Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Personal Injury Lawyers Need to Consider This

A personal injury claim can be a complicated process. A client can present with injuries that seem to have been minor but turned much worse. Under the current conditions of an overloaded, budget-cutting health care system like the one we currently have in Canada, as an attorney, you need to consider the timeline of medical care provided to your client.

It is not unusual for me as a practising RN to hear of patients being delayed care that would have made receovery that much easier and faster. Only ten days ago, I heard from a friend who went to see a physician for a suspected broken ankle. The wait to see a doctor was five hours with no pain relief or comfort measures. He was given a requisition for an x-ray. A full week later, he receives a call to return for a cast... he really does have a broken ankle. The long term consequences of having a fracture in joint that will now not heal properly are immense. Surgeries, physiotherapy, degenerating joint health all that could have been prevented by an immediate diagnosis and treatment with a cast.

Is your client a pharmaceutical firm facing claims about side-effects and adverse reactions involving long-term injuries? Evaluate how quickly the client was seen by a doctor, how soon were they given treatment for the symptoms? Did they spend days in a hallway in a crowded emergency room?

Unfortunately, this is not an unknown story in hospitals and doctors' offices. Perhaps you have more than an injury claim... perhaps you also have a negligence claim against a hospital.

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