Undergoing surgery takes trust. You trust that your surgeon, anesthesiologist, and hospital staff will care for you with skill and caution during one of your most vulnerable moments. So when your condition worsens after an operation instead of improving, it’s natural to wonder what went wrong and whether someone made a mistake.
While every surgery carries some inherent risk, certain outcomes shouldn’t even happen when medical professionals follow proper procedures. A 2024 study found that adverse events affect more than one in three surgery patients, with nearly half of these events classified as major and the majority considered potentially preventable. Another study tracking patients across five countries discovered that complications after surgery are associated with a 94% increased risk of death within one year, even after accounting for other health factors.
If a provider’s mistake caused your condition to decline or led to new complications you didn’t have before, you may have grounds for a medical malpractice claim.
The line between an unfortunate outcome and actionable negligence isn’t always clear.
Understanding your legal rights requires knowing what constitutes malpractice, what evidence proves negligence occurred, and what steps protect your ability to seek compensation.
In this article, we’ll discuss when surgical outcomes cross that line from unavoidable risk to negligence, what you’ll need to prove your case, and how to take action if your health declined after surgery.
Yes, you can sue if your worsened condition was caused by medical negligence rather than a known or unavoidable surgical risk. The critical distinction is whether the harm resulted from errors that fell below the accepted standard of care.
Every surgery carries inherent risks that patients accept when they consent to the procedure. Bleeding, infection, scarring, and adverse reactions to anesthesia can occur even when every precaution is taken. These are known complications that don’t automatically indicate malpractice.
However, when healthcare providers make preventable errors or fail to meet professional standards, they can be held legally accountable. But in order to do so, you have to prove the following elements:
Meeting these requires substantial evidence and typically expert medical testimony. Understanding the difference between expected risks and true negligence helps determine whether you have a valid claim.
Not every poor outcome after surgery constitutes malpractice. The law recognizes that medicine involves uncertainty and that even skilled, careful providers can’t guarantee perfect results.
Surgical complications can occur even when doctors do everything right. These are risks inherent to the procedure itself:
Patients typically receive informed consent documents explaining these risks before surgery. Accepting these known risks doesn’t waive your right to sue for negligence, but it does mean complications alone don’t prove malpractice.
Medical negligence, by contrast, occurs when a provider’s mistake or carelessness causes unnecessary and preventable harm:
Hospitals and surgical centers must maintain safe environments and ensure properly trained staff. Systemic failures may point to institutional negligence:
Both individual providers and healthcare institutions can be held liable when their failures cause patient harm.
Building a successful medical malpractice case requires comprehensive evidence that documents both what happened and how it deviated from proper medical care.
Complete medical records form the foundation of every case. These documents tell the story of your care before, during, and after surgery:
Request complete copies of all medical records as soon as you suspect a problem. Healthcare providers must provide these records, though they may charge reasonable copying fees.
Visual documentation can powerfully illustrate the harm you suffered:
Expert witnesses provide the specialized knowledge courts need to evaluate whether care met professional standards. These medical professionals review your case and explain:
Most states require expert testimony in medical malpractice cases because judges and juries lack the medical expertise to independently assess whether care was appropriate.
Evidence of damages shows the full scope of harm you suffered:
The strength of your evidence directly impacts both the likelihood of success and the compensation you may recover.
Time limits on filing lawsuits, called statutes of limitations, vary by state and can be complex in medical malpractice cases. Understanding and meeting these deadlines is critical because missing them typically bars you from recovering any compensation.
Most states give patients between one and three years from the date of the surgical error or from when the injury was discovered to file a medical malpractice lawsuit. California, for example, generally allows one year from discovery or three years from the date of injury, whichever comes first.
Many states recognize that some surgical errors aren’t immediately apparent. A surgical tool left inside the body, nerve damage that develops gradually, or internal scarring causing problems months later may not be obvious right away. The discovery rule allows the statute of limitations to begin when you discovered or reasonably should have discovered the injury, rather than on the date of surgery.
This rule protects patients who couldn’t have known about the harm earlier, but it has limits. Courts expect patients to exercise reasonable diligence in monitoring their health and investigating concerning symptoms.
Some circumstances may extend filing deadlines:
However, even with extensions, waiting too long creates serious risks. Medical records may be destroyed, witnesses become unavailable, and evidence deteriorates.
Consulting a medical malpractice attorney soon after recognizing a problem protects your rights:
Even if you’re uncertain whether you have a case, speaking with a lawyer ensures you don’t forfeit your rights by missing a deadline.
Medical malpractice compensation addresses both the financial costs and personal impacts of negligent care that made your condition worse.
Economic damages compensate for measurable financial losses:
These damages are calculated based on actual bills, pay stubs, expert projections of future costs, and other concrete evidence.
Non-economic damages address intangible but deeply real impacts on your life:
While these damages lack precise monetary values, they represent genuine harm that deserves compensation. Your testimony, along with statements from family members and mental health professionals, helps establish their value.
Punitive damages are rare in medical malpractice cases but may apply in extreme situations involving:
These damages punish particularly egregious conduct and deter similar behavior, but they’re reserved for cases showing more than simple negligence.
Some states impose caps on certain types of compensation. California’s Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA), for example, limits non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases (the original cap of $250,000 has been subject to recent legislative changes that have incrementally increased the cap). Crucially, these caps don’t affect economic damages, which can be substantial in birth injury cases.
Taking the right steps immediately after recognizing a problem protects both your health and your legal rights.
Consult another surgeon or specialist to evaluate your current condition and whether the outcome was preventable. An independent medical assessment provides both the care you need and professional perspective on whether negligence occurred. Be honest about your concerns, good doctors want to help patients harmed by others’ mistakes.
Obtain copies of all medical records related to your surgery and follow-up care as soon as possible. You have a legal right to these documents. Review them carefully for inconsistencies, missing information, or entries suggesting complications weren’t properly addressed. Your attorney will need complete records to evaluate your case.
Keep detailed notes tracking how your condition has worsened:
This documentation creates a timeline showing how your health declined after surgery and contradicts potential claims that problems existed before the procedure.
Don’t discuss fault with hospital staff or the surgeon who performed your procedure. Well-meaning attempts to get answers can be used against you later.
Don’t sign any settlement agreements, releases, or waivers without first consulting an attorney. Healthcare providers and their insurers may try to resolve matters quickly with minimal compensation before you understand the full extent of your injuries.
Consult an attorney experienced in surgical injury cases who can review your situation objectively, connect with medical experts to assess whether negligence occurred, explain your legal options and the strength of your case, and handle all communications with healthcare providers and insurers.
Most medical malpractice attorneys offer free initial consultations and work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless they recover compensation for you.
No one expects to wake up from surgery in worse condition than before.
When medical mistakes turn recovery into a nightmare, the physical pain combines with emotional trauma and financial stress. You trusted healthcare professionals with your wellbeing, and when that trust was violated, you deserve answers and accountability.
Thompson Law’s medical malpractice attorneys help patients uncover what went wrong and pursue full compensation for their injuries. Our team reviews surgical records meticulously, consults with specialists in relevant surgical fields, and fights for justice when negligence leads to lasting harm.
We handle every aspect of the legal process so you can focus on your recovery and regaining as much function as possible.
If your condition worsened after surgery, contact Thompson Law today for a FREE CONSULTATION. Let us help you find the truth about what happened and move forward with the compensation you need and the confidence that comes from holding negligent providers accountable.
Thompson Law charges NO FEE unless we obtain a settlement for your case. We’ve put over $2.1 billion in cash settlements in our clients’ pockets. Contact us today for a free, no-obligation consultation to discuss your accident, get your questions answered, and understand your legal options.
State law limits the time you have to file a claim after an injury accident, so call today.