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Missouri Medical Malpractice Case Review

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Common Questions

General information only — not legal advice.

Medical malpractice occurs when a healthcare provider deviates from the accepted standard of care, causing injury to a patient. Not every bad outcome is malpractice — you need to show a doctor-patient relationship existed, the provider's care fell below the standard, and that directly caused you harm.

An attorney can arrange for a medical expert to review your records and determine whether the care met the applicable standard. Medical procedures carry inherent risks that patients consent to — malpractice requires showing the provider deviated from what a reasonably competent provider would have done in the same circumstances.

Common cases include surgical errors (wrong-site surgery, instruments left inside patients), misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis, medication errors (wrong drug, wrong dose, dangerous interactions), birth injuries, anesthesia errors, failure to treat or follow up on test results, and hospital negligence such as understaffing or infection control failures.

Each state has its own statute of limitations for medical malpractice, typically ranging from one to three years. Some states have discovery rules that start the clock when you knew or should have known about the malpractice. Special provisions may apply for minors. An attorney can confirm the exact deadline for your Missouri case.

You need to show a doctor-patient relationship existed, a competent doctor in the same specialty would have diagnosed correctly given the symptoms and available information, the misdiagnosis caused delay or wrong treatment, and this caused you measurable harm. Medical records, pathology reports, and expert testimony are critical evidence.

Yes, for their own negligence such as understaffing, unsafe conditions, or failing to implement safety protocols. Hospitals may also be liable for employee negligence. However, many physicians are independent contractors rather than employees, which can affect the hospital's liability.

You may recover medical costs for corrective treatment, lost wages and reduced earning capacity, pain and suffering, diminished quality of life, and in cases involving death, wrongful death damages. Some states cap non-economic damages in malpractice cases. An attorney can explain how Missouri law affects your potential recovery.

Most medical malpractice attorneys work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing upfront and they take a percentage of your recovery if you win. These cases require significant upfront investment in medical expert reviews, which the attorney typically advances. If there is no recovery, you generally owe no fee.

In most states, yes. Medical malpractice cases typically require testimony from a qualified medical expert who can establish what the standard of care was, how the provider deviated from it, and how that deviation caused your injury. Some states require an expert affidavit just to file the lawsuit.

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