he or she develops cerebral palsy, which you learn may have been due to rough handling and improper use of obstetrical forceps during delivery. You have reason to believe the same injuries that caused the subdural hemorrhage also caused your child’s cerebral palsy. When you file your lawsuit, the doctors and the hospital admit that it was a difficult delivery, and the baby’s head was damaged. But, they also say that cerebral palsy has many causes, and challenge you to rule out other possible diseases or injuries. That would be almost impossible. How would you deal with it?
Or, your husband has severe chest pain and goes to the hospital where they do not take an ECG (electrocardiogram), or any lab tests, and send him home with medications. He later dies of a heart attack. The hospital says, “It was a massive heart attack, and he probably would have died anyway, even if he had been in the ICU (intensive care unit).” How do you answer that?
Or, you had a spinal operation for a bad back. Afterward, you developed a wound infection and meningitis, which left you paralyzed and brain damaged. When asked how this could happen in a modern hospital, under sterile techniques and infection control, the doctor showed your family a booklet published by the American College of Surgeons, stating that 7% of surgical wounds become infected. The booklet attributes the infections to contamination by the patient’s own germs and does not mention medical malpractice as a possible cause. He told the family that it was just your bad luck to be one of the 7%, and your infection was not anyone’s fault. You probably brought the germ into the hospital with you. True or false?
A woman goes to a doctor’s office several times over a period of months, complaining of a lump in her breast. The doctor does not do any diagnostic tests and tells her not to worry. Two years later, she goes to another doctor who discovers she has breast cancer, and it is inoperable. Cancer is an insidious disease, and no one can say for sure that it will not spread, even if treated aggressively in its very earliest stages. So, the doctor says, “How can you prove that she could have been cured two years ago?” You can’t. Not even the best cancer specialist can. You can give statistics and percentages, but no one can say for sure that that particular case could have been cured. So, what do you do?
Are these explanations valid defenses? Do they destroy your case? Do you have to show beyond a reasonable doubt that the doctor’s malpractice was the only cause of your injuries?
The Old “But For” Rule
In the past, medical malpractice cases and dental malpractice cases came under what lawyers call the But For Rule, which said the doctor was only liable if the bad result would not have occurred, but for his negligence. In simple terms, that meant the plaintiff had to rule out all other possible causes of the injury and show the bad result was 100% the doctor’s fault. That was often impossible, except for the most flagrant malpractice. In all the cases listed above, it would have been easy for the doctor to slip off the hook, by raising doubts and questions and demanding that the patient perform the impossible task of disproving all other possible causes.
Medicine and Dentistry are complex, and it is not often that you can nail anything down with 100% certainty or say that any single thing caused a good or bad result, especially with modern medicine and dentistry where different doctors and hospital personnel may be giving a patient several different treatments at the same time. Who is to say just who was responsible for what? Under that doctrine, all a doctor had to do was raise doubts and claim that some other person was partly responsible for the bad result, or that some other disease might have caused the injury, or that the outcome might have been the same, even if he had not committed malpractice and had done everything right, and he was home free.
We will discuss the new Substantial Factor Test in our next blog post.
Tags: brain damaged, breast cancer, but for rule, cerebral palsy, dental malpractice, dental malpractice lawsuit, heart attack, medical malpractice, medical malpractice lawsuit, meningitis, subdural hemorrhage, substantial factor test, wound infection Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, August 5th, 2010
To show that a doctor committed fraud or deceit, whether in giving you advice, altering clinical records, or helping you with a case, you have to show the following:
1. The doctor knew, or should reasonably have known, the information was false or the records were altered.
2. The doctor intended that you rely on it, and you believed it was true.
3. You based your decision or action on the belief that it was true.
4. You suffered an injury or financial loss because of your reliance on the doctor’s misrepresentation. For example, you consented to surgery or delayed filing a malpractice suit until after the time limit ran out.
Destruction of evidence is a crime and so is tampering with a witness. And, you are now asking yourself why a doctor who alters clinical records, or threatens your expert witness with political reprisals if he testifies for you, cannot be fined or sent to jail. The answer is that he can. And, anybody else who tried it would probably be punished with a fine or jail sentence. But, doctors seem to get preferential treatment from the courts. Although altering clinical records and intimidation of medical expert witnesses or dental expert witnesses happens every day, it would be hard to find any instance of a doctor ever having been punished for doing them.
In a West Virginia case, the doctor called the patient’s expert witness and made threats against his life, if he testified against him. When the patient’s lawyer complained to the court, the judge had a chat with the doctor who explained that what he really meant was the expert would “get killed” by being embarrassed and humiliated on the witness stand. The judge agreed with him. End of complaint.
What about the doctor who offers to help you, then deliberately destroys your case? You can also recover from him, and this will be dealt with later.
To show fraud in obtaining your consent, or in concealing the effects of medical malpractice or dental malpractice, you must have some proof, either statements made in the presence of a reliable witness or a promise in writing. If it is just your word against the doctor’s word, it tends to turn into a “shouting match”, which the doctor usually wins.
Fraudulent alteration of clinical records can be established by a medical expert or dental expert or by an authenticator of disputed documents (handwriting expert). In the New Jersey case mentioned earlier involving the neurosurgeons, the medical expert witness for the patient spotted the typist’s notations that the documents had been dictated a year later and must have replaced the originals, which had been destroyed. In a Long Island case, the plaintiff was able to prove the doctor had altered the medical records to cover his malpractice and deceive the court. The jury awarded punitive damages, in addition to compensatory damages.
Punitive damages are not covered by the doctor’s malpractice insurance. Therefore, if you discover your expert has conspired against you, or the records have been altered or destroyed with intent to deceive, it gives your lawyer leverage.
The Rule Is: In order to plead fraud or deceit, you must show there was a conspiracy between the doctors or the clinical records were deliberately altered with the intention of defeating your case. Just because the doctors know each other, or are friends and have discussed your case, or because records are lost or edited in preparation for trial, will not do it. You must show deliberate intent to deceive you.
Tags: compensatory damages, dental expert witnesses, destruction of evidence, expert witness, fraudulent alteration of clinical records, malpractice, medical expert witnesses, punitive damages, with intent to deceive, witness tampering Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Thursday, July 22nd, 2010
Fraud and deceit usually occur in one of the following forms:
1. Assuring the patient that a diagnosis known to be wrong is correct.
2. Deliberately making a false prognosis as to the risks or outcome of treatment, especially if it is to persuade you to submit to surgery, treatment, or expense you would not have had otherwise.
3. Falsely representing what happened while the patient was unconscious or under anesthesia.
4. Falsely representing what was done during surgery and what organs or tissues were removed.
5. Pretending to have skills or training which he does not have.
6. Concealing vital information or a material fact, such as having left a sponge, instrument, etc. inside a patient.
7. Conspiring with another doctor, or any other person, to mislead or deceive you.
Effects of Fraud and Deceit by Physicians and Dentists
Earlier it was stated that a medical malpractice case or a dental malpractice case is not a criminal case, and the court is not going to punish the doctor beyond making him pay for your losses and pain and suffering. All you can hope to be awarded is what is known as compensatory damages. That means compensation for the following damages:
1. Your medical and other expenses.
2. Loss of income or the support you would have received from the person who was disabled or died.
3. Pain and suffering, including emotional suffering.
However, if a doctor is guilty of fraud and deceit to induce you to undergo treatment or conceal malpractice, or if he alters or destroys medical or dental records and you discover it, it can strengthen your case in the following ways:
First, jurors do not like doctors, who do these things and will likely award damages.
Second, the judge or jury can award punitive damages, which are in addition to your compensatory damages and are designed to punish the doctor. They are like a fine, not just to compensate the injured person, but to teach the wrongdoer a lesson. They are actually a fine, but not like a criminal fine, because the money does not go to the court. The money from punitive damages goes to the victim.
Third, if a doctor uses fraud or deceit to obtain your consent to treatment or a surgical procedure, the consent is null and void.
Fourth, if the doctor conceals his malpractice after the treatment, it tolls the statute (stops the clock) on the time limit for you to file your case until you find out about the doctor’s fraud. But, it has to be active concealment, such as lying to you. If the doctor failed to tell you there was malpractice that does not count. The United States Constitution says he does not have to incriminate himself or testify against himself.
Tags: compensatory damages, conceal malpractice, consent to treatment, dental malpractice case, medical malpractice case, punitive damages Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 7th, 2010
Fraud and deceit by physicians and dentists are serious words. They mean the doctor either defrauded you or deliberately deceived you. There are usually four ways in which a doctor can be guilty of these unethical actions.
First, the doctor intentionally misleads you as to the nature of your condition and what the treatment involves.
A North Carolina surgeon told a patient that a heart operation held no risk. The patient was not yet 40 years old, the operation was not really necessary, and he could have lived for many years without it. But, since the doctor had assured him there was not any risk, he decided to go ahead with it, just to be on the safe side. After the operation, the patient developed an air bubble to the brain and died.
Postoperatively, the patient’s family found out the operation was considered dangerous by heart surgeon, and as many as 10% of the people who have it die. Even though the doctor had performed the operation correctly and had not committed malpractice, he had willfully concealed the dangers of the operation to get the patient to agree to the surgery. The family sued, charging that the doctor had deliberately deceived the patient about the risks, and he did it for the money. The jury thought so, too.
Second, the doctor intentionally misleads you as to what went wrong with a treatment and gives you a false story to keep you from suing him, until the statute of limitations (time limit) runs out.
Third, the doctor alters or destroys his office records, or the hospital records, in order to conceal the truth from your lawyer and the jury. This is known as spoliation of evidence and is the most serious of all.
In a New York case, a woman was sent home from the hospital with pneumonia and she died. When the family’s lawyer obtained the hospital chart, all the reports of laboratory tests were normal. Since that did not square with the patient’s condition, the lawyer obtained a court order to see the original records in the hospital laboratory. It turned out that when the doctor was notified he was being sued for medical malpractice, he went to the hospital and removed the original laboratory report slips that showed his patient had a raging infection. He substituted forged reports that showed a normal white blood count when he sent her home. When that was brought out at trial, the jury not only gave the victim’s family an award for compensatory damages but added an amount for punitive damages, to punish the doctor for attempting to deceive the court.
Since reports of surgical operations and discharge summaries are very important, most hospitals require doctors to dictate the report of an operation before he leaves the surgical suite and the discharge summary within 48 hours after his patient is discharged from the hospital. The dates these reports are dictated and transcribed are indicated by a notation in the lower, left corner that read like this: D: 01/22/09, T: 01/24/09.
In a New Jersey case, a team of neurosurgeons botched a major brain operation, and the patient died. When the patient’s family filed a lawsuit for medical malpractice, and their lawyer obtained the medical records from the hospital, he discovered the report of the operation and the discharge summary had been dictated and typed a year after the patient died and two months after the lawsuit had been filed. Under hospital policy, the doctors would have been suspended and would not have been able to admit patients to the hospital, if the chart had not been completed. But, they had been admitting patients all along, since the patient died, so it was obvious they had destroyed their original reports and substituted falsified reports. The secretary was honest and noted the correct dates she typed the revisions and exposed the doctors’ scheme to deceive the court. The patient’s family won at trial.
Not all cases of alteration of medical records and spoliation of evidence are as easily detected as in this New Jersey case. Sometimes it requires an Authenticator of Disputed Documents (handwriting expert) to prove it to the satisfaction of the court. In a Virginia case, the authenticator found that the doctor had used a pen that was not even manufacturer until after the dates on his handwritten note. If you can show medical records have been altered or destroyed, it puts you in a strong position.
Fourth, a doctor offers to help you with your medical malpractice case or dental malpractice case or promises to be your expert witness. At the last minute, he fails to appear to testify or changes his opinion on the witness stand.
A Utah lawyer was suing an anesthesiologist for medical malpractice, which resulted in the death of a patient during surgery. The surgeon, who had performed the operation was critical of the anesthesiologist and offered to act as the lawyer’s medical expert witness. The lawyer did not bother to look for another expert or obtain any other opinion. The surgeon was also helpful in preparing an airtight case against the anesthesiologist, and there was never any question that the surgeon was responsible, too.
Three weeks before the case was due to go to trial, the surgeon announced that he would not be able to act as the expert witness “for personal reasons.” When the lawyer went to an independent expert, who was located in another city, he was astonished to learn that the surgeon, who had been so helpful, was the one who had committed malpractice and should have been sued. The lawyer did not have a case at all against the anesthesiologist. The surgeon had led the lawyer along until it was too late to sue him. When confronted, the surgeon admitted he never had any intention of testifying. It was too late to find a substitute expert, and the case was lost.
Tags: alteration of medical records, Authentication of Disputed Documents, compensatory damages, deceit, dental malpractice, dental malpractice case, expert witness, fraud, medical expert witness, medical malpractice, medical malpractice case, punitive damages, spoliation of evidence, statute of limitations Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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