Failure to Treat in Georgia
Average Settlement: $250,000 - $750,000 | Statute: 2 years from the date of the negligent act
About Failure to Treat
Failure to treat occurs when a healthcare provider correctly diagnoses a condition but fails to provide appropriate treatment, refer the patient to a specialist, or follow established treatment protocols. This form of malpractice can be particularly frustrating for patients who sought care, received a correct diagnosis, and then experienced harm because the necessary next steps were never taken. These cases often involve systemic issues such as overloaded physicians, poor follow-up systems, or cost-driven treatment decisions.
Georgia Medical Malpractice Laws
Statute of Limitations
2 years from the date of the negligent act
Damage Cap
No cap (caps struck down as unconstitutional in 2010 by the Georgia Supreme Court)
Discovery Rule
Georgia applies a limited discovery rule — the statute may be tolled in cases of foreign objects left in the body, but there is a 5-year statute of repose from the date of the negligent act.
Pre-Filing Requirements
Plaintiffs must file an expert affidavit with the complaint identifying at least one negligent act and the factual basis for each claim.
Common Examples of Failure to Treat
- •Failing to prescribe appropriate medication after diagnosing a treatable condition
- •Not referring a patient to a specialist when the condition requires specialized care
- •Discharging a patient without an adequate treatment or follow-up plan
- •Ignoring or failing to act on abnormal test results that confirm a known diagnosis
- •Failure to provide appropriate post-surgical care or rehabilitation
- •Not ordering necessary follow-up imaging or biopsies after an initial diagnosis
- •Providing treatment that is outdated or inconsistent with current clinical guidelines
Key Facts
- ✓Failure to treat is legally distinct from misdiagnosis — the provider identified the condition correctly but did not act on it appropriately
- ✓Clinical practice guidelines from medical specialty organizations are often introduced as evidence to show what the standard treatment should have been
- ✓These cases frequently involve gaps in care coordination, particularly when multiple providers or healthcare systems are involved in a patient's treatment
- ✓Electronic health records that show a diagnosis was documented but no corresponding treatment plan was entered can be powerful evidence of failure to treat
- ✓Insurance-driven treatment denials may contribute to failure to treat, but the treating physician still has a legal duty to advocate for and pursue medically necessary care
- ✓Expert testimony in these cases typically focuses on what a competent physician in the same specialty would have done after reaching the same diagnosis
- ✓Georgia's $350,000 non-economic damage cap was struck down in Atlanta Oculoplastic Surgery P.C. v. Nestlehutt (2010).
- ✓An expert affidavit must accompany the complaint — failure to file it can result in dismissal.
- ✓Georgia follows a modified comparative negligence standard with a 50% bar.
- ✓Punitive damages are generally capped at $250,000 unless the defendant acted with intent to harm or was under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
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This information is for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed medical malpractice attorney in Georgia.