DELAYS IN DIAGNOSING SERIOUS INFECTIONS
Pneumonia, Sepsis, Meningitis/Encephalitis, Spinal Abscesses and Endocarditis.

Infections can cause serous damage, including amputation, organ failure, and even death. Diagnosing an infection is a critical part of a doctor’s job and can be done by visualizing the infected part (is it red, swollen, and painful?); considering systemic symptoms such as a fever; and carefully reviewing lab results (for example, a high white-blood count). Early diagnosis of infections is crucial in patients who are diabetic or have a compromised immune system.
One of the most serious infections is sepsis or septicemia, a condition where an infection spreads to the blood stream and can affect the entire body. Diagnosing and treating an infection early can avoid organ failure, loss of limbs, and death resulting from sepsis.
Delays in Diagnosing Serious Infections Practice Areas
Pneumonia Malpractice Claims
Sepsis Claims
Meningitis / Encephalitis Claims
Sharon went to a local emergency room with flank pain. She was diagnosed as having kidney stones and sent home to wait for them to pass. Within 48 hours she returned to the ER with severe pain and a fever. Over the next several hours, the ER providers and doctors at the hospital (where she was admitted) struggled with a diagnosis, but finally concluded she had developed sepsis arising from a blocked ureter from the kidney stone. The lost hours before a definitive diagnosis was made delayed surgery to unblock the ureter, and her sepsis (blood poisoning from infection) became severe.
Sharon required amputations of both legs and both arms from damage caused by the sepsis. The case was complex because of the involvement of numerous physicians as well as the hospital. Eventually, a settlement was reached that will provide adequate care over her lifetime.
Related posts from
The CMG Voice
Doctors who pay the most claims are those who have paid claims in the past
A recent study published by the New England Journal of Medicine found that approximately 1% of all physicians accounted for 32% of paid claims.
The subtlety of blaming the patient in healthcare
Often in my world patients often are explicitly or implicitly blamed for the harm that has happened to them. It is not the provider’s fault
Potentially dangerous fluid used in spine surgeries
Around 40 people were injected with a fluid that was not tested against harmful pathogens at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York City.