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Medical Malpractice Attorneys
49,086 verified medical malpractice attorneys across the United States. Medical malpractice lawyers represent patients harmed by negligent doctors, hospitals, and other providers. Free case review, no fee unless you win.
Medical malpractice cases hold doctors, hospitals, and other healthcare providers accountable when substandard care causes preventable harm. These cases are technically and financially demanding — they require expert testimony from physicians in the same specialty, careful causation analysis, and significant upfront investment. Most successful medical malpractice firms only take cases with clear deviation from the standard of care and meaningful damages.
Misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis of cancer, stroke, heart attack
Birth injury including cerebral palsy from oxygen deprivation
Medication errors and prescribing mistakes
Hospital infections from substandard sanitation
Emergency room negligence
Nursing home and assisted-living neglect or abuse
How medical malpractice cases work
You must prove four elements: a duty of care existed, the provider breached the standard of care, the breach caused your injury, and you suffered actual damages. Every element typically requires expert physician testimony. Many states also require a pre-suit affidavit of merit from a qualified expert before the case can be filed.
When to talk to a lawyer
You suffered a serious or unexpected injury during medical treatment
A loved one died unexpectedly under medical care
You suspect a diagnosis was missed or delayed
A surgical complication appears not to have been disclosed properly
The statute of limitations is approaching (often 2 to 3 years with a discovery rule)
Frequently Asked Questions about Medical Malpractice
How do I know if I have a medical malpractice case?
You need three things: a clear deviation from the standard of care, a direct causal link between that deviation and your injury, and significant damages. Bad outcomes alone are not malpractice — even competent care sometimes fails. An attorney with medical expert resources can review your records and tell you whether a viable claim exists.
How long do I have to file a medical malpractice claim?
Statutes of limitations vary by state — typically 2 to 3 years from the date of injury or discovery. Many states have shorter deadlines for claims involving minors, public hospitals, or government providers. Some states impose a hard “statute of repose” that bars suit after a fixed number of years regardless of when the harm was discovered.
How much does medical malpractice litigation cost?
Costs to prosecute a medical malpractice case (expert witnesses, deposition transcripts, medical-record retrieval, court costs) often exceed $100,000 — and the firm typically advances these costs on contingency. For this reason most firms screen aggressively and only accept high-damages cases with strong liability.
What damages are recoverable?
Economic damages (past and future medical bills, lost income, lost earning capacity), non-economic damages (pain & suffering, loss of consortium), and in extreme cases punitive damages. Many states cap non-economic damages, often around $250,000 to $750,000.
Can I sue if the doctor admits the mistake?
A frank apology or admission is helpful evidence but does not establish liability by itself — you still need to prove standard of care, causation, and damages with expert testimony. Many states have apology statutes that exclude sympathetic statements (“I’m sorry this happened”) from evidence; explicit admissions of fault are usually still admissible.
Will my case go to trial?
A higher percentage of medical malpractice cases go to trial than typical personal injury matters because doctors’ malpractice insurers strongly resist settlement — reputation and licensure concerns make doctors reluctant to settle. But many cases still resolve through settlement or mediation once liability is well-developed.