Medication Errors in Texas
Average Settlement: $200,000 - $600,000 | Statute: 2 years from the date of the breach or the last date of the relevant course of treatment
About Medication Errors
Medication errors involve mistakes in prescribing, dispensing, or administering drugs that cause harm to the patient. These errors can occur at any stage of the medication process and may involve the wrong drug, wrong dosage, dangerous drug interactions, or failure to account for known patient allergies. Medication errors are among the most preventable forms of medical malpractice and affect millions of patients annually.
Texas Medical Malpractice Laws
Statute of Limitations
2 years from the date of the breach or the last date of the relevant course of treatment
Damage Cap
$250,000 non-economic damages per claimant against physicians and healthcare providers; $250,000 per hospital (up to $500,000 total against hospitals per claimant)
Discovery Rule
Texas applies the discovery rule in limited circumstances but has a strict 10-year statute of repose. The open courts provision of the Texas Constitution may provide relief in some cases.
Pre-Filing Requirements
Plaintiffs must serve an expert report within 120 days of filing the original petition. Failure to do so results in mandatory dismissal with prejudice.
Common Examples of Medication Errors
- •Prescribing a medication to which the patient has a documented allergy
- •Administering the wrong dosage, especially with high-risk drugs like blood thinners or opioids
- •Failing to check for dangerous drug interactions with the patient's current medications
- •Pharmacy dispensing errors, including providing the wrong medication or incorrect strength
- •Medication administration errors in hospitals, such as giving drugs to the wrong patient
- •Failure to monitor patients on medications that require regular blood level checks
Key Facts
- ✓The Institute of Medicine estimates that medication errors harm at least 1.5 million people in the United States each year
- ✓Liability in medication error cases can extend to physicians, pharmacists, nurses, and hospitals depending on where the error occurred
- ✓Electronic prescribing systems and barcode scanning have reduced but not eliminated medication errors in hospital settings
- ✓Cases involving high-alert medications such as anticoagulants, insulin, and chemotherapy agents tend to result in higher damages due to the severity of potential harm
- ✓Pharmacy records, medication administration records (MARs), and electronic health record audit trails are critical evidence in these cases
- ✓Expert testimony often focuses on whether proper safety protocols and verification steps were followed at each stage of the medication process
- ✓Texas's tort reform (HB 4, enacted 2003) significantly reduced medical malpractice filings through strict caps and expert report requirements.
- ✓An expert report must be served within 120 days of filing — failure results in mandatory dismissal with prejudice.
- ✓Texas follows a modified comparative responsibility system with a 51% bar.
- ✓Punitive damages are capped at the greater of $200,000 or two times economic damages plus non-economic damages up to $750,000.
- ✓The Texas Medical Liability Act provides specific procedures and requirements distinct from general tort claims.
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This information is for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed medical malpractice attorney in Texas.