When a Misdiagnosis May Be Malpractice
- Failure to order or interpret tests: Ignoring red flags, misreading imaging/labs, or mixing up patient results.
- Not taking a proper history or exam: Overlooking key symptoms or risk factors.
- No differential diagnosis: Not considering common, dangerous alternatives that should be ruled out.
- Delay in diagnosis: Waiting too long to test, refer, or treat, worsening the outcome.
Commonly Misdiagnosed Conditions
- Cancer (e.g., breast, colorectal, lung)
- Heart attack, clogged arteries, or other cardiac disease
- Stroke, infections (e.g., sepsis, meningitis), and tumors
What You Must Prove (Texas)
- Duty/Standard of care: What a reasonably prudent provider would have done.
- Breach: The provider fell below that standard (e.g., missed obvious signs).
- Causation: The misdiagnosis or delay caused a worse outcome.
- Damages: Physical, financial, or other losses (e.g., additional treatment, lost income).
Texas deadlines are strict. Malpractice claims have tight filing timelines and expert-report requirements. If you suspect a harmful misdiagnosis, speak with an attorney promptly.
Free case review: Call the Dallas medical malpractice lawyers at Rasansky | McKenzie Law at (214) 367-6793.