Medical Malpractice News

Five years ago Christina Lane’s water broke and she was brought into the Keystone Women’s Health Center in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania ready to deliver her baby boy. Early tests showed that the baby was healthy and there were no expectations of complications. But during the delivery at the federally subsidized clinic the alleged negligence of Dr. Thomas Orndorf, the attending OB/GYN, changed the lives of Christina Lane’s family forever. After a six-day bench trial, U.S. District Judge Sylvia H. Rambo awarded the baby and his family $42 million, to be paid by the federal government, in a malpractice lawsuit brought by Lane and Nathan Armolt, the child’s father.

According to court documents there was nothing abnormal about the delivery until, after just one push, Dr. Orndorf made a tragic error by using forceps prematurely. Lawyers representing Lane and Armolt claimed that Orndorf first applied the forceps to the infant’s head and pulled once. He then stopped using the aid to extract the baby, but after a few moments he reapplied them and forcefully pulled the baby’s head three more times. He did so even though it was too early in the delivery to use forceps and despite the fact that Lane and the baby’s vitals were normal.

Hours after the baby was delivered it was determined that Lane’s child was suffering from severe intracranial bleeding and skull fractures. Court documents said that the baby had observable markings across his face from the forceps and that Orndorf was “straining, red-faced and sweaty” while delivering the baby. During the trial Orndorf admitted using the forceps and acknowledged that in doing so he increased the risk of injury to both mother and child.

Christina Lane told reporters that she is “happy with the verdict and that the case is finally over.” She went on to say that the family can now “focus on our son” and ensure that “he receives the best care available.”

The injury sustained during delivery caused permanent brain damage and the child, now five-years-old, cannot speak, express himself, and will not be able to read or write. In addition, it is believed that the child will be forced to use a wheelchair for the rest of his life and will potentially need to be institutionalized. The $42 million judgement is believed to be the largest award in the history of Pennsylvania’s Middle District. More than $33 million was set aside for future and past medical expenses, $5 million for pain and suffering, and more than $3.5 million for the loss of future earning and benefits.

Judge Finds PA Doctor Negligent for Infant’s Brain Damage; Awards Family $42 Million
01 may
Judge Finds PA Doctor Negligent for Infant’s Brain Damage; Awards Family $42 Million

Five years ago Christina Lane’s water broke and she was brought into the Keystone Women’s Health Center in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania ready to deliver her baby boy. Early tests showed that the baby was healthy and there were no expectations of complications. But during the delivery at the federally subsidized clinic the alleged negligence of Dr.

Read More
Mob Attacks Hospital in India After Alleged Malpractice Claims Infant’s Life
01 may
Mob Attacks Hospital in India After Alleged Malpractice Claims Infant’s Life

Last week around 30 outraged Kolkata citizens violently attacked a hospital in India after the death of Kuheli Chakraborty, a four-month-old infant. The enraged mob reportedly cracked the glass doors at the entrance of the facility prompting police intervention to break up the protesters. Kuheli’s parents allege that if not for the negligence of doctors

Read More
Paralyzed Woman Awarded Second Largest Medical Malpractice Judgement in Colorado’s History
01 may
Paralyzed Woman Awarded Second Largest Medical Malpractice Judgement in Colorado’s History

In September 2013, Robbin Smith was preparing to travel to what was supposed to be one of the happiest days of her life. It was her son’s wedding that fall. As a chronic pain sufferer, Smith visited the Surgery Center at Lone Tree LLC in Colorado for a consultation, seeking relief. The attending physician recommended

Read More
South Florida Medical Center Found Negligent for Woman’s Fall & Broken Hip
01 may
South Florida Medical Center Found Negligent for Woman’s Fall & Broken Hip

In September 2015, Dolores Moore was brought to the West Boca Medical Center in South Florida where she was found to be suffering from hyponatremia, which is a low sodium level in the blood. Hyponatremia is very common in the United States. There are more than three million cases annually and with treatment the condition

Read More
Ohio Family Sues Over Alleged Negligence that Led to the Death of Michael R. Gillen
01 may
Ohio Family Sues Over Alleged Negligence that Led to the Death of Michael R. Gillen

On a Friday in April 2016, Michael R. Gillen woke up with a fever, a cough, congestion, and an aching body. That night as his symptoms worsened he was brought to the Holzer Clinic, his local medical provider in Ohio. Doctors at the clinic found that he had a temperature of 102.2 and tested him

Read More
Deceased Architect’s Estate Settles for Nearly $1 Million Over Doctor’s Alleged Negligence
19 apr
Deceased Architect’s Estate Settles for Nearly $1 Million Over Doctor’s Alleged Negligence

In the beginning of 2008, Robert Jackson Miller III, an ivy-league graduate and successful architect based out of New York City, went to a dermatology appointment for a routine checkup. He had recently co-founded Miller & Wright Architects and his work had already been featured in Architectural Digest, the New York Times, and the Wall

Read More
Two New Jersey Doctors Found Negligent; Infant’s Family Awarded $45 Million
19 apr
Two New Jersey Doctors Found Negligent; Infant’s Family Awarded $45 Million

After a four-week trial, a New Jersey jury in Gloucester County found that the negligence of two emergency room doctors led to the continued abuse of an infant, who suffered permanent brain damage as a result. The jury awarded the child’s mother $45 million in damages because the doctors failed to diagnose the child’s broken

Read More
Medical Complications Post Heart Operation Cost Actor Bill Paxton His Life
17 apr
Medical Complications Post Heart Operation Cost Actor Bill Paxton His Life

Earlier this year beloved actor Bill Paxton, 61 years-of-age, suffered an aortic aneurysm and had emergency surgery to replace his aortic valve, which pumps blood out from the heart to the body. The procedure is very common and has a high success rate. In fact, just days before Paxton’s surgery, news anchor Charlie Rose had

Read More
Jury Finds Woman’s Brain Damage Caused by Doctors’ Negligence; Awards Family $45,822,677
11 apr
Jury Finds Woman’s Brain Damage Caused by Doctors’ Negligence; Awards Family $45,822,677

On August 22, 2009, Shannon Trabue’s water broke and she was rushed to the Atlanta Women’s Specialists LLC, a Georgia hospital, to deliver her baby. After the successful cesarean section birth of a little girl, Trabue’s doctors found a spike in her blood pressure. Three days later, still under the care of obstetricians Stanley R.

Read More
Jury Awards Nearly $1 Million After Finding that Leg Amputation was Unnecessary
10 apr
Jury Awards Nearly $1 Million After Finding that Leg Amputation was Unnecessary

After taking a nasty fall in August 2011, Tonya Valentine could not walk.  She was then rushed to the emergency room where doctors found that she had badly fractured her ankle during the fall. The fracture was so severe that she required surgery. The procedure appeared to be successful, but her wound would not heal

Read More
Arkansas Doctor & Medical Center Found Negligent for Infant’s Brain Damage;  Family Awarded $46.5 Million
10 apr
Arkansas Doctor & Medical Center Found Negligent for Infant’s Brain Damage; Family Awarded $46.5 Million

After a two-week medical malpractice trial, an Arkansas jury awarded more than $46 million in damages to the family of two-year-old Kara Smalls. The jury found that the brain damage sustained by the toddler could have been avoided if not for the negligence of Dr. Jonathan Lewis and the Ouachita County Medical Center in Camden,

Read More
INOVA Fairfax Hospital Found Negligent for Surgical Fire; Plaintiff Awarded $5.13 Million (but Will Receive Less Than Half)
10 apr
INOVA Fairfax Hospital Found Negligent for Surgical Fire; Plaintiff Awarded $5.13 Million (but Will Receive Less Than Half)

All biopsies can be scary because of the uncertainty of what they may uncover. But the procedure itself is routine and rarely causes any issues. This was not the case, however, for Beverly Wilson, who went in for a biopsy in December 2013 and left with second and third-degree burns to her face, neck, shoulder,

Read More
Phoenix VA Facility Declared Negligent; Cooper Awarded $2.57 Million
30 mar
Phoenix VA Facility Declared Negligent; Cooper Awarded $2.57 Million

During Steven Harold Cooper’s prostate exam at Carl T. Hayden VA Medical Center in December 2011, the nurse who administered the assessment found irregularities. But according to a malpractice lawsuit the nurse failed to order more testing or recommend a specialist. This alleged failure delayed Cooper’s diagnosis by almost a year and, by that time,

Read More
Plaintiff Awarded $13.75 Million;  Seletha Gartell v. Universal Health Services, Inc., dba Aiken Regional Medical Center
30 mar
Plaintiff Awarded $13.75 Million; Seletha Gartell v. Universal Health Services, Inc., dba Aiken Regional Medical Center

  Earlier this month a jury awarded Seletha Gartell $13.75 million in damages over the alleged negligence of her South Carolinian doctors and nurses from more than four years ago. After being rushed to the emergency room for breathing complications on December 6, 2012, Gartell allegedly waited five hours to see a physician. Her lawyers

Read More
South Dakota’s Historic Malpractice Judgement in Danger of Nonpayment
30 mar
South Dakota’s Historic Malpractice Judgement in Danger of Nonpayment

Hudson E. Myers was born with a rare heart condition requiring the replacement of his aortic valve, which is found on the left side of the heart. In 2006, when he was 17-years old, Doctor James H. Oury replaced the aortic valve with his pulmonary valve and replaced that with one from a cadaver. The

Read More
Kevin Clanton vs. United States of America; Plaintiff Awarded $29.6 Million
24 mar
Kevin Clanton vs. United States of America; Plaintiff Awarded $29.6 Million

When Kevin Clanton walked into the Windsor Health Center in June 2008, then just 28-years-old, he could have never anticipated experiencing kidney failure four years later. But after hearing arguments from his lawyers and an attorney representing the federal government, Judge Nancy Rosenstengel ruled that the kidney failure and subsequent transplant could have been avoided

Read More
Debunking Medical Malpractice Fallacies: Three Popular Defense Myths
31 jan
Debunking Medical Malpractice Fallacies: Three Popular Defense Myths

Several myths about medical negligence and malpractice suits have become popular recently, particularly as healthcare and insurance costs continued to be a major focus of economic and political debate.  Below are three of the major myths tort reform proponents use to help push their agenda to limit the ability of injured patients to seek compensation

Read More
The False Hope of Tort Reform: Why this Silver Bullet Misses its Mark
01 oct
The False Hope of Tort Reform: Why this Silver Bullet Misses its Mark

  Proponents push tort reform as a silver bullet that will supposedly reign in medical costs, insurance premiums, and even improve the quality of care by allowing doctors to practice without fear, particularly by decreasing the number of unnecessary tests.  However, the truth is that the impact of medical malpractice suits on health care spending

Read More
Pennsylvania State Supreme Court May Allow ‘Error In Judgment’ In Medical Malpractice Cases
01 oct
Pennsylvania State Supreme Court May Allow ‘Error In Judgment’ In Medical Malpractice Cases

Last week, it was announced that the state Supreme Court of Pennsylvania would discuss whether or not to overturn a law that allows defendants in medical malpractice lawsuits to avoid prosecution based on “error in judgment”. The decision came as Stephen and Nicole Passarello were granted a new trial after their original lawsuit was dismissed

Read More
Hospital Safety Score Developed by Leapfrog Group with Grades A Through F
01 oct
Hospital Safety Score Developed by Leapfrog Group with Grades A Through F

Each year, more than 265,000 people die in the United States from medical accidents. According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC), this is a higher annual death rate than the combined total of stroke and Alzheimer’s deaths. The Leapfrog Group has shown concern for this trend by evaluating the safety of 2,652 hospitals across

Read More
Alabama Man Awarded $5 Million In Medical Malpractice Lawsuit
01 oct
Alabama Man Awarded $5 Million In Medical Malpractice Lawsuit

The son of an Alabama woman who passed away in 2005 from a brain hemorrhage was recently awarded a $5 million judgment after a jury declared that the doctor that had been treating his mother was guilty of negligence. Dr. Frank Gillis had been treating Florine Bryant for atrial fibrillation, which is the most common

Read More
Medical Malpractice Lawsuits Increasing Against New Hampshire Hospital
01 oct
Medical Malpractice Lawsuits Increasing Against New Hampshire Hospital

As many as 24 former patients and one employee of Exeter Hospital in New Hampshire are currently suing or planning to sue the medical treatment facility and its officials for medical malpractice and other charges because they all claim they contracted hepatitis C under the hospital’s care. State officials believe that a greater number of

Read More
New York Medical Malpractice Laws May Discriminate Against Breast Cancer Patients
01 oct
New York Medical Malpractice Laws May Discriminate Against Breast Cancer Patients

Physicians have long recommended that women receive annual mammograms beginning at the age of 40. A mammogram is a diagnostic screening process in which low-energy X-rays are taken of the human breast, male or female. Instances of breast cancer are much more common in women, which is the reason for the annual mammogram recommendation put

Read More
New York City Hospitals Taking Huge Risk Without Medical Malpractice Insurance
01 oct
New York City Hospitals Taking Huge Risk Without Medical Malpractice Insurance

According to a recent article in the New York Times, some of the city’s busiest hospitals are practicing a disturbing new trend when it comes to protecting themselves from mistakes. Many hospitals have reduced the amount of medical malpractice insurance coverage that they pay for, and some facilities are even completely forgoing malpractice insurance. Because

Read More
Jacksonville Man Files Medical Malpractice Lawsuit Over Negligent Cosmetic ‘Mommy Makeover’ Procedure
01 oct
Jacksonville Man Files Medical Malpractice Lawsuit Over Negligent Cosmetic ‘Mommy Makeover’ Procedure

A 38-year old husband and father of two has filed a lawsuit against a Jacksonville area health facility, primary care physician, and plastic surgeon after his 39-year old wife passed away after suffering a blood clot in her lung. According to the Florida Times-Union, David Boon believes that his wife died as the result of

Read More

“Judge Rambo appropriately held the government and Dr. Orndorf responsible for the catastrophic injuries caused to this little boy,” said the family’s attorney. “The court recognized the severity of (the child’s) injuries and awarded what plaintiffs argued was necessary to care for him throughout his lifetime.”