Medical Malpractice

Request Your Free Consultation

Helping Kentucky to Understand Fatal Medical Misdiagnoses

You may know someone who has lost a relative because of a missed medical condition or a misdiagnosis. Do you wonder how—in this day and age—such mistakes happen? They’re Supposed to Be the Experts! It’s hard to understand how doctors could make errors like this….

Read More

Too Many People Die From Preventable Medical Errors, Kentucky

Too many Americans are dying each year from medical errors, and something has to be done about it.  According to a national investigation conducted by Hearst newspaper and television journalists, about 200,000 people in America die each year from preventable medical mistakes and hospital infections….

Read More

Does Implied Consent Affect My Kentucky Medical Malpractice Lawsuit?

If you are one of the many patients who has awoken to discover he or she had suffered a surgical error in Kentucky, you are likely feeling a wealth of emotions. Anger, shock, and disbelief will set in quickly, but now you’re in a state…

Read More

Kentucky, Do You Know How Often Medical Malpractice Occurs?

We depend on our Kentucky doctors and hospitals to take good care of us when we’re sick or injured, but sometimes they make mistakes that can hurt the people they’re supposed to be helping. How frequently does medical malpractice occur? Following are some facts that…

Read More

Louisville Lawyers Discuss Diagnosis and Treatment of Lyme Disease

You’ve been feeling lousy lately, and you thought you might have the flu. Your doctor, however, believes that it could be Lyme disease. What kinds of tests will you have to undergo to find out? If it is Lyme disease, what can you do to…

Read More

Sponge Counts May Not Stop Retained Objects in Surgeries in Louisville

It may seem incredible that a surgeon could leave a pair of scissors in a patient’s body during a procedure. After all, these items are counted beforehand to prevent these mistakes from happening. So it’s surprising that, in almost 90 percent of cases of retained…

Read More