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Today's hospitals do their best to move patients through surgery and recovery as quickly as possible in order to both tend to more patients and increase revenues. Although there is some merit to the practice, it can also result in surgical mistakes-- some minor, some much more critical, and some, fatal. Surgical mistakes are some of the most common types of medical malpractice lawsuits in the U.S. If the surgical injury or death could have been avoided, or was a result of negligence or inattention, the injured party has the legal right to sue for monetary damages.
While there are probably as many potential types of surgical errors as there are surgical procedures, here's a closer look at five of the most common surgical mistakes:
Surgical mistakes might not always be as apparent as operating on the wrong body part or leaving a sponge inside a patient, but can come in a more subtle form such as a doctor's failure to exercise reasonable care at any time during the surgery. Doctors are human, and as such, suffer the same human conditions as the rest of us; they can be exhausted from working too many hours when performing a surgery, or they could have been sick themselves, but still came to work. It is not nearly as easy to "call in sick" when you are a surgeon who has a number of procedures scheduled for a particular day. Whether the intent was malicious in any way or not, the issue is whether your surgical injury could have been avoided if due care and diligence had been exercised. The key steps in a medical malpractice case are establishing the medical standard of care -- what a reasonably skilled surgeon would have done under similar circumstances -- and then showing how the surgeon in the instant case failed to measure up to that standard in performing the procedure. Finally, it must be shown that the surgeon's negligence caused actual harm to the patient.
A surgical mistake can trigger huge medical bills, and may necessitate corrective follow-up procedures which can require the patient to take time off work (and thus lose wages.) In some case, your physical health may not be the same as it was before the surgical error, and may never be. Filing a medical malpractice suit is a legal remedy that seeks to make you whole again, but it's a complex process both from a legal and medical standpoint, so it's best to discuss your situation with an experienced medical malpractice attorney.
Updated by: David Goguen, J.D.