Medical malpractice occurs when a healthcare provider — a doctor, nurse, hospital, surgeon, or other medical professional — fails to meet the accepted standard of care and causes harm to a patient as a result. Trusting your health to a medical professional should not lead to additional injury, but when it does, you may be entitled to significant compensation for what you've endured.
Medical malpractice cases are among the most complex areas of personal injury law, requiring detailed medical evidence, expert testimony, and careful legal strategy. Below are some of the most common types of medical malpractice claims:
Misdiagnosis or Delayed Diagnosis — When a doctor fails to correctly identify a condition (such as cancer, heart disease, or stroke) or takes too long to diagnose it, the resulting delay in treatment can cause serious harm or death. Misdiagnosis is one of the leading causes of medical malpractice claims.
Surgical Errors — Surgical mistakes can include operating on the wrong site, leaving instruments inside the body, damaging organs or nerves, or performing unnecessary procedures. These errors often lead to additional surgeries, infections, permanent disability, or death.
Birth Injuries — Negligence during pregnancy, labor, or delivery can cause lasting harm to both mother and child. Conditions such as cerebral palsy, Erb's palsy, brain damage from oxygen deprivation, and maternal hemorrhaging may result from preventable medical errors.
Medication Errors — Prescribing the wrong medication, incorrect dosages, dangerous drug interactions, or pharmacy mistakes can cause severe injury or death. These errors can occur at any point — from the prescribing physician to the dispensing pharmacist.
Anesthesia Errors — Mistakes administering anesthesia, including incorrect dosage, failure to monitor the patient, or failure to recognize allergies, can result in brain damage, paralysis, or death.
Hospital Negligence — Hospitals can be held liable for unsanitary conditions, inadequate staffing, poor patient monitoring, untrained personnel, and infections acquired during admission.
Failure to Obtain Informed Consent — Patients have the right to understand the risks and alternatives before consenting to a procedure. When a provider fails to disclose known risks and the patient suffers harm they would not have agreed to face, that may constitute malpractice.
Nursing Home Negligence — Elder care facilities have a duty to protect vulnerable residents. Bed sores, malnutrition, falls, medication errors, and abuse may all give rise to malpractice or negligence claims.
Medical malpractice can leave victims with mounting medical bills, lost income, lasting disability, and profound emotional trauma. The following includes general damages which you may be entitled to:
Medical malpractice claims are uniquely challenging. They require qualified medical experts willing to testify about the standard of care, detailed review of medical records, and the resources to take on hospitals and their well-funded insurance carriers. Idaho and Washington both have specific procedural requirements — including, in Idaho, a pre-litigation review by a screening panel — that must be handled correctly to preserve your claim. Caldwell Law Group has the experience and resources to evaluate your case, identify the appropriate experts, and pursue the full compensation you and your family deserve. Call 208-743-5299 today for a free consultation.
Common questions about medical malpractice cases in Idaho and Washington.

