June 22, 2010

Half of Pediatricians Admit Making Incorrect Diagnosis

A new study in Business Week reports than over half of pediatricians admit to making false diagnosis, missing diagnosis, or delaying diagnosis once or twice in the past month alone. Pediatric trainees are even more susceptible to error, with over 77 percent of them making diagnostic mistakes in the last thirty days.

Even more startling is that over half of those doctors admitted that their missed diagnosis or incorrect diagnosis resulted in direct harm to the patient. Because of that it should not be surprising that virtually one out of every three medical malpractice lawsuits stems from a doctor’s inaccurate or failed diagnosis.

These diagnostic errors have various causes, but the report indicated that the most common include a doctor’s failure to properly gather a patient’s medical or exam history, errors on medical charts, and failure to follow up on abnormal test results.

A member of the American Academy of Pediatrics committee on Quality Improvement and Management admitted that these diagnostic errors were “rampant in health care.” He went on to explain that our “systems in health care are set up in an antiquated way that allows for flaws to easily occur.” The sad reality is that life and death often hang in the balance of these medical decisions.

When patients and their families seek medical care they deserve to receive timely and accurate assessments of their condition from medical experts. However, as this report makes clear, all too frequently those patients are victims of diagnostic errors often having severe medical consequences.

To guard against these errors, be sure to contact a medical malpractice lawyer if you suspect that you or someone you know has been affected by a failure to diagnose, delayed diagnosis, or wrong diagnosis. In Illinois, our Chicago medical malpractice attorneys at Levin & Perconti continue to deal with these errors in diagnoses. One of many successful battles was a record $14 million verdict against a doctor who ignored x-ray results leading to a delayed diagnosis of lung cancer.

To read more about the report on the prevalence of diagnostic errors, Click Here.

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May 14, 2009

Medical Malpractice Lawyer Blames Loss on Jury Tampering

A medical malpractice attorney has filed a motion for a new trial after blaming a local paper for jury tampering. According to the plaintiff’s medical negligence attorney, agents associated with the newspaper handed out copies of the publication near the courthouse while the trial was taking place. The paper allegedly was covering the trial as it happened and that lead the plaintiff’s attorney to accuse the paper of jury tampering. The client sued her physicians for their delayed diagnosis of breast cancer. To read more about the medical malpractice attorneys’ allegations, follow the link.

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April 22, 2009

Attorney Steven Levin Settles Medical Malpractice Case in Chicago

Chicago medical malpractice lawyer Steven Levin recently settled a case for $1 million on behalf of a Chicago boy who suffered brain damage and hearing loss when a doctor failed to diagnose his meningitis. The boy, now 10 years old, was only 8 months old when the injury occurred. His parents took him to the pediatrician twice and on both visits the doctor failed to recognize that he had pneumococcal meningitis. It was not until he had multiple seizures and was taken to the emergency room that doctors diagnosed his condition. As a result of this delayed diagnosis, he suffered brain damage and hearing loss. Since the boy was so young at the time of his injury, his attorneys had to wait for his medical conditions to develop so that they could truly understand the effects of this mistake. A Cook County judge ordered the medical malpractice settlement on April 15, 2009.