Misdiagnosis in Tennessee
Average Settlement: $300,000 - $900,000 | Statute: 1 year from the date of the negligent act or omission
About Misdiagnosis
Misdiagnosis occurs when a healthcare provider incorrectly identifies a patient's condition, leading to inappropriate treatment or no treatment at all. This is one of the most common forms of medical malpractice and can result in disease progression, unnecessary procedures, or harmful medications. Cancer misdiagnosis is particularly devastating, as delayed treatment can mean the difference between a curable and terminal prognosis.
Tennessee Medical Malpractice Laws
Statute of Limitations
1 year from the date of the negligent act or omission
Damage Cap
$750,000 non-economic damages ($1,000,000 for catastrophic injuries such as paraplegia, amputation, or severe burns)
Discovery Rule
Tennessee applies the discovery rule, tolling the statute until the injury is discovered or should have been discovered, subject to a 3-year statute of repose.
Pre-Filing Requirements
Plaintiffs must provide 60 days' pre-suit notice and file a certificate of good faith with the complaint, supported by a written expert opinion.
Common Examples of Misdiagnosis
- •Diagnosing a malignant tumor as benign
- •Misidentifying a heart attack as acid reflux or anxiety
- •Confusing symptoms of stroke with migraine or vertigo
- •Incorrectly diagnosing an infection, leading to wrong antibiotic treatment
- •Failing to identify cancer on imaging studies such as mammograms or CT scans
- •Misdiagnosing autoimmune conditions as psychological disorders
Key Facts
- ✓Studies indicate that diagnostic errors affect approximately 12 million adults in the United States each year in outpatient settings
- ✓To prove misdiagnosis, the plaintiff must show that a competent physician in the same specialty would have correctly identified the condition under the same circumstances
- ✓Medical records documenting the patient's reported symptoms, test results, and the physician's reasoning are essential to building a misdiagnosis case
- ✓Misdiagnosis claims often require demonstrating that the correct diagnosis was on the physician's differential diagnosis list but was improperly ruled out
- ✓The damages in misdiagnosis cases are measured by the difference in outcome between what occurred and what would have happened with a timely, correct diagnosis
- ✓Radiology and pathology misreads are among the most clear-cut misdiagnosis cases because the evidence is preserved in images and slides
- ✓Tennessee has a short 1-year statute of limitations but offers a 3-year statute of repose from the date of the negligent act.
- ✓Pre-suit notice of 60 days must be given to the healthcare provider before filing the complaint.
- ✓A certificate of good faith with a supporting written expert opinion must be filed with the complaint.
- ✓Tennessee follows a modified comparative fault system with a 50% bar.
- ✓The non-economic damages cap has a higher tier of $1,000,000 for catastrophic injuries.
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This information is for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed medical malpractice attorney in Tennessee.