Anesthesia Errors in Maryland
Average Settlement: $400,000 - $1,200,000 | Statute: 3 years from the date of the injury, or 5 years from the date of the negligent act, whichever is earlier
About Anesthesia Errors
Anesthesia errors involve mistakes made before, during, or after the administration of anesthesia that result in patient harm. These errors can lead to devastating consequences including brain damage from oxygen deprivation, awareness during surgery, nerve damage, or death. Because anesthesia involves carefully managing a patient's consciousness and vital functions, even small errors can have catastrophic and irreversible outcomes.
Maryland Medical Malpractice Laws
Statute of Limitations
3 years from the date of the injury, or 5 years from the date of the negligent act, whichever is earlier
Damage Cap
Approximately $890,000 non-economic damages (increases by $15,000 each year; applies per claim regardless of number of defendants)
Discovery Rule
Maryland applies the discovery rule, beginning the statute when the patient discovers or should have discovered the injury, subject to the 5-year statute of repose.
Pre-Filing Requirements
Plaintiffs must file a certificate of qualified expert and an expert report within 90 days of filing the complaint.
Common Examples of Anesthesia Errors
- •Administering too much anesthesia, leading to cardiovascular collapse or brain damage
- •Failure to properly intubate the patient, resulting in oxygen deprivation
- •Inadequate pre-operative evaluation of patient history, allergies, or airway anatomy
- •Failure to monitor vital signs during surgery, including oxygen saturation and blood pressure
- •Anesthesia awareness — patient regains consciousness during surgery but cannot move or communicate
- •Delayed recognition and treatment of malignant hyperthermia
- •Improper placement of regional anesthesia causing nerve damage or paralysis
Key Facts
- ✓Anesthesia errors are relatively rare but disproportionately result in severe injury or death, making them high-value malpractice claims
- ✓Continuous intraoperative monitoring records, including capnography, pulse oximetry, and blood pressure logs, are critical evidence in anesthesia malpractice cases
- ✓The pre-anesthesia evaluation is a key area of scrutiny — failure to identify risk factors such as difficult airway, obesity, or drug allergies can establish negligence
- ✓Anesthesia awareness affects an estimated 1–2 per 1,000 patients under general anesthesia and can cause lasting psychological trauma including post-traumatic stress disorder
- ✓Cases may involve anesthesiologists, nurse anesthetists (CRNAs), or the supervising physician, depending on the care model and state regulations
- ✓Maryland's non-economic damages cap increases by $15,000 each year and applies per claim, not per defendant.
- ✓A certificate of qualified expert and an expert report must be filed within 90 days of filing the complaint.
- ✓Maryland follows a contributory negligence standard — any fault on the plaintiff's part may bar recovery entirely.
- ✓Claims must be filed with the Health Claims Alternative Dispute Resolution Office before proceeding to circuit court.
- ✓Punitive damages require actual malice or conduct so egregious as to amount to malice.
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This information is for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed medical malpractice attorney in Maryland.