Foreign Objects Left in the Body After Surgery
A retained surgical object is one of the clearest and most serious preventable errors in medicine. Sponges, needles, instruments, and other items are not supposed to be left inside a patient at the end of surgery. When that happens, the consequences can be severe: infection, pain, obstruction, additional surgery, prolonged hospitalization, and sometimes permanent injury or death.
How These Cases Happen
Foreign object cases usually involve breakdowns in basic operating room safety. Surgical teams are expected to follow count protocols, communicate clearly, and respond appropriately when counts do not reconcile or when post-operative signs point to a retained object.
Common Signs of a Retained Object
Patients may experience persistent pain, infection, fever, drainage, obstruction, unexplained post-operative decline, or the need for repeat imaging or repeat surgery.
Why These Cases Matter Legally
Retained object cases are often powerful malpractice cases because the error is so obvious and so preventable. Even so, the case still must be developed carefully, with attention to who was responsible, what protocols applied, and what harm resulted.
Common Questions
What counts as a foreign object?
That depends on Georgia law and the facts of the case.
Do these cases have special deadlines?
Yes. Foreign object cases can involve specific timing rules and should be reviewed immediately.
Can more than one provider be responsible?
Absolutely. Surgeon responsibility, nursing responsibility, and hospital responsibility may all be at issue.
Protect Your Rights for a Foreign Object Claim
If you or a loved one required another surgery or suffered complications because something was left inside the body after surgery, contact Cash Krugler Fredericks for a confidential review.

