Abogados de Medical Misdiagnosis
582 abogados de Medical Misdiagnosis encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Holly S. C. Wojcik, Attorney at Law

Tunison Injury Lawyers

Tunison Injury Lawyers

Law Offices of Hugh Augustine Donaghue

Hunter Duke, Attorney at Law

Law Offices of Ian R. Alexander

Hargrove & Partners

Law Offices of JP Sawyer

Mycroft Law Group

Jack R. Hilgeman, Attorney at Law

Green Injury Lawyers

Carmichael & Partners

Law Offices of Jaime Jackson

Law Offices of Jake R. Vigil

Sproat Law Office

Sproat Law Group

James D. Tawney, Attorney at Law
Medical Misdiagnosis Lawyers in the United States
Medical misdiagnosis is one of the most common forms of medical malpractice in the country. Studies published in BMJ Quality & Safety estimate that approximately 12 million Americans are affected by diagnostic errors each year. When a doctor gets the diagnosis wrong, the consequences can range from unnecessary treatment to permanent disability or death.
What Medical Misdiagnosis Cases Cover
A misdiagnosis claim arises when a healthcare provider fails to correctly identify a patient's condition, and that failure causes measurable harm. This includes delayed diagnosis, where the correct condition is eventually identified but treatment comes too late. It also covers complete misdiagnosis, where a patient is treated for a condition they don't have while the real problem worsens.
Common misdiagnosed conditions include cancer, heart attacks, strokes, infections, and autoimmune disorders. These cases require proof that a competent doctor in the same specialty, under similar circumstances, would have reached the correct diagnosis. The legal term for this benchmark is the standard of care.
When to Hire a Medical Misdiagnosis Lawyer
- You received a wrong diagnosis that led to unnecessary surgery, medication, or treatment
- A delayed diagnosis allowed your condition to progress to a more advanced or untreatable stage
- You suffered permanent injury, disability, or organ damage because the correct condition went undetected
- A loved one died after a healthcare provider failed to identify a life-threatening condition
- Your medical records show signs that diagnostic tests were misread or never ordered
How the Legal Process Works
Your attorney will first obtain and review all relevant medical records. From there, a qualified medical expert will evaluate whether the treating doctor deviated from accepted diagnostic standards. Most states require this expert opinion before a lawsuit can even be filed.
Once the case is filed, both sides exchange evidence through discovery. Depositions of the treating physicians and expert witnesses typically follow. Most misdiagnosis cases settle before trial — roughly 90% of medical malpractice claims resolve outside the courtroom, though the timeline often stretches 18 months to three years.
How Compensation Is Calculated
- Medical expenses — costs of corrective treatment, future surgeries, rehabilitation, and ongoing care resulting from the misdiagnosis
- Lost income — wages lost during recovery and reduced future earning capacity if the injury caused long-term disability
- Pain and suffering — physical pain, emotional distress, anxiety, and diminished quality of life
- Loss of consortium — compensation for the impact on a spouse or family member's relationship with the injured person
- Wrongful death damages — funeral costs, lost financial support, and grief-related losses if the misdiagnosis proved fatal
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to file a misdiagnosis lawsuit?
Every state sets its own statute of limitations for medical malpractice claims, typically ranging from one to three years. Some states apply a "discovery rule," meaning the clock starts when you knew or should have known about the misdiagnosis rather than when it occurred. Missing this deadline almost always bars your claim entirely.
Do I need to prove the misdiagnosis caused harm, or just that it happened?
A wrong diagnosis alone isn't enough to win a case. You must show that the diagnostic error directly caused injury, worsened your condition, or led to harmful treatment you wouldn't have otherwise received. Your attorney and medical experts will work together to establish this direct connection between the error and your damages.
