Undergoing surgery requires placing our trust and our lives into the hands of a surgeon and surgical team while we are unconscious and completely vulnerable. Patients place themselves in this position when they need serious medical intervention with the expectation that their doctor will treat them within the high standard of care accepted by the medical community.
This same medical community describes some surgical errors as “Never Events” because they should never occur under the accepted standard of care. Still, surgical “never events” are not as uncommon as we’d like to think.
In the event you were harmed during a surgical procedure, contact our surgical error lawyer in Chicago today for a free case consultation and take the next step to receiving the compensation you deserve.
Medical journals describe “never events” in surgery as follows:
“… Errors in medical care that are clearly identifiable, preventable, and serious in their consequences for patients, and that indicate a real problem in the safety and credibility of a health care facility.”
These events should never occur because protocols have been established as safeguards against them due to their egregious nature and life-altering adverse effects on affected patients. Still, the following “never events” persist in surgical practice:
Although surgical “never events” are relatively rare, an alarming 2013 medical study reported that an estimated 4,000 medical never events happen each year in the United States.
For a patient who suffered a supposed “never event,” the statistics become meaningless. Surgical malpractice causes permanent, catastrophic injury to a patient.
Proving liability for medical malpractice requires evidence that demonstrates the following:
The physical and financial consequences of a surgical never event are the damages in a medical malpractice claim.
All cases of medical malpractice are serious violations, but a “never event” during surgery often has catastrophic consequences for the patient. In medical malpractice, a catastrophic injury means one with permanent adverse consequences for the injury victim, including the following:
In addition to the permanent harm of a surgical never event, the injury victim often requires one or more additional surgeries for the original medical problem and/or to address the surgical error. A successful medical malpractice claim for a catastrophic injury often recovers compensation for past and future medical expenses, lost earnings, compensation for pain, suffering, and permanent injury.
Reach out to a medical malpractice lawyer in Chicago from Smith LaCien LLP today for a free consultation.
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