Showing posts with label Illinois. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illinois. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2011

Illinois Medical Malpractice Lawyers Take on the Challenge of Proving Pain and Suffering

Illinois medical malpractice lawyers face long trials steeped in endless expert testimony, caveats in civil procedure and usually hundreds of thousands of dollars at risk, all the result of emotionally heart wrenching cases involving deaths, amputations, paralysis, brain damage, and almost always, pain and suffering. Among the critical roles that attorneys play in medical malpractice cases, the role of proving pain and suffering is one of the most challenging.

Paralyzed in silence on an operating table, a 53-year-old patient was unable to react when he experienced anesthesia awareness during open heart surgery. He suffered the pain of a bone saw cutting through his sternum and jolts of excruciation as doctors shocked his heart. He listened in agony to conversations among the surgical team that was completely oblivious of his anesthesia awareness. The patient was unable to move, scream or give any kind of indication that he was in pain. After surgery, the patient was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress syndrome. The patient hired a lawyer to raise pain and suffering as a cause of action in a medical malpractice case. Although there was no other cause of action involved in the case, the patient was awarded 2,500.

Lawyer Malpractice

Most Illinois lawyers know that as of 2001, pain and suffering is no longer just an element of damages, but a cause of action in medical malpractice. It is every medical professional's duty to treat and effectively control pain. Inferring that pain is all in a patient's head is no longer a valid defense.

Illinois Medical Malpractice Lawyers Take on the Challenge of Proving Pain and Suffering

Pain and suffering cannot be seen or heard and usually, there is no physical evidence to prove its existence. Illinois lawyers are called upon to prove the invisible, working against hundreds of years of social and cultural ideologies, to show the 12 member juries what is silently tormenting their clients.

To make matters more complicated for medical malpractice lawyers, medical professionals usually disregard pain and suffering. In order to treat severely injured patients effectively, many of the best doctors do not allow themselves to empathize. As a result, pain and suffering is a symptom that is easily ignored.

In addition to medical professionals, juries can also be unwilling to empathize with patients who raise pain and suffering as a cause of action for medical malpractice. Illinois medical malpractice lawyers have to work against strong political beliefs and viewpoints of jurors. Republican-minded jurors tend to be less sympathetic with a patient's pain and suffering and more cognizant of the need for tort reform. There is a strong ideology that patients should be able to deal with pain and not open the floodgates of new litigation into the judicial system. Unlike other causes of action, such as severe burns, quadriplegia, and mutilation, pain and suffering is invisible and impossible to objectively quantify, so it is all too often disregarded.

When jurors have blind faith in both the medical community and politicians, it can be difficult for Illinois medical malpractice lawyers to garner sympathy for patients who have no scars or physical proof of pain and suffering. Thus, plaintiffs who endure undue pain and suffering that breaches the standards of care, have a cause of action for medical malpractice, but still face the challenge of presenting a case that can break through the social and political ideologies of jurors.

The July 2006 edition of The Economist reported that understanding pain and suffering is one of leading neurological issues of our time. The old saying "it's all in his/her head" is not too far off base, as pain and suffering truly is regulated by nerves in the brain. Unfortunately, the human brain is one of the least understood areas of medical science, and many patients continue to endure it. As long as pain is silently endured, Illinois medical malpractice lawyers face the challenge of proving that it exists.

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Emily Gleason is a law student at John Marshall in Chicago. For more information about Illinois medical malpractice laws, please visit [http://www.findgreatlawyers.com//MedicalMalpractice.php] , a leading resource for referrals to Illinois medical malpractice lawyers and Illinois medical malpractice information.

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Saturday, September 25, 2010

Illinois Medical Malpractice

You read it everywhere--doctors are being forced out of Illinois by medical malpractice attorneys in Chicago.  But what about the people whose lives are devastated by a medical errors, or whose loved ones are killed by a bad doctor or a mistake at a hospital that was 100% preventable?

Why is the media obsessed with protecting the doctors at the expense of the injured person?

Since before even Shakespeare's time, regard for lawyers has never been high in the public eye...that is, until one is in dire need of legal representation. The insurance industry is taking full advantage of this public misunderstanding of the vital function of lawyers in American society to propose ineffectual and self-enriching tort reform. The charge for tort reform is being lead on the back of the issue of medical malpractice damage caps.

Any medical malpractice lawsuit in Illinois against a doctor or medical services provider MUST be brought along with a certified statement from a doctor that he has reviewed all of the pertinent medical records and case information, and that the reviewing doctor holds an opinion to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that the accused doctor's medical service was not merely a "bad outcome," but instead, rises to the level of medical malpractice. Medical malpractice is generally defined as care which constitutes an act or omission that even a minimally-qualified doctor would not have rendered. By definition, bad outcomes from risky procedures do not qualify.

No other person or entity being sued in any other type of lawsuit - from car accident, fall-down accidents, products liability cases, contract disputes, or even violations of Constitutional Rights and discrimination suits - receives this "report first" procedural protection afforded to doctors. Damage caps are yet another procedural hurdle the insurance industry wishes to have placed in the way of wrongfully - and catastrophically - injured patients seeking a reckoning.

Currently, in jurisdictions without damage caps, a jury of twelve (as provided in Amendment VII to the U.S. Constitution) listens to all of the law and all of the facts of a particular case, including damages testimony from the injured person, of the plaintiff's treating doctors, of life-care planners who have calculated the precise amount of money that the crippled plaintiff's future care is likely to require, and of economists who have calculated, down to the penny, the amount of money the injured person has lost by no longer being able to work in their former capacity - or if the injury is severe enough, at all.

Armed with knowledge, and after hearing all of the defendant's exculpatory and damages-reducing evidence, the jury retires and, first, decides whether the doctor's conduct was not merely mistaken, and the harm not merely an innocent "bad outcome" but instead, rises to the level of medical malpractice. If, and only if, a jury makes this determination, it must next consider damages, or, how to fix what can be fixed, help what can be helped, and make up for what cannot be helped or fixed.

Already having a pre-suit procedural safeguard to ensure that only cases with merit are filed against doctors, the insurance industry has now turned its attention to the damages aspect of medical malpractice lawsuits. Instead of allowing the twelve people with the most information and knowledge of the case (the jury) to fix a precise amount which is necessary to compensate the wrongfully injured person, the insurance industry is lobbying hard for caps on damages. In other words, instead of leaving a determination on damages up to the people who have heard exactly how and how much the injured person has been damaged, Big Insurance prefers that a silver-spoon legislature makes that decision.

Instead of relief tailored to the particular case, and a jury left to its constitutionally-mandated province, Republicans and their insurance-industry benefactors seek to impose a big-government, one-size-fits-all answer. They don't trust juries made up of people like you, your friends and your neighbors to decide based on the facts and evidence in each individual case.

Damage caps do not stop frivolous lawsuits. Caps only affect the cases in which a jury of twelve people heard all the facts of the case and decided the injury was so severe and life-altering and the misconduct so blatant that a patient injured by the errors of a health care provider should receive more than $250,000. By definition, that is not a frivolous lawsuit, but a very serious one. Damage caps do not prevent frivolous lawsuits, but instead, ensure that the most catastrophically-injured patients will not be compensated as a jury instructs, thereby limiting their rights.

The strongest, most publicized argument for damage caps in medical malpractice cases is the mythical unavailability of doctors - particularly in rural areas, who have supposedly been driven out of business due to soaring malpractice insurance premiums, due to outrageous jury verdict. As appealing as this argument may at first seem, it suffers from a fatal flaw. It is complete fabrication, utter hogwash.

Doctors are not fleeing states in droves, despite increasingly frantic and unsupported claims from the American Medical Association, the insurance industry and their allies. Independent assessments by state officials and the media have found that the number of doctors in many states, including Florida, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington, has remained stable and in most, has actually increased. ( FL, Palm Beach Post Editorial, 7/16/03; OH, Toledo Blade, 7/17/04; PA, Allentown Morning Call, 4/24/04; WA, Seattle Times, 2/23/04).

The 2003 Weiss Report found that despite caps on economic damages in 19 states, "most insurers continued to increase premiums (for doctors) at a rapid pace, regardless of caps." The report found that insurers failed to pass along any savings to physicians in states with caps by refusing to lower their insurance premiums, and that caps only slowed the increase in the amount of damages insurers were required to pay out. (Weiss Report, 6/3/03.)

Premiums are higher in states with caps than in those without. The average malpractice premium in states without caps was $35,016 in 2003. The average premium in states with caps was $40,381. (Medical Liability Monitor, 10/03)

Medical errors kill an average of 195,000 people a year with an associated cost of more than $6 billion per year - "[t]he equivalent of 390 jumbo jets full of people are dying each year due to likely preventable, in-hospital medical errors, making this one of the leading killers in the U.S." ("In-Hospital Deaths from Medical Errors at 195,000 per Year, HealthGrades' Study Finds," Press Release for "Patient Safety in American Hospitals", July 2004, http://www.healthgrades.com)

"America spends more on dog and cat food each year than all medical malpractice payouts combined," said FTCR president Jamie Court, author of Corporateering: How Corporate Power Steals Your Personal Freedom And What You Can Do About It. (FTRC, 7/20/04, [http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/healthcare/pr/pr004485.php3])

"Malpractice costs amounted to an estimated $24 billion in 2002, but that figure represents less than 2 percent of overall health care spending. Thus, even a reduction of 25 percent to 30 percent in malpractice costs would lower health care costs by only about 0.4 percent to 0.5 percent, and the likely effect on health insurance premiums would be comparably small." ("Limiting Tort Liability for Medical Malpractice," CBO, 01/08/04)

The median inflation-adjusted payout in all tort (personal injury) cases dropped 56.3% between 1992 and 2001, to $28,000. ("Civil Trial Cases and Verdicts in Large Counties, 2001," Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dept. of Justice, 2004.)

The filing of personal injury cases has declined 4% since 1993. ("Examining the Work of State Courts, 2003," National Center for State Courts, 2004.)

And, perhaps most revealing, the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO), Congress's nonpartisan research arm, examined the insurance industry's publicity campaign of lawsuit-induced falling doctor availability. The GAO concluded that "many of the reported physician actions and hospital-based service reductions were not substantiated or did not widely affect access to health care...some reports have received extensive media coverage in each of the five states, we found that actual numbers of physician departures were sometimes inaccurate or involved relatively few physicians," and at any rate, they "did not find access to these services widely affected." Rather than concluding that large malpractice verdict drove premiums up (of which the GAO found no evidence), it instead noted that "...malpractice insurers experienced sharply reduced gains on their investments from 1998 to 2001." (Medical Malpractice: Implications of Rising Premiums on Access to Health Care GAO-03-836.)

If you or a loved one has been injured or killed by bad medical care, you have a right to fair compensation, and you should not feel guilty about it.  The wrongdoer should feel guilty. Medical malpractice cases in Illinois are very complicated cases, and you need a good lawyer to handle the case for you and your family.




Chicago Personal Injury lawyer Scott D. DeSalvo has been in practice defending the rights of people who have been injured for many years. More information about Mr. DeSalvo and information about how to protect your rights can be found by clicking here: Chicago Injury Lawyer

Friday, February 5, 2010

Car Wreck Lawyer Chicago Illinois Truck Accident Lawyer

www.prescription-malpractice.com If You've Been in a car, truck or motorcycle accident, contact one of our attorneys in the Scanlan Law Group Chicago, Illinois at 877-494-1309. Our lawyers can help with your motor vehicle case now.



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Monday, January 25, 2010

Chicago Brain Injury Lawyer Bloomingdale, Illinois Head Trauma Lawyer

www.prescription-malpractice.com The Scanlan Law Group works hand in hand with experts to properly identify, asses and treat brain injuries, to the best possible outcome in court. Call our lawyers today in Chicago 877-494-1309.



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Monday, January 11, 2010

Chicago Product Liability Lawyer Bloomingdale, Illinois Personal Injury Lawyer

www.prescription-malpractice.com The Scanlan Law Group is a Chicago Illinois Personal Injury firm. We bring commitment, heart and soul to your case and your case. Call us today at 877-494-1309 Lawyers.



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