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Medical Malpractice Claims and Settlements in Georgia

When a patient is seriously harmed by a preventable medical mistake, one of the first questions the family asks is what happens next. Do you file a claim? Does the case settle? Do you have to sue? How long does all of this take?

The honest answer is that every case is different. But most strong Georgia medical malpractice cases follow the same basic path: investigation, expert review, filing, discovery, negotiation, and either settlement or trial.

How a Medical Malpractice Claim Begins

A claim begins with a careful review of the facts and the medicine. Before a case can be filed, the records must be obtained and reviewed by the right expert. The issue is not whether the outcome was terrible. The issue is whether the care fell below the standard required under the circumstances and whether that failure caused the injury.

Why Settlement Is Not the Starting Point

Families often ask whether the case can simply be settled with the hospital or insurer. Sometimes that happens. More often, meaningful settlement discussions occur only after the case has been thoroughly developed. The defense wants to see the medicine, the experts, the timeline, the damages proof, and the lawyer on the other side.

What Affects Settlement Value

Settlement value is driven by the same issues that drive trial value:

  • the strength of the liability proof;
  • the quality of the expert testimony;
  • whether causation is clear or disputed;
  • the severity and permanence of the injury;
  • the amount of economic loss; and
  • whether the defense believes the plaintiff’s lawyers are ready to try the case.

Why Early Low Offers Are Dangerous

Insurance carriers are not in business to pay top value voluntarily. An early offer may sound appealing when a family is overwhelmed, but taking less than the case is worth can leave the patient without the resources needed for future care, lost earnings, and long-term support.

Common Questions

Do most malpractice cases settle?
Many do, but strong settlements usually come after substantial work has been done.

How long does settlement take?
Some cases resolve relatively early, but complex cases often take much longer.

What if the case does not settle?
Then it should be prepared and presented for trial.

Talk with an Experienced Med Mal Lawyer Today

Cash Krugler Fredericks handles serious Georgia medical malpractice claims involving catastrophic injury and wrongful death. If you believe a preventable medical error caused lasting harm, contact us for a confidential case review.

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If you wish to discuss your case or need additional information, please feel free to contact us today.

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