Harmed By Medical Negligence?
Get a free, confidential review of your case from an attorney experienced in medical malpractice litigation.
When a doctor, nurse, or hospital fails to provide the standard of care you're entitled to, the consequences can be permanent. We help patients and families hold negligent providers accountable.
Florida law requires a pre-suit investigation and a signed affidavit of merit from a qualified medical expert before a malpractice case can be filed. We handle this process for you.
Medical malpractice occurs when a healthcare provider fails to meet the accepted standard of care, and that failure directly causes injury. Not every bad medical outcome is malpractice — but when negligence, not simply an unavoidable risk, is the cause, you may have a claim.
Florida requires a detailed pre-suit investigation, including a written opinion from a qualified medical expert, before a malpractice lawsuit can be filed. We manage this entire process, working with independent physicians to evaluate the strength of your case.
Medical negligence can happen at any point in your care — from diagnosis through surgery and recovery.
Wrong-site surgery, retained instruments, or avoidable surgical complications.
Failure to diagnose a serious condition in time for effective treatment.
Incorrect dosages, dangerous drug interactions, or administering the wrong medication.
Preventable injuries to mother or child during pregnancy, labor, or delivery.
Improper dosing or monitoring that leads to serious complications during a procedure.
Preventable infections caused by unsanitary conditions or improper protocols.
We work with independent, board-certified physicians to evaluate whether your care fell below the accepted standard, and we manage Florida’s pre-suit investigation and affidavit-of-merit requirements from day one.
Get a Free Case ReviewWe consult board-certified physicians outside the defendant's hospital network.
We manage Florida's required investigation and expert affidavit process.
Hospital insurers know our firm is prepared to litigate malpractice claims fully.
Generally two years from when the injury was discovered or should have been discovered, subject to a statute of repose. Because the pre-suit investigation process takes time, you should contact an attorney as soon as possible.
Florida requires a written, sworn statement from a qualified medical expert confirming there are reasonable grounds to believe malpractice occurred, before a lawsuit can be filed.
Yes. Medical malpractice cases require expert testimony to establish both the standard of care and how the provider deviated from it. We work with independent experts on every case we take.
Get a free, confidential review of your case from an attorney experienced in medical malpractice litigation.
Contact us today for a free case review — you pay nothing unless we win.