Medical Malpractice Law Addressing Medical Malpractice Concerns


by Somdev Mukherjee - Date: 2007-04-10 - Word Count: 447 Share This!

Medical malpractice is said to be taking place when a medical practitioner is acting in a negligent manner while undertaking treatment of some medical condition. The medical malpractice law is a branch of personal injury law. This deals with pain and suffering caused owing to some gross mistake(s), negligence or bad judgment on the part of a doctor or other medical practitioner.

Failure to diagnose or wrongly diagnose a disease or medical condition, failure to provide right treatment for the condition and unreasonable delay in treating a medical condition diagnosed are common examples of medical malpractice that are sought to be redressed by enforcement of medical malpractice law.

The roots of the medical malpractice law can be traced back to the nineteenth century English common law. The general law body dealing with injuries to people or property- the tort law included the laws that developed concerning medical malpractices.

In order to win a genuine negligence lawsuit filed regarding medical care the person injured bears the onus of proving that he/she had obtained considerable medical care and such care was the causative of the injury. In the first place a person injured during treatment has to ascertain whether the harm has been the result of inadequate care. Usually the physicians and other medical care providers are not legally bound to tell the patients that they got hurt by medical care that was less than adequate. So, it is the patients themselves (those who suffer adverse outcomes) who need to approach and consult other professionals in the medical field to find out facts. The patient could have been under the care of multiple health care providers in which case the particular provider responsible for the injury needs to be determined.

It may be noted that a medical malpractice lawsuit need be brought within a period prescribed by law. This is referred to as a 'statute of limitation'. Upon bringing the lawsuit the court will inquire into a number of issues prior to deciding whether the medical malpractice has actually occurred. If evidences available provide sufficient indications that medical malpractice has actually occurred then remedial/compensatory/punitive action is ruled.

It needs to be borne in mind that medical malpractice cases are very expensive to litigate and the recovery of damages may be limited by statute. The necessary advice in the regard that is sought from medical experts can be costly too. The highly technical nature of medical malpractice litigation makes it best suited to first approach an attorney who specializes in medical malpractice law with the case. Such attorney will be having the resources needed in order to develop the case, hire the right experts and to take the case for trial at court if necessary.


Related Tags: law, medical malpractice, medical malpractice law, medical malpractice legal action, medical legal

Somdev Mukherjee is a Kolkata (India) based writer of articles, short stories, poems and web content related to finance, mortgage, debt consolidation, insurance, laws and other topics of interest. Somdev is presently associated with http://www.0001articleworld.com, http://www.jmcgarments.com and http://www.nathinfosolutions.com as a content developer and manager.

Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles

© The article above is copyrighted by it's author. You're allowed to distribute this work according to the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs license.
 

Recent articles in this category:



Most viewed articles in this category: