Manchester New Hampshire Medical Malpractice Lawyers
Abramson, Brown & Dugan, P.A.
- Medical Malpractice
- Cerebral Palsy
- Misdiagnosis
- Lung Cancer
- Wrongful Death
- Defective Drugs or Products
- Anesthetic Errors
- Wrong Treatment
- Birth Injuries
- Failure to Diagnosis
- Breast Cancer
- Medication Errors
- Nursing Home Abuse
- Surgical Errors
- Adverse Drug Reactions
Over the past several years, we have been successful in collecting over $200 Million in settlements and verdicts on behalf of our clients. Our lawyers are supported by a dedicated staff, which includes registered nurses and other experienced health care professionals. Our Firm also has an extensive library of medical texts and periodicals, and access to a number of on-line databases. We have the resources and experience to handle the most complex cases.
The Institute of Medicine has reported that as many as 98,000 people die each year in American hospitals due to medical mistakes. In fact, medical malpractice injuries are the eighth ranking cause of death in America.
A medical malpractice claim is among the most complicated of legal actions. A medical malpractice attorney must not only possess knowledge and experience in handling personal injury cases in court, he or she must also have a solid understanding of medical terminology, medical science, medical research and how health care is practiced.
If you or someone you know has been injured by medical malpractice, you benefit by hiring lawyers who have experience in medical malpractice cases. Trained eyes can recognize malpractice that others will miss. As skilled Manchester Medical Malpractice Lawyers, we have spotted medical malpractice in cases that other attorneys have reviewed and turned away.
If you or someone you know in New Hampshire needs the assistance of an experienced Manchester Medical Malpractice Lawyer, call Abramson, Brown & Dugan, P.A. today at 866-774-9646, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your initial consultation.
Practice Areas and Legal Definitions
Medical Malpractice:
Medical malpractice is the failure of a health care provider to follow the accepted standards of practice of his or her profession in the community where the service is rendered. If a physician was careless, lacked proper skills, or disregarded standardized rules resulting in injury to a patient, a jury may find the health care provider liable for negligence. Hospitals can also be held liable for the negligence of their employees, including staff nurses and technicians.
Examples of Medical Malpractice include:
- Failing to diagnose a tumor while reading an x-ray
- Puncturing a nearby organ or tissue during surgery
- Failing to order necessary and appropriate medical tests
- Failing to diagnose a condition in time to treat it properly
- Failing to refer a case to a medical specialist
- Prescribing incorrect medication
- Brain Injury
- Birth Injury
- Cerebral Palsy
- Incorrect diagnosis that results in a failure to treat a medical condition
- Failing to properly administer anesthesia
- Emergency room negligence
- Dental Malpractice
- Cosmetic Surgery Malpractice
Cerebral Palsy:
Cerebral palsy is permanent brain injuries that affect an infant in the womb, during birth or in the months following birth and is one of the most common birth injuries in the United States. Cerebral palsy patients are subject to limited motor skills, speech difficulties and learning disabilities. When cerebral palsy occurs as the result of medical malpractice, the responsible party inflicting said injuries can be held legally responsible.
Misdiagnosis:
Sometimes medical professionals negligently misdiagnose a patient. Misdiagnosis and delayed treatment of a medical condition can have debilitating effects on a patient and in some cases misdiagnosis can be fatal. We rely on medical professionals to provide knowledgeable information and competent diagnoses. When patients suffer from negligent healthcare or the misdiagnosis of a serious medical condition they deserve answers.
Lung Cancer:
The key to successful treatment of lung cancer is early diagnosis and many medical mistakes can lead to a delay in diagnosis which may deprive patients of the chance for a cure. Failure to diagnose lung cancer or significant delay in diagnosing the disease can result in a medical malpractice lawsuit. Delays in diagnosis may cause a worsening of the illness and are often a result of:
- Failure to order chest x-ray, CT scan and MRI procedures
- Failure to adequately evaluate the results of the above
- Failure to recognize the symptoms that characterize lung cancer and diagnose it in time.
Wrongful Death:
A wrongful death occurs when a person is killed due to the negligence or misconduct of another individual, company or organization. One of the most frequent causes of wrongful death is medical malpractice. A legal action for wrongful death belongs to the decedent's immediate family members, usually a surviving spouse and children, and sometimes parents. Under certain circumstances, unrelated minor children living with and supported by the decedent may also bring a claim for wrongful death. In order to bring a successful wrongful death cause of action, the following elements must be present:
- The death of a human being caused by another's negligent or intentional conduct.
- The survival of family members who are suffering the loss of financial support, love, care, comfort, supervision, guidance, household assistance and general society previously provided by the deceased.
The general rule in wrongful death cases is that one is entitled to recover both economic and non-economic damages which are suffered as a result of the loss of a loved one. Economic damages in a wrongful death case include an award for the financial contributions which the decedent would have made to his or her spouse, children and/or parents had he or she survived. It also includes the recovery for funeral service expenses in memory of the decedent and for burial cost. Non-economic damages include loss of love, society, companionship, comfort, affection, solace or moral support.
Defective Drugs or Products:
The sad truth is that some giant pharmaceutical companies and a handful of medical device manufacturers have put the public at risk by bringing dangerous or defective products to market. A medical product may be considered defective because of a manufacturing or design defect. In addition to design and manufacturing defects, insufficient warning of consumers as to possible side effects can also serve as the basis of litigation for both medical products and drugs.
Often, when a person is injured as a result of medical treatment, the first assumption often is that the physician or other health care provider made a mistake. In many cases, however, it is learned that the doctor did nothing wrong and the injury was caused by a defective or dangerous medication or medical device. In such a case, the claim for injuries should actually be brought against the manufacturer of the drug or device.
Anesthetic Errors:
When you go in to surgery, the last face you usually see is that of the anesthesiologist, who will regulate your consciousness during the operation. The anesthesiologist is responsible for maintaining you in a state somewhere between awake and dead throughout the length of the procedure. Too little anesthesia and you will awake to great pain and panic; too much anesthesia and you will never wake up. When anesthesiologists make errors in administering anesthesia, the results are usually catastrophic, including coma and death.
Wrong Treatment:
The wrong treatment given by a medical professional because of his or her negligence is medical malpractice. The doctor may prescribe the wrong medication for the patient or the incorrect dosage and complications can arise. There are many cases that where the patient had to suffer because of wrong diagnosis and treatment - things such as a left leg being amputated instead of right leg, or wrong kidney operation, wrong eye operation or being treated for flu when it was something else.
Birth Injuries:
Occasionally during the birth process, the baby may suffer a physical injury that is simply the result of being born. This is sometimes called birth trauma or birth injury. One major cause of birth injuries is oxygen deprivation, which commonly occurs when the umbilical cord is compressed and/or twisted in the birth process. The other main cause is mechanical trauma which may occur when the baby assumes an unusual position at the time of birth. Complications in the process of pregnancy, labor and delivery can result in a wide variety of complications for a newborn baby. Birth injuries vary greatly - from very minor to being so severe as to cause the death of the infant.
Some common types of birth injuries include skin irritations; temporary paralysis; fractured collar bone; fractured arm; Cerebral Palsy; brain damage; Erb's Palsy and Brachial Plexus Palsy. The most serious birth injuries involve damage to the infant's brain, causing brain damage, traumatic brain injury, seizures and mental retardation. These brain injuries are caused by oxygen deprivation or bleeding inside the brain from trauma during pregnancy, labor or delivery.
Sometimes the birth injuries are just natural circumstances of delivery but there are also many circumstances where brain damage or brain injuries are caused by mistakes made by doctors, hospitals or other medical professionals during the delivery process.
Failure to Diagnosis:
Failure to diagnose is a term in the medical and legal communities that represents the failure of a medical provider to detect a condition before serious or fatal consequences. In many instances, particularly those involving cancer, early detection is a key element to successful treatment. A missed diagnosis can make treating a disease much more difficult, and in some cases, render successful treatment impossible.
When the failure to diagnose is negligent on the part of the medical provider, if the provider using a reasonable standard of care should have detected the problem sooner, a medical malpractice claim might be appropriate.
These cases are generally traumatic for all involved, the patient as well as the family members who have to try to deal with a future that might have been quite different if only a cancer or another medical condition were diagnosed in time.
Breast Cancer:
Patients may complain of a lump, mass or cyst in one of their breasts during a doctor’s visit, or the physician may notice a lump during an examination. When permitted to grow unimpeded, the cancer spreads and can completely devastate a person's life. Sometimes physicians fail to take such patient complaints seriously or to properly follow up with additional diagnostic tests, including mammograms, sonograms and biopsies.
It is the responsibility of treating physician and technicians to provide adequate medical care for their patients, including correctly interpreting symptoms, ordering follow-up tests in a timely manner and correctly reading test results. The failure to take the proper precautions, and to perform each of the procedures correctly, as other medical personnel would have done, is medical malpractice.
Medication Errors:
Another area of medical malpractice involves the medication and prescription errors doctors, nurses and pharmacists can make. Unfortunately, patients are sometimes given the wrong prescription or dosage, with very serious, often deadly, results.
Medication errors can happen for several reasons, such as the doctor’s illegible handwriting, the pharmacist’s drug dispensing error, the nurse giving the wrong medication or amount, or the doctor not asking all of the pertinent questions while examining the patient. Most commonly, the type of medication error involves not the type, but the does. If the dose is too little, the medication is ineffective. If the does is too much, the medication may have side effects and other consequences.
Also, if a patient is taking more than one medication, it is the healthcare provider’s responsibility to monitor his or her drug intake. A mix of the wrong medications can be fatal in some cases. If a doctor or nurse is especially careless, they won’t test for or ask about allergies, which can lead to serious injury or death.
Nursing Home Neglect:
Nursing home neglect includes medical malpractice and careless treatment leading to broken bones, malnutrition, dehydration, bedsores, bruises and poor hygiene. It can also include the failure to supervise staff and physical or sexual assaults by other residents or staff.
The number of doctors who care for nursing home patients is inadequate. But this does not give doctors and other health care providers the right to ignore or not fully care for nursing home patients. The truth is that a small minority of medical doctors do not provide the same level of care to someone who is elderly and in a nursing home than they would to other patients.
Surgical Errors:
Surgical errors that cause injury may give rise to medical malpractice claims. Surgical errors can result in permanent disfigurement and complications due to post surgical infections. The following are some examples or surgical errors:
- Wrong-site surgery - operating in or on the wrong area of the body.
- Surgical instrument left in the body - retractors, sponges and surgical towels all have been left in patients’ bodies following surgery.
- Misdiagnosis issues, such as surgery unrelated to the patient's correct diagnosis.
- Wrong patient surgery.
Adverse Drug Reactions:
Adverse drug reaction is defined as a medical event caused by a prescription drug which results in a patient's death, hospitalization or disability, or has caused a congenital abnormality, a life-threatening event, or a required intervention to prevent permanent damage. Up to 200,000 patients die every year from adverse drug reactions, according to reports from the Journal of the American Medical Association and the Institute of Medicine. Adverse drug reactions are considered to be the 4th leading cause of death in America, killing more people than pulmonary disease, diabetes, AIDS, pneumonia and automobile deaths.
If you or someone you know in New Hampshire needs the assistance of an experienced Manchester Medical Malpractice Lawyer, call Abramson, Brown & Dugan, P.A. today at 866-774-9646, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your initial consultation.
If you or someone you know in New Hampshire needs the assistance of an experienced Manchester Medical Malpractice Lawyer, call Abramson, Brown & Dugan, P.A. today at 866-774-9646, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your initial consultation.
ADDRESS OF THE FIRM:
Abramson, Brown & Dugan, P.A.
1819 Elm Street
Manchester, NH 03104
Telephone: 866-774-9646
Fax: 603-666-4227
MEMBERS OF THE FIRM:
Holly B. Haines
EDUCATION:
- Franklin Pierce Law Center, J.D., 2000
- Virginia Polytechnic Institute, B.A., 1996
- American Bar Association
- Manchester Bar Association
- New Hampshire Association for Justice
- New Hampshire Women's Bar Association (Board of Directors)
- The American Association for Justice
- American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics
- Medical Malpractice
- Plaintiff's Personal Injury
- New Hampshire
- U.S. District Court, New Hampshire
- Massachusetts
Mark A. Abramson
EDUCATION:
- University of Toledo, J.D., 1975
- Baldwin-Wallace College, B.A., 1971
- Manchester Bar Association
- New Hampshire Bar Association (Member: Medical Malpractice and Products Liability Committee, 1982-83; Ethics Committee, 1988-89)
- American Bar Association
- The Association of Trial Lawyers of America (Sustaining Member, Professional Negligence Section, Birth Trauma Litigation Group)
- New Hampshire Association for Justice (Member, Board of Governors, 1984-87 and 1997-2001)
- New Hampshire
- U.S. District Court, New Hampshire
- Medical Malpractice
- Plaintiff's Personal Injury
Eva H. Bleich
EDUCATION:
- Fairleigh Dickinson University, A.A. Nursing, 1969
- Temple University, BA, Summa Cum Laude, 1970
- Temple University School of Law, J.D., 1983
- Board of Nursing (New Jersey) RN, 1970
- Board of Nursing (Pennsylvania) RN, 1972
- New Hampshire Bar Association
- New Jersey Bar Association
- The American Association for Justice
- The Pennsylvania Association for Justice
- The New Hampshire Association of Justice
- The New Hampshire Women's Bar Association
- Medical Malpractice
- Plaintiff's Personal Injury
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- Pennsylvania
Kevin F. Dugan
EDUCATION:
- Stetson University, J.D., 1985
- Florida State University, B.S., 1981
- Florida Bar
- New Hampshire Bar Association
- Florida Association for Justice
- The American Association for Justice (Sustaining Member, Professional Negligence Section, Birth Trauma Litigation Group)
- New Hampshire Association for Justice (Member, Board of Governors, 1995-; Secretary, 1996-1997; Treasurer, 1997-1998; President-Elect, 1998-1999; President, 1999-2000; Chairman, CLE Committee, 1996-1999; Chairman, Legislative Committee, 2000-; Recipient, Board of Governors, Award, 1997 and 2003)
- Trial Lawyers for Public Justice
- Medical Malpractice
- Plaintiff's Personal Injury
- Florida
- U.S. District Court, Middle District of Florida
- U.S. Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
- U.S. Supreme Court
- New Hampshire and U.S. District Court, District of New Hampshire
Jared R. Green
EDUCATION:
- Franklin Pierce Law Center, J.D., 1993
- Mercy College, B.A., summa cum laude, 1988
- New Hampshire Bar Association
- New Hampshire Association for Justice (Editor, New Hampshire Trial Bar News, 2000-)
- The American Association of Justice
- Medical Malpractice
- Plaintiff's Personal Injury
- Products Liability
- New Hampshire
- U.S. District Court, District of Vermont
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