Surgical Errors in New Hampshire
Average Settlement: $500,000 - $1,500,000 | Statute: 3 years from the date of the act or omission
About Surgical Errors
Surgical errors occur when a surgeon or surgical team makes a preventable mistake during an operation, resulting in harm to the patient. These errors range from wrong-site surgery to leaving instruments inside the body, and they can lead to permanent disability, additional surgeries, or death. Surgical malpractice cases often involve clear deviations from accepted medical standards that can be demonstrated through operative reports and expert testimony.
New Hampshire Medical Malpractice Laws
Statute of Limitations
3 years from the date of the act or omission
Damage Cap
No cap on damages
Discovery Rule
New Hampshire applies the discovery rule, beginning the statute when the plaintiff discovers or should have discovered the injury and its causal connection to the treatment.
Pre-Filing Requirements
Plaintiffs must submit claims to a pre-litigation screening panel before filing suit.
Common Examples of Surgical Errors
- •Wrong-site or wrong-patient surgery
- •Surgical instruments or sponges left inside the patient
- •Damage to surrounding organs, nerves, or blood vessels during surgery
- •Performing an unnecessary surgical procedure
- •Inadequate post-operative monitoring leading to complications
- •Failure to obtain proper informed consent before surgery
- •Errors during minimally invasive or robotic surgery due to insufficient training
Key Facts
- ✓Operating room records, including time-stamped logs and surgical checklists, are critical evidence in proving surgical error claims
- ✓Wrong-site surgeries are considered 'never events' — incidents so clearly preventable they should never occur — which strengthens the plaintiff's case considerably
- ✓Expert surgical testimony is almost always required to establish what the accepted standard of care was and how it was breached
- ✓Many surgical error cases involve multiple defendants, including the surgeon, anesthesiologist, surgical nurses, and the hospital itself
- ✓The discovery of retained surgical instruments may not occur until weeks or months after the procedure, but statutes of limitations typically begin at the time of discovery
- ✓New Hampshire requires a mandatory pre-litigation screening panel hearing before filing a medical malpractice suit.
- ✓The screening panel's findings are admissible at trial as evidence.
- ✓New Hampshire follows a modified comparative negligence system with a 51% bar.
- ✓Punitive damages are limited to situations where the defendant's conduct amounts to willful or malicious misconduct.
Victim of Surgical Error in New Hampshire?
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Other Malpractice Types in New Hampshire
This information is for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed medical malpractice attorney in New Hampshire.