Protecting Clients’ Future Well-Being After An Accident Or Injury For Over 25 Years

Attorney Erik H. Olson

The duration of a medical malpractice lawsuit can vary significantly. It may take anywhere from several months to a few years, depending on case complexity, court schedules, and the willingness of parties to settle. Working with an experienced attorney can help streamline the process.

Not every bad medical outcome is malpractice. To have a valid case in Georgia, you must prove four elements:
  • Doctor-patient relationship existed: The provider agreed to treat you
  • Breach of standard of care: The provider’s care fell below what a reasonably competent doctor would have provided in the same situation (requires expert testimony)
  • Causation: The negligence directly caused your injury, not an underlying condition or unavoidable risk
  • Damages: You suffered measurable harm (medical bills, lost wages, disability, pain and suffering)

The only way to know for certain: Have an experienced attorney review your medical records. We offer free case evaluations.

In Georgia, the statute of limitations for filing a medical malpractice claim is typically two years from the event of malpractice or the discovery of the resulting injuries.

Compensation in a medical malpractice case can include medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and potentially punitive damages. Every case is unique, and we are prepared to fight for the compensation you deserve.

Never accept a settlement offer from a hospital or insurance company without first consulting an experienced Georgia medical malpractice attorney—and never sign anything under pressure.

Here’s why: Hospitals and their insurers make early settlement offers for one reason—to pay you far less than your claim is actually worth. They’re counting on you being overwhelmed, in pain, and desperate for money to cover mounting medical bills. Early offers typically represent 10-30% of your claim’s true value.

What you should do immediately:

  • Do not sign anything – Even if they say the offer expires soon, legitimate settlement discussions don’t disappear overnight
  • Request everything in writing – Get the offer details and any supporting documents
  • Don’t give recorded statements – Anything you say can be used to devalue your claim
  • Contact an attorney within 24-48 hours – Most medical malpractice lawyers offer free case evaluations and can quickly assess whether the offer is fair

An experienced lawyer understands the full scope of damages in Georgia medical malpractice cases—including future medical costs, lost earning capacity, and pain and suffering—and can negotiate for the maximum compensation you deserve. If the offer is genuinely fair (rare), your attorney will tell you. If it’s a lowball attempt (common), we’ll fight for what you’re actually owed.

These terms are often used interchangeably, but they have distinct legal meanings in Georgia—and understanding the difference is critical to your case.

Medical Mistake: An unintended error that occurs during medical care. Mistakes can happen even when a provider follows all proper protocols. Not all medical mistakes constitute malpractice. For example, if a surgeon follows the correct procedure perfectly but you have a rare, unforeseeable complication, that’s a mistake but likely not malpractice.

Medical Negligence: This occurs when a healthcare provider fails to meet the “standard of care”—the level of care that a reasonably competent provider would have provided under similar circumstances. Negligence means the provider deviated from accepted medical practices. However, negligence alone isn’t enough for a legal claim.

Medical Malpractice (Legal Claim): This is a formal legal claim that arises when medical negligence directly causes injury, harm, or death to a patient. To prove medical malpractice in Georgia, you must establish four elements: (1) the provider owed you a duty of care, (2) they breached that duty through negligence, (3) the breach directly caused your injury, and (4) you suffered measurable damages (medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, etc.).

The key distinction: All medical malpractice cases involve negligence, but not every negligent act qualifies as malpractice. You must prove both that the provider was negligent AND that their negligence directly caused harm. If negligence occurred but caused no injury, there’s no malpractice case. Conversely, if you suffered harm but the provider followed the standard of care, that’s a tragic medical mistake—but not malpractice.

Bottom line: If you suffered unexpected harm during medical treatment, don’t assume it was “just one of those things.” Contact a Georgia medical malpractice attorney who can investigate whether negligence played a role.

Medical malpractice liability in Georgia can extend far beyond the individual doctor you believe made the mistake. Identifying all potentially liable parties is crucial because it affects the total compensation available for your claim.

Potentially liable parties include:

  • Individual providers: Physicians, surgeons, nurses, anesthesiologists, pharmacists, physician assistants, and medical technicians
  • Healthcare facilities: Hospitals, surgical centers, nursing homes, urgent care clinics, and medical practices
  • Other entities: Medical device manufacturers (if defective equipment contributed), pharmaceutical companies, and medical staffing agencies

Important Georgia considerations: Some government-owned hospitals have partial sovereign immunity, which can limit recovery options. Hospitals can be held liable for their employees’ negligence (vicarious liability) or their own failures like inadequate staffing or poor credentialing (corporate negligence). Many surgeons are independent contractors, not hospital employees—which affects who you can sue.

Why this matters: Each party typically has separate insurance coverage. A doctor might have $1 million in coverage while the hospital has $10 million. Identifying all liable parties could mean the difference between partial and full compensation.