Can I Make A Medical Negligence Claim After The Death Of A Loved One?

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If your family has suffered a tragedy such as a loved one dying of blood poisoning, should you consider appointing a medical negligence solicitor?

In his early twenties your son was a young man. When he stayed in bed late one morning, it wasn't usual. He was active and sporty. He was very popular with a great future ahead of him.

Something was wrong. He was in bed with a raging temperature, complaining of terrible pain.

You rang the doctor's surgery and asked to be put through to your doctor on the phone.

After a minute the receptionist's reply came back informing you the doctor had said it was probably a fever and to get him to drink plenty of fluids and rest. You called again half an hour later as this was clearly not the solution. This seemed like a nightmare of medical negligence. His condition deteriorated and he was getting worse. He was sweating and weak.

You called the surgery again but were told to take him to casualty or wait for the home visiting doctor on his daily rounds. You think you might be causing problems.

You called an ambulance. Two days later, your son died of meningococcal septicaemia. You believe that you have experienced medical negligence. You feel angry and betrayed and want an explanation. Had the doctor responded earlier he could have been saved.

After the inquest, the thought persists that this must be a case to take to a medical negligence lawyer. Surely this area of law covers refusal to attend someone who is so ill and gets a dismissal of symptoms? The hospital were brilliant, they did all they could to save him but it was too late. Is a medical negligence claim still available in this situation then, but against the GP not the hospital?

A medical negligence solicitor will help to support you to find out. He will look at your medical history and call in the services of an independent doctor to examine your case. A medical negligence claim is very rarely a short process and therefore you must be aware that whilst you are feeling your grief you will have to deal with long and complicated communications and likely court action. Making a claim against your doctor will not bring your loved ones back to you, but it might help stop mistakes like what happend to your family to anyone else.


About the Author:
Tim Bishop is senior partner at Bonallack & Bishop, a firm of Medical Negligence Solicitors specialising in compensation claims. He is responsible for all major strategic decisions, seeing himself as a businessman who owns a law firm. Tim has expanded the firm by 1000% in 12 years and has plans for its continued development.



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