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Articles Posted in Medical Malpractice

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Court Throws Out Medical Malpractice Case Because the Case Was Not Timely Filed

In Louisiana, a general tort claim has a prescriptive period of one year. This means that the plaintiff must file a claim within one year of the injury bringing about the claim. The prescriptive period has been implemented by the Louisiana legislature in LSA-C.C. art 3492 and a brief summary…

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Medical Malpractice Claims Against Public Sector Health Providers Must Be Submitted to a Medical Review Panel

Medical Malpractice Claims Against Public Sector Health Providers Must Be Submitted to a Medical Review Panel The State of Louisiana Division of Administration, headquartered in Baton Rouge, requires that that medical malpractice claims against public sector health care providers must be processed through its administrative procedure, starting with the submission…

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Medical Malpractice Suit for Wrongful Death Action of Unborn Child  

Medical malpractice can be a serious issue that involves very unfortunate circumstances and strong feelings. One such case, analyzed below, examines the parameters of such a matter and how they are handled. Because of the sensitive nature of this case, names will not be used and, instead, the individuals involved…

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Duty of Care Doctors Owe their Patients and Medical Malpractice

The level of care required of medical practitioners is very high. This is because people put their trust, and sometimes their lives and well being in the hands of a doctor or surgeon. The level of care is high because we must attain the very best from the people who…

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Court Discusses Prescriptive Period in Medical Malpractice Case

Regular readers of this blog are no doubt aware that the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act requires that all “claims against healthcare providers be reviewed or ‘filtered’ through a medical review panel before proceeding to any other court.” Also, medical malpractice suits are subject to a period of prescription — that…

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Court Dissects Nursing Home Wrongful Death Case

Many families in America have had to move their loved ones into a nursing home. Whether the reason is that they don’t have the room to care for the elder, they don’t have the time or money to provide adequate care, or their elder wishes to be in the nursing…

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First Circuit of Louisiana Allows Lost Chance of Survival Tort Case to Go Forward and Specifies Burden of Proof

In June 2010, the First Circuit of the State of Louisiana Court of Appeal reversed and remanded the case of Lena Hebert et al. v. Plaquemine Caring, L.L.C. due to a legal error committed by the Eighteenth Judicial District Court for Iberville Parish. This legal error proved to be a…

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Disastrous Results for Plaintiffs that Wait Too Long to File Suit

In Louisiana, there are certain steps that need to be taken in order to file a case for medical malpractice. In order to get a case to trial, a plaintiff must first submit a malpractice petition to a medical review board. The board reviews the facts surrounding a case and…

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Understanding Medical Malpractice and Legal Caps to Awards

The Court of Appeals of Louisiana, Third Circuit, recently held the Medical Malpractice Act’s (MMA) award limitation unconstitutional when applied in violation of the Equal Protection clause of the 1974 Louisiana State Constitution. In Oliver v. Magnolia Clinic, a minor child was treated by a nurse practitioner who failed to…

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Transferable Rights and How They Pertain to a Lost Pregnancy

Certain legal rights are transferable. If you owe a debt to some entity, upon your death, there is a chance that the entity will have some rights to your estate in order to satisfy your debt. Another example of a transferable right is a right of survival. If the victim…

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