Brain injury lawyers deal with causation by accidents, blunt trauma or violence some brain injuries can also be the result of doctor negligence. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an injury to the brain as a result of accident or injury. It may be focal (confined to a small area) or diffuse (affecting a large area of the brain). When an outside force impacts the head hard, a brain injury can occur. Impactions can happen in various ways, either causing the brain to move within the skull, or breaking the skull and hurting the brain on contact. Although, among the elder and infants, the leading cause of brain injuries are falls. Infants can also obtain a brain injury from being shaken violently. Medical malpractice Lawyers and personal injury lawyers deal with brain injury victims. In many medical malpractice cases Brain injury lawyers are dealing with a Failure to timely diagnose a patient with low oxygen saturation rates. This will often lead to unnecessary and often times, irreversible brain injury. The trauma is horrible and it just takes a matter of a few minutes to dramatically alter a loved one and their families’ lives forever.
Not only can medical mistakes cause brain injury, negligent medical care can exacerbate an already existing brain injury. If a brain injury is not properly diagnosed and treated by a doctor, nurse or hospital staff, an individual may suffer serious complications leading to severe mental impairment, stroke, paralysis and even death. An attorney experienced with brain injuries should be contacted. It is important for the lawyer to understand these types of injuries in order to present a viable case and call in correct expert witnesses.
If you or a loved one has suffered a brain injury because of health care negligence, you may be facing a lifetime of uncertainty and costly medical bills. You deserve compensation.
Individuals might suffer brain injury due to a surgeon or doctor error in cases involving:
* Undiagnosed blood clots:
A significant cause of brain injury is blood clots that develop during surgery and pre-operative surgical procedures. Doctors, nurses and other hospital staff must diligently monitor for blood clots that might travel to the lung or brain where they can cause serious disability and death.
* Anesthesia:
Surgeons, nurses, nurse anesthetists, anesthesiologists and other doctors must be properly experienced and certified to administer anesthesia. Improper administration of anesthesia can lead to significant brain injury, stroke, coma and even death due to the deprivation of oxygen.
* Surgical error:
Many surgical mistakes can be traced to poor pre-operative care and planning. A doctor must thoroughly analyze a patient’s medical history, medication and lifestyle choices prior to determining what surgical course, if any, should be taken. A surgeon must make sure that the procedure is as safe as possible by extensively monitoring his surgical team. In short, the surgeon and his or her team must be experienced and competent enough to mitigate any unnecessary risk of surgical error.
* Emergency room error:
Brain injuries are commonly misdiagnosed in the fast-paced, stressful setting of an emergency room. Common claims of emergency room error include the failure to properly diagnosis diseases or conditions, the failure to order tests, the failure to check on a patient after discharge, improper discharge, misinterpreting x-rays, misreading test results, and surgical or trauma error.
* Infant delivery error (cerebral hypoxia and cerebral palsy):
Delivery complications caused by doctor and staff negligence can result in a significant decrease in oxygen to a newborn or fetus’s brain. A loss or decrease in oxygen can cause cerebral hypoxia, cerebral palsy and significant impairments in motor and sensory functions.
* Medication Error:
There are times when a patient can be given too much conscious sedation medication which can further slow respiratory rates and lead to brain injury.
* Failure to Intubate:
In the event a patient is having respiratory distress, the use of a ventilator machine to assist a patient in their breathing can often quickly reduce the potential for loss of oxygen and resulting brain injury. While failure to timely intubate, can be a deviation from the prevailing professional standard of care and wind up causing preventable brain injury.
* Failure to Diagnose:
If a patient’s oxygen saturation rates are not carefully monitored in certain treatment scenarios, the potential for catastrophic brain injury is almost imminent. It is crucial that a patient’s oxygen and respiratory rates be monitored carefully in certain cases, failure to do so could result in failing to properly treat or intubate a patient, leaving him or her with severe brain injury.
Diagnostic and treatment errors can result in brain injury or the further exacerbation of a pre-existing brain injury. A brain injury as a result of a doctor’s negligence may lead to speech impairment, paralysis, stroke, heart attack, psychological and behavioral disorders, cerebral hypoxia, cerebral palsy, sensory and motor impairment, persistent vegetative state and/or death. Brain injuries are often permanent, debilitating problems. While litigation certainly will not treat an injury, it can provide lifelong financial stability for the victims of brain injury medical malpractice.
If you or a loved one has been the victim of brain injury related medical malpractice in Florida , Georgia,Tennessee,New York,New Jersey, North ,South Carolina,Michigan or California contact us today. You may be entitled to damages including medical expenses, lost wages and other compensation.
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