Can You Sue an Ambulance for Taking Too Long? Government Liability and When Lawsuits Succeed

Emergency responders at the scene of a road accident with vehicles and traffic cones

You called 911 for help, and the ambulance took too long, and now someone you love is permanently injured or dead. Yes, you can sue an ambulance for taking too long, but these cases are complex, as most ambulances are run by the government, and have special laws, shorter deadlines based on their statutes of limitations, and a higher bar to prove negligence.

We will consider the best course of action about whether you have a case, how much time you have (it could be as little as 6 months), what the process entails, what to do right now to protect your claim, and how we can help you, taking into account the specific limitations of these types of cases. Deadlines are not flexible, so take action today.

Ambulance responding to an emergency on a city street

Can You Sue an Ambulance for Taking Too Long?

Yes, it is possible to sue an ambulance service for taking too long to provide service, but these cases are more complex and have a lower chance of success. 

  • Most ambulance services are government-run (sovereign immunity). The state has different laws regarding lawsuits, and under certain conditions, the state cannot be sued without its consent.
  • You usually need gross negligence, not ordinary negligence. This means that only the most complex cases are likely to succeed.
  • You must show that the delay directly caused or worsened the harm. The connection between the care provided or the failure to act and the resulting harm must be clear and precise.

If you’re unsure about your situation and if it qualifies, a free consultation costs nothing. Waiting longer, while your claim deadline expires, does. We will provide you with all the information you need to determine whether you have a case.

When Can You Sue an Ambulance Service?

Although most ambulance services are provided by the state, there are situations in which you may be able to file an ambulance malpractice claim. You may have a valid claim if:

  • Unreasonable delay caused by gross negligence, such as ignored 911 calls, dispatch errors, miscommunication, or inaccurate triage.
  • Negligence during transport, including incorrect medications, failure to provide adequate care, or medical equipment failure.
  • Refusal to transport when transport was clearly necessary.

These situations generally do not support a claim:

  • Delays caused by traffic, weather, or genuine unavailability of resources.
  • Delays that did not result in measurable harm to the patient.
  • Reasonable judgment calls made under pressure, even if a better option existed.

The difference between filing a valid claim and wasting your limited time on a case that won’t succeed is knowledge. Let us evaluate what category your situation falls into.

Public vs. Private Ambulance Services: Why It Matters

Public ambulance services are protected by sovereign immunity, which means they enjoy greater protection against errors they may commit; they are more difficult to sue; they have a much shorter statute of limitations; and they require a higher standard of negligence.

Private ambulance services, on the other hand, are subject to the standard level of medical malpractice, and certain cases of ordinary negligence may be sufficient to sustain a claim.

Finally, there are hybrid ambulance services, which are private companies working under contract for the state; however, in these cases, it is necessary to review the contract and understand the standards under which it operates.

You don’t need to figure out if your ambulance was public, private, or hybrid. That’s our job. A free consultation is the fastest way to understand your options and what your claim may be worth. It is possible to sue any service provider for ambulance malpractice, but the level of severity required to proceed will vary.

What You Must Prove in an Ambulance Negligence Lawsuit

A legally valid lawsuit against an ambulance service must be based on these four elements or considerations under the negligence law:

  • Duty of care: The EMS assumes this duty once it receives the assignment to provide you with transportation services.
  • Breach: Failure to meet the standard of care that a reasonable EMT or paramedic would provide under similar circumstances.
  • Causation: The delay or negligent care directly caused the harm. If the outcome had been different with a more appropriate response.
  • Damages: Measurable harm. This can be clearly identified in worsened injury, death, and additional medical costs, among others, that could have been prevented with proper care.

These same elements apply to cases against government-run EMS, but the bar is higher. You must show gross negligence, significant harm, and a wrongful act or inaction that was clearly unjustified.

You need to show that the ambulance had a duty to help, failed to meet basic standards, that failure caused harm, and you have damages. We handle the legal proof so that you can focus on your family and your recovery.

What Counts as Gross Negligence in Ambulance Cases

Gross negligence in ambulance cases goes beyond a single mistake. It means the provider showed reckless disregard for the patient’s safety. Examples include:

  • Ignoring or missing a 911 call.
  • Failing to follow proper service protocols.
  • Falsifying response times in records.
  • Providing service with unqualified personnel.
  • Chronic, documented understaffing that the agency refused to address.

These situations affect patient care but generally do not rise to gross negligence:

  • Heavy traffic or weather delays outside the provider’s control.
  • Errors that were corrected in time and caused no lasting harm.
  • Slower response times on a genuinely busy day.

Common Types of Ambulance and EMS Negligence

If the care you received from the ambulance service involves any of these forms of negligence, you may have a case:

  • Failure to respond or unreasonable delay may offer grounds for an ambulance delay lawsuit. Service delays may occur, but there must be a valid and justifiable reason.
  • Failure to bring or use proper medical equipment. Ambulances have standardized protocols and medical equipment. If the staff does not have or does not use the proper medical equipment, they are failing in their duty.
  • Medication errors. If, during the administration of medication, the wrong medication is given, the wrong dose is administered, or the medication cannot be provided because it is not available.
  • Improper patient stabilization or handling. If the patient could have been treated better, but was not provided with the correct care.
  • Reckless ambulance driving causing additional injury. If, during transport, the patient sustains additional injuries due to a reckless driver.
  • Misdiagnosis or failure to assess the patient correctly. If the patient is not diagnosed on time, or if an incorrect diagnosis is made.
  • Refusal to transport. If it is determined that ambulance transport was necessary and was denied.
  • Transport to the wrong facility. And this results in delays in care and complications.
  • Inadequate monitoring during transport. If the patient experiences complications that could have been prevented with proper care.

Statute of Limitations for Ambulance Lawsuits

The standard medical malpractice has one to three years to file a claim, though this varies by state; however, claims against the government have much shorter statutes of limitations, sometimes as short as six months to file the claim and proceed with the case.

For lawsuits against ambulance services, the statute of limitations applies, which means that the clock typically starts from the date of the incident, not from when the injury is discovered.

However, cases such as wrongful death cases may have shorter deadlines, and you should keep this in mind. Time limits vary from state to state, but the fact is that once the deadline passes, the case loses any chance of proceeding; there are no extensions. If you wait too long, you lose your right to sue forever, even if the ambulance service admits fault, even with all the proof available, because the law is strict on time.

Person at a desk with a clock and money representing legal deadlines and compensation

When Does the Clock Start on an Ambulance Negligence Claim?

In most cases, the relevant dates are the dates of the incident. Some exceptions include the date of discovery, which is when you discover the injury or are deemed to have discovered it, and, in wrongful death cases, the date of death, which is typically the date of death itself, not the date of transfer.

Certain exceptions apply to individuals who cannot file a lawsuit at the time, such as minors or incapacitated persons, until they are in a position to initiate proceedings (upon reaching the age of majority or once they regain their capacity). Don’t try to calculate this yourself, as one mistake can damage your whole case.

Sovereign Immunity and Government EMS: Why These Cases Are Hard

Sovereign immunity means that the government cannot be sued without its consent. Most public ambulance cases are dismissed unless you prove gross negligence or willful misconduct. The Tort Claims Act allows individuals to sue the state, but only under specific exceptions.

The most common exceptions involve gross negligence, willful or wanton misconduct, or cases where the provider made specific promises to the patient that created expectations beyond the scope of the service. Statutory waivers under the Tort Claims Acts also apply in situations such as when an ambulance collides with another vehicle and cannot prove the collision resulted from an emergency rather than negligence.

The public duty doctrine explains why most delayed response cases are dismissed: the state is liable to the public as a whole, not to individuals. However, certain specific circumstances can create a legal opening, and those are worth evaluating with an attorney.

Federal Civil Rights Claims (Section 1983) and the State-Created Danger Theory

Section 1983 allows individuals to sue government employees if they are violating their constitutional rights, which opens a window for suing ambulance personnel acting on behalf of the state, but only for violations of constitutional rights; incompetent emergency service does not constitute a constitutional violation.

The state-created danger theory explains that the state has no duty to help you, but is liable for risks directly caused by its actions. For this to apply, four elements must be present:

  • Affirmative state action, meaning the state did something that directly increased the risk.
  • Foreseeable harm. The state should have been able to foresee the harm.
  • Conduct that shocks the conscience. Beyond being irresponsible, the state’s actions are truly reprehensible.
  • Identifiable victim. The harm is not to the general public but to a specific individual.

This has not yet been successfully applied to cases of service delays, but it is something lawyers are testing. It is rarely the right course of action, but a lawyer should evaluate it.

Why These Laws Exist

We include this so you understand why these cases are hard and why timing and evidence matter so much, not to discourage you from trying. These laws exist because it is believed that broad liability would deter or paralyze emergency services, which would cause even greater harm on a large scale. It is also because government resources are limited, and funding comes from tax revenues.

Furthermore, working in emergencies requires acting quickly and efficiently, and this is not always possible to a perfect degree. Exceptions exist for real misconduct, where there is a legal avenue for filing a claim.

What Damages Can You Recover in an Ambulance Negligence Case?

If negligence is proven, you may be entitled to compensation for economic damages such as medical bills, future medical care, lost wages, and lost earning capacity, as well as non-economic damages, which include pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life.

There are instances of punitive damages, but only when it can be proven that there were intentionally harmful actions or grossly negligent conduct. Many states cap damages in malpractice cases, and these limits vary from state to state. For wrongful death cases, there are different legal frameworks available to surviving family members.

What Evidence Strengthens an Ambulance Negligence Claim

Pay attention to the most relevant evidence for an emergency response negligence, and what we need to start preparing your case:

  • 911 call records and dispatch logs (timestamps are critical)
  • EMS run report/patient care report
  • Medical records from the receiving hospital
  • Witness statements (family members, bystanders, other first responders)
  • Ambulance vehicle logs and GPS data
  • Internal agency policies and dispatch protocols
  • Documentation of any prior complaints or known understaffing patterns
  • Expert testimony from EMS or emergency medicine specialists

The right evidence gives you the best chance, and we’ll work with what you have. This doesn’t guarantee that the claim will be successful, but it gives you the best chance. Your ambulance lawyer will do everything possible to work with the evidence you provide.

Two people reviewing and signing documents outdoors after an incident

What NOT to Do If You’re Considering an Ambulance Lawsuit

Avoiding these mistakes gives your case the best chance of moving forward:

  • Don’t wait. Government claim deadlines can be as short as six months.
  • Do not give recorded statements to the agency or their insurance company without legal advice first.
  • Don’t accept the EMS’s explanation of what happened as the final word.
  • Don’t assume you have no case just because the response seemed reasonable.
  • Gather your medical records and the EMS run report now. The longer you wait, the harder it becomes.

Get a Free Case Review From a Personal Injury Lawyer

Thompson Law offers ambulance negligence victims a free consultation with no fee unless we win. These cases have some of the shortest deadlines in personal injury law. Government claims can expire in as little as six months. Contact us today before the deadline closes your case.

FAQ

Can you sue an ambulance for taking too long?

Yes, but government-run ambulances have shorter deadlines and require proof of gross negligence. 

What is gross negligence in an ambulance case?

When a healthcare professional causes harm through their actions by providing substandard care that results in injury, such as ignoring a 911 call, or showing reckless disregard for the patient’s safety.

How long do I have to sue an ambulance service?

Deadlines vary by state, but claims against government-run ambulance services can be as short as six months. Act immediately to avoid losing your right to sue.

Can you sue a government-run ambulance service?

Yes, but only in cases of gross negligence. Government-run services are protected by sovereign immunity, which means ordinary mistakes are not enough. You must show reckless disregard for the patient’s safety.

¿Tienen abogados que hablen español para casos de negligencia de ambulancia?

Sí, ofrecemos atención en español para ayudarte con tu caso de negligencia por parte de una ambulancia. Contáctanos y pide tu consulta gratis. No tienes que pagar a menos que ganemos.

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