What percent of malpractice suits are won?

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asked Jul 25, 2020 in Law/Ethics by Avelpe (310 points)
What percent of malpractice suits are won?

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answered Jul 25, 2020 by Jamie (68,360 points)
Only about 5 percent of malpractice suits are won and vast majority of the malpractice suits never make it to trial.

Only a small percentage of malpractice lawsuits are won in court.

Proving malpractice can be very difficult to do and you need enough strong evidence and a good malpractice lawyer or attorney to help you fight for and win the malpractice suit.

To win a malpractice suit you would have to suffer some injury or illness that can be proved to happen from the malpractice the doctor or surgeon has done to you.

For example if a surgery goes wrong and you suffered injury or other illness from the surgery that went wrong then you may be able to win the malpractice lawsuit.

But it can still be very difficult to win the malpractice lawsuit.

When you have surgery you have around a 4 to 5 percent chance of the surgery going wrong.

A persons health can factor into the possibility of surgery going wrong or you having any complications during or after the surgery.

If you're overall healthy then the chance of the surgery going wrong or you dying on the operating table are very low.

If you have other health issues such as kidney disease, heart disease etc then your chance of getting more ill or dying is much higher.

Only about 4 to 5 percent of the 100 percent of surgeries fail or go wrong.

Surgery that is done today is more safe than it ever was way back before all the medical advances we have today.

I've been through a few surgeries and although they were scary going in nothing went wrong.

If surgery does go wrong though then if you live then you can sue the hospital for the malpractice.

But rarely do you need to worry about the surgery going wrong at all.

Some peoples bodies or skin does swell slightly after surgery which is normal.

Not everyone who has surgery will experience swelling but in some parts of the body there may be noticeable swelling after the surgery which is normal.

The swelling should go away within a few days or so.

I once had abdominal surgery and my abdomen was swollen for a few days afterwards.

The doctor said it was normal although I though I had an infection.

The swelling did go away within a few days.

Also some parts of the skin may swell after the incision is sewed shut and that is normal as well because your bodies natural response to injury is swelling to help heal the injury.

Severe swelling or swelling that does not go away within a few days to a week of surgery could be bad though and you should let a doctor know about it.

Some surgery incisions heal within 1 to 3 weeks and some surgery incisions take between 6 to 8 weeks to fully heal.

The size of the surgery incision will factor into the actual time it takes for the surgery incision to heal after surgery.

Smaller incisions heal within 1 to 3 weeks and sometimes 4 weeks.

Larger surgery incisions take between 6 to 8 weeks to fully heal.

You may still have a scar for a few years after the surgery incision and sometimes you may have the surgery incision scar for the rest of your life.

The last time I had a surgery incision which was for appendix removal the surgery incision healed within 3 weeks of the surgery.

The doctors told me to take it easy for around 4 weeks to allow the incision to heal.

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