A surgery malpractice lawsuit is a legal claim filed when a surgeon, anesthesiologist, or other member of the surgical team causes harm by failing to provide care that meets accepted medical standards. To win, you must prove duty of care, breach, causation, and damages. Most states give you between one and three years to file.
A medical malpractice claim holds medical professionals accountable when a procedure goes wrong due to preventable errors, such as operating on the wrong site, leaving instruments inside a patient, or failing to monitor vital signs.
You can sue any negligent party whose actions directly caused your injury, including the lead surgeon, anesthesiologist, surgical nurses, and the hospital or surgical center that employed them.
Yes, you can sue if the harm was caused by the direct negligence of the surgeon or any of the surgical team members. Not every bad outcome qualifies. This applies only to damage caused by mistakes, not to known surgical risks.
For a malpractice lawsuit to move forward, you need to document both the harm you suffered and how it could have been avoided if a surgeon following proper standards had treated you.
The main difference lies between “fault” and “fate.” Complications are common during surgeries; they cannot be avoided even with the utmost care, and they are explained before every medical procedure. Medical malpractice, on the other hand, is an error that could have been avoided if the appropriate protocols had been followed.
However, even within the realm of complications, malpractice may be present if the physician failed to follow proper procedure to manage the crisis. A known risk does not automatically shield a doctor from liability. What matters is whether the outcome could have been prevented.
These are circumstances that can occur even with the best procedures and cannot be prevented by actions taken by the doctor or the healthcare team. Common complications include bleeding, infections at the incision sites, reactions to anesthesia, and delayed recovery.
There are also common aftereffects, such as scars, which are a natural part of surgery. Complications cannot be prevented by technique or procedure, and for that reason, they are not considered grounds for malpractice.
Medical malpractice is generally considered to have occurred when harm could have been prevented with proper care. This includes inadequate monitoring, failure to diagnose complications and treat them promptly, infections resulting from improper wound management, and any other actions that fall outside the standard of care.
Not every adverse outcome constitutes malpractice, but if you’re reading this section and recognizing your experience, don’t talk yourself out of seeking help. You don’t need to be an attorney to know something went wrong; you need an attorney to prove it. That’s what we do.
Hospitals and surgical centers must maintain safe environments and ensure properly trained staff. Systemic failures may point to institutional negligence:
Both individual providers and healthcare institutions can be held liable when their failures cause patient harm.
A surgical error is any preventable mistake made before, during, or after a procedure that causes patient harm. The most clear-cut examples are known as “never events” and include operating on the wrong site, leaving instruments inside the patient, and performing the wrong procedure entirely:
Most surgical errors trace back to the same preventable failures, according to research on surgical negligence:
Every cause on this list is preventable. When prevention fails, accountability is the only way forward. Thompson Law holds them accountable so you can focus on healing.
To succeed in a malpractice lawsuit, you must prove four key elements, often referred to as the four pillars of medical negligence:
Speak with a medical malpractice attorney and start collecting evidence for your case.
The surgeon, anesthesiologists, operating room nurses, and circulating nurses may be held liable, as well as the hospital itself, supervisors, staff members, and those responsible for sterilizing medical supplies, among others.
In rare cases, medical device manufacturers may be held liable if a causal link between the injury and the product can be demonstrated. In most cases, however, negligence is primarily found among the medical team in the operating room. You don’t need to figure out who’s at fault. That is our job. Focus on your recovery and let us handle the rest.
Signing a consent form does not waive your right to sue for surgical negligence. Informed consent covers known risks explained to you before the procedure. It does not protect a surgical team from liability when a preventable error occurs during surgery.
Failing to receive adequate information before consenting can itself be grounds for a separate legal claim. The exception applies to emergency procedures where obtaining consent was not possible, but even then, the standard of care during surgery still applies.
The strongest surgical malpractice cases are built on six categories of evidence:
Your attorney can help you request records that the hospital may otherwise delay or deny. Don’t wait; some evidence, like surveillance footage and witness availability, has a short window.
Hospitals and insurers rely on a standard set of defenses in surgical malpractice cases. Knowing them in advance helps you understand why strong evidence and an experienced attorney matter.
These defenses are predictable, and they are beatable. An attorney who knows how to counter them from the start gives your case the best chance.
The general time limits are one to three years, depending on the state. This also depends on the Discovery Rule, which means the clock starts when the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been. Some exceptions can extend that window.
For minors, the time does not start counting until the child turns 18. Fraudulent concealment, when a doctor deliberately hides information to conceal the malpractice, also pauses the clock. Cases involving retained objects have more flexibility, since the time does not start running until another healthcare provider discovers the object.
For ongoing treatment, the clock typically starts when care ends. Regardless of your situation, time is the most critical factor in any statute of limitations analysis. Act as soon as possible to preserve evidence, secure witnesses, and give your attorney time to build a strong case.
Surgical malpractice victims can recover three categories of damages:
If the surgical error resulted in death, the family may be entitled to file a wrongful death claim as a separate cause of action. Courts may also award punitive damages in exceptional cases.
A surgical malpractice case moves through six stages:
Thompson Law handles every stage of this process. We know the defenses, we know the deadlines, and we know how to win.
These are the steps to take as soon as you suspect a surgical error caused your harm:
These mistakes can seriously damage your case. Avoid all of them from the moment you suspect something went wrong:
Contact a medical malpractice lawyer immediately if any of the following apply to your situation:
A quick settlement offer is almost always a sign that the insurer knows they are liable and wants to resolve the case before you understand what it is worth. Do not sign anything before speaking with a personal injury lawyer.
Thompson Law handles surgical malpractice cases on a contingency basis; you pay nothing unless we win. If you or someone you love was harmed by a surgical error, our team will review your case, explain your options, and fight for the compensation you deserve. Contact us for a Free Consultation. No Fee Unless We Win.
Nearly three in five (59.6%) obstetricians & gynecologists and about half (53.1%) of general surgeons have been sued at least once in their careers, according to the American Medical Association.
Yes. If negligence caused real harm, a malpractice claim can recover the cost of additional surgeries, lost income, rehabilitation, and long-term care.
There is no fixed payout for medical malpractice. Settlements vary widely based on injury severity, economic losses, and state law. The national average is roughly $300,000 to $400,000, but cases involving permanent disability, brain damage, or wrongful death often settle for $1 million or more.
It depends on the harm caused. If the procedure resulted in no lasting harm, compensation may be limited to surgical fees and recovery costs, often under $50,000. If the unnecessary surgery led to complications like infection or organ damage, amounts can reach $750,000 or more. Catastrophic outcomes, permanent disability, or wrongful death can exceed $1 million.
Most surgery malpractice cases have a one-to-three-year window to file a lawsuit, depending on the state. The clock typically starts when the injury occurred or when you reasonably discovered it.
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Thompson Law charges NO FEE unless we obtain a settlement for your case. We’ve put over $1.9 billion in cash settlements in our clients’ pockets. Contact us today for a free, no-obligation consultation to discuss your accident, get your questions answered, and understand your legal options.
State law limits the time you have to file a claim after an injury accident, so call today.