| We
all entrust ourselves and our children to the care of a doctor or
other health care professional from time to time. When any doctor
or other health care professional makes a mistake in diagnosing
what’s wrong with a patient, or in discovering that something
is wrong, or in the treatment prescribed or the surgery undertaken,
the results can be catastrophic -- permanent disability or death.
What Is Medical Malpractice?
The negligence of a doctor or other medical provider in
the course of rendering professional services is commonly called
“medical malpractice.” But
not every failure to diagnose or bad outcome from medical care is
medical malpractice. A doctor or other
health care professional is not necessarily negligent just because
his/her efforts are unsuccessful or he/she makes an error of judgment
or reaches an erroneous conclusion that was reasonable under the
circumstances. On the other hand, it is not enough that
the health care professional has done his/her “best.”
A health care professional is negligent if he/she was not
as skillful, knowledgeable, or careful as other reasonable health
care professionals of the same type would have been in similar circumstances.
In other words, a breach of the standard of care
is negligence or medical malpractice.
What is the Standard of Care?
• It is the failure to exercise
the level of skill, knowledge, and care
in diagnosis and treatment that other reasonably careful medical
practitioners of the same type would possess and use in similar
circumstances.
• Specialists are held
to the higher standard of learning and skill
normally possessed by such specialists in the same or similar locality
under the same or similar circumstances.
• The adequacy of a nurse’s
performance is tested with reference to the performance of other
nurses, and is not measured by
the standard of care required of a doctor or surgeon.
Ordinarily, the standard of care required of a doctor or other health
care professional -- and whether he/she exercised such care -- can
be established only by the testimony of a qualified expert in the
same field or specialty as the health care professional whose care
and treatment is being challenged.
For example, if a primary care physician is negligent in
failing to make a timely diagnosis or in failing to refer a patient
to a specialist, the opinion testimony of a primary care physician
regarding the standard of care for primary care physicians
and whether the particular primary care physician under scrutiny
exercised such care, will be necessary to prove a claim for medical
malpractice.
There are exceptions to the requirement of expert testimony to prove
medical malpractice -- such as when a sponge or surgical instrument
is left in the patient’s abdomen. A layperson needs no help
from experts to know that this can only happen when a health care
professional is negligent.
What Duties Do Hospitals Have?
A hospital is negligent if it does not
use reasonable care toward its patients.
The duty of a hospital is to provide procedures, policies, facilities,
supplies, and qualified personnel reasonably necessary for the treatment
of its patients.
The amount of care that a hospital must exercise toward a patient
varies depending on the patient’s condition. A hospital’s
duty extends to both treatment and care.
Hospitals must monitor a patient’s condition and observe the
progress of a patient in his/her recovery. A hospital has a duty
to provide sufficient staff, and must maintain safe conditions on
their premises. A hospital must use reasonable care to select and
periodically evaluate its medical staff so that its patients are
provided adequate medical care. A hospital must use reasonable care
to prevent a patient from harming himself/herself if the hospital
knew or reasonably should have known that the patient might do so.
What Duties Do Patients Have?
Patients also have a duty to use reasonable care to provide for
their own well-being. This includes a responsibility to follow a
health care professional’s instructions and to seek medical
assistance when a reasonable person in the same situation would
do so. When there is evidence that a patient suing for medical malpractice
failed to do so, the health care professional being sued may be
able to prove that the patient’s own negligence caused
or contributed to the outcome.
Must The Medical Malpractice Cause Harm?
A patient who sues a health care professional for medical malpractice
must not only prove that the health care professional was negligent
because he or she breached the standard of care that applied
to their field or specialty, the patient must prove that the negligence
caused harm. This means that what the health care professional
did or did not do, must be a substantial -- not a remote or trivial
-- factor in bringing about the harm even if it was not the only
cause of the harm. By the same token, if the harm would have resulted
anyway, then the negligence of the health care professional did
not cause it.
For example, if a radiologist is negligent in reading
an x-ray and misses the opportunity to make a timely diagnosis of
a condition that could have been treated and cured, the radiologist’s
negligence is a cause of harm if the patient dies or suffers disability.
But if the radiologist’s negligent reading of the x-ray occurred
at a time when it was already too late to treat the condition and
save the patient, the radiologist’s negligence was not the
cause of harm if the patient dies.
Must A Patient’s Consent Or Refusal
For A Procedure Or Test Be Given & Be Informed?
A patient must actually consent -- by words (express) or
by conduct (implied) -- to a particular medical procedure or diagnostic
test. If the patient did not
consent, the health care professional commits a battery
-- which is a civil wrong -- unless an exception or justification
applies.
And a patient’s consent to a medical procedure must
be “informed,” meaning the consent is given only after
the health care professional has fully explained -- in language
that the patient can understand -- the proposed treatment, procedure,
or diagnostic test -- including the likelihood of success and the
risks of agreeing to the medical procedure. A health care professional
must give the patient as much information as he/she needs to make
an informed decision, including telling him/her about any
risk that a reasonable person would consider important in deciding
to have the proposed treatment or procedure. The patient must be
told about any risk of death or serious injury or significant potential
complications that may occur if the procedure is performed. But
the health care professional is not required to explain minor risks
that are not likely to occur.
A patient must also be given the same type of information when he
or she refuses a therapeutic procedure or diagnostic test so that
his/her refusal is an informed one.
There are exceptions and defenses
to the requirements for a health care professional to get an informed
consent or an informed refusal -- such as when the
health care professional proves that:
• the particular patient would have consented even if a reasonable
person would not have;
• the patient asked not to be told of the risks;
• the procedure involved was a simple one and it is commonly
understood that any dangers were not likely to occur;
• the information would have so seriously upset the patient
that the patient would not have been able to reasonably consider
the risks of refusing to have the medical procedure;
• an emergency existed.
Medical Malpractice Claims Have Special
Rules & Limitations
Claims for medical malpractice in California
are subject to a number of different rules from those which apply
to all other claims for personal injury, including:
• The time limits for filing claims;
• The requirement to give advance notice of the intent to
sue a health care professional;
• The attorney’s fees which may be charged;
• How the receipt of benefits from other sources will be handled
when there is a settlement or favorable judgment against a health
care professional;
• A cap of $250,000 on the total amount the victim of medical
malpractice may recover for past and future pain and suffering damages
-- but there is no cap on economic damages;
• A cap of $250,000 on the total amount the spouse, children
or other eligible heirs may recover for loss of the society, comfort
and companionship of a loved one who dies due to medical malpractice
-- regardless of the number of eligible heirs who suffer
these losses – but there is no cap on economic damages;
• The period of time over which a health care provider may
pay a judgment for money damages in certain circumstances.
You are not alone.
See how we will help.
Se Habla Espanol
Legal Team
Ann
M. Smith
Position: Partner
Admitted to Bar: 1985, California and U.S. District
Court, Southern District of California; U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth
Circuit.
Education: Simmons College; Monterey College of Law
(J.D., cum laude, 1985).
Of Note: 1993 Recipient, Outstanding Trial Lawyer
Award, San Diego Trial Lawyers Association. Labor Negotiator for United
Farm Workers of America 1976-1981 and for San Diego Municipal Employees
Association 1986--.
Member: Consumer Attorneys of California, Consumer Attorneys of San
Diego, San Diego County Bar Association, and State Bar of California.
Languages: Spanish.
Reported Cases: Salgado v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
(9th Cir. 1987) 823F 2nd 1322. Branch v. Homefed Bank (1992) 6 CA.
4th 793.
Jon
Y. Vanderpool
Position: Partner
Admitted to Bar: 1992, California; 1995, Massachusetts;
and U.S. District Court, Southern, Central, and Northern Districts
of California.
Education: Rice University (B.A., 1986); Pepperdine
University (J.D., 1992).
Member: American Inns of Court, San Diego County
Bar Association, and State Bar of California.
Note: Nothing on this page should be construed as a legal
opinion regarding any claim you may have. For a legal opinion, please
speak with an attorney. |