What Is Medical Malpractice?
Medical malpractice occurs when a doctor, nurse, hospital, or other healthcare provider fails to deliver the level of care that a reasonably competent professional would have provided under the same circumstances—and that failure causes harm to a patient. In legal terms, this is known as a breach of the “standard of care.”
It’s important to understand the distinction between a bad outcome and actual malpractice. Medicine is not perfect, and not every negative result means something went wrong legally. Sometimes patients suffer complications or unexpected outcomes despite receiving excellent care. What matters in a malpractice case is whether the provider’s actions—or failure to act—fell below the accepted standard of care, and whether that failure caused the patient’s injury.
Medical malpractice cases are among the most complex in personal injury law. They require thorough investigation, extensive review of medical records, and expert testimony from qualified medical professionals. That’s why it’s critical to have an experienced, tenacious legal team in your corner from the start.
Common Types of Medical Malpractice
Our firm handles a broad range of medical malpractice claims for clients across Arkansas, southern Missouri, and eastern Oklahoma, including:
Surgical Errors
Mistakes made in the operating room can have life-altering consequences. Surgical errors include operating on the wrong body part or patient, leaving instruments or sponges inside the body, damaging nearby nerves or organs, performing unnecessary procedures, or making critical mistakes during the procedure. These errors are almost always preventable and represent a serious failure of the standard of care.
Misdiagnosis and Delayed Diagnosis
When a doctor fails to correctly identify a condition—or takes too long to do so—a patient may miss the window for effective treatment. Cancers, strokes, heart attacks, infections, and blood clots are among the conditions most often misdiagnosed or diagnosed too late. In many of these cases, an earlier or accurate diagnosis could have prevented serious injury or death.
Prescription and Medication Errors
Medication mistakes can happen at multiple stages—from the prescribing physician to the dispensing pharmacist. Common errors include prescribing the wrong drug or dosage, failing to account for dangerous drug interactions, administering medication to a patient with a known allergy, or failing to properly monitor the effects of a medication over time. The consequences can range from a worsening condition to a fatal overdose.
Anesthesia Errors
Anesthesia requires precise administration and close monitoring throughout a procedure. Errors include administering too much or too little anesthesia, failing to properly intubate a patient, neglecting to monitor vital signs, or failing to account for a patient’s medical history or known drug reactions. Even a brief lapse in attention can result in brain damage, stroke, or death.
Emergency Room Errors
Emergency rooms are high-pressure environments where fast, accurate decision-making is necessary to ensure patient well-being. Some of the most serious ER errors include failing to recognize the signs of a heart attack, stroke, or appendicitis; misreading test results or imaging; discharging patients too soon; or failing to order the diagnostic tests needed to identify a serious condition. When emergency providers miss the mark, the results can be catastrophic.
Hospital Negligence
Hospital administration has an obligation to maintain a safe, properly staffed, and competently operated facility. Hospital negligence can include failing to verify staff credentials, inadequate supervision of medical personnel, understaffing that leads to patient neglect, failure to follow infection control protocols, and failure to carry out physician orders in a timely manner. Hospitals can be held directly liable for the failures of their staff and systems.
Birth Injuries
Birth injuries often result from errors made during labor and delivery, including failing to monitor fetal distress, improper use of delivery instruments such as forceps or vacuum extractors, delays in ordering a necessary C-section, and mismanagement of complications like umbilical cord prolapse or placental abruption. These injuries often lead to lifelong impairments, including cerebral palsy, Erb’s palsy, brain damage, and other serious developmental disabilities.
Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect
Nursing home residents are among the most vulnerable patients in the healthcare system, and they deserve high-quality care. Unfortunately, abuse and neglect are far too common in long-term care facilities, often driven by understaffing, inadequate training, and facilities prioritizing profits over people. Nursing home malpractice can involve physical abuse, medication errors, pressure sores left untreated, malnutrition and dehydration, falls due to lack of supervision, delayed treatment of serious conditions, and failure to respond to signs of infection or medical deterioration.
The Consequences of Medical Malpractice
Medical malpractice doesn’t just cause physical harm—it can reshape every aspect of a patient’s life. The injuries sustained as a result of a provider’s negligence may range from temporary setbacks to permanent, life-altering disabilities. Among the most serious consequences our clients have faced:
- Permanent disability or loss of function requiring long-term care
- Worsening of an underlying condition due to delayed or incorrect treatment
- Chronic pain, reduced mobility, and diminished quality of life
- Traumatic brain injury or neurological damage
- Wrongful death, leaving families without a spouse, parent, or child
- Significant psychological harm, including depression, anxiety, and PTSD
- Mounting medical bills, lost income, and reduced earning capacity for years to come
These losses are real, and they deserve real accountability. Our Arkansas medical malpractice lawyers are committed to aggressively pursuing every dollar of compensation you are owed so you can focus on what matters most: healing and rebuilding your life.
Who Can Be Held Responsible for Medical Malpractice?
In a medical malpractice case, liability is not always limited to one individual. Depending on the circumstances, multiple parties may share responsibility for the harm caused to a patient, including:
- Physicians, surgeons, and specialists who provided negligent care
- Nurses and nursing staff who failed to monitor, communicate, or respond appropriately
- Anesthesiologists who administered or managed anesthesia incorrectly
- Hospitals and health systems that failed to maintain safe staffing, policies, or oversight
- Pharmacists who dispensed the wrong medication or missed a dangerous interaction
- Nursing home facilities and their staff who failed to meet the standard of care for residents
- Medical device or pharmaceutical manufacturers, in cases involving defective products or dangerous drugs
At Caddell Reynolds, we leave no stone unturned. We conduct thorough independent investigations to identify every responsible individual and entity and maximize your pathways to compensation.
Medical Malpractice Laws in Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma
Medical malpractice laws vary significantly across Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma, with different filing deadlines, damages caps, and procedural requirements that can make or break your case depending on where your injury occurred.
Arkansas Med Mal Laws
Statute of Limitations: Two years from the date of the negligent act. Arkansas sets the clock from the date the malpractice occurred—not from when you discovered it—so time is of the essence.
Discovery Rule Exception:Â If a foreign object, such as a surgical instrument or sponge, was left in your body and could not reasonably have been discovered within two years, you have one year from the date of discovery to file.
Minors:Â If the injured patient was nine years old or younger at the time of the malpractice, they have until their 11th birthday or two years from the date of injury, whichever is later. If the injury could not reasonably have been discovered before the child’s 11th birthday, the deadline extends to two years after discovery, but no later than the child’s 19th birthday.
Damages Caps: Arkansas does not cap compensatory damages in medical malpractice cases—meaning a jury can award the full amount needed to compensate for your losses. Punitive damages are capped at the greater of $250,000 or three times compensatory damages, up to $1 million.
Expert Witnesses:Â In most Arkansas malpractice cases, expert testimony is required to establish the appropriate standard of care and how it was breached.
Missouri Med Mal Laws
Statute of Limitations:Â Two years from the date of the negligent act. Missouri also has a statute of repose, meaning no claim can be filed more than 10 years after the medical error, regardless of when the injury was discovered.
Discovery Rule Exception:Â Applies in cases involving a foreign object left in the body or failure to inform a patient of test results. The two-year clock runs from the date of discovery in those situations, subject to the 10-year repose period.
Minors:Â Patients who were under 18 at the time of the malpractice have until their 20th birthday to file a claim.
Damages Caps:Â Missouri caps non-economic damages such as pain and suffering in medical malpractice cases. The 2025 cap is approximately $475,000 for most injuries and $825,000 for catastrophic injuries and deaths, with annual adjustments. Economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages are not capped.
Healthcare Affidavit Requirement:Â Missouri requires plaintiffs to file an affidavit from a qualified healthcare expert within 90 days of filing suit, confirming that the provider’s conduct fell below the standard of care. Failure to file this affidavit in time will likely result in the case being dismissed.
Expert Witnesses:Â Expert witnesses must be licensed in Missouri or another state in the same specialty as the defendant and must be actively practicing or within five years of retirement.
Oklahoma Med Mal Laws
Statute of Limitations: Two years from the date the patient knew or reasonably should have known that an injury was caused by medical negligence. Oklahoma applies the discovery rule broadly, meaning the clock may not start until the harm becomes apparent—but there is generally a maximum of four years from the date of the alleged malpractice.
Minors:Â If a child under 12 was injured, parents have seven years from the injury date to file. If the child was 12 or older, the standard two-year window applies. Once the child turns 18, they have one year to file independently if no lawsuit has been filed on their behalf.
Damages Caps:Â Oklahoma previously capped non-economic damages at $350,000, but the Oklahoma Supreme Court struck down that cap as unconstitutional in 2019. There are currently no limits on non-economic damages in Oklahoma medical malpractice cases. Economic damages have never been capped.
Expert Witnesses:Â Expert testimony is required in virtually all Oklahoma medical malpractice cases. The expert must be a qualified healthcare professional with relevant knowledge and experience in the same field as the defendant.
The deadlines to file a medical malpractice claim are strictly enforced in all three of the states we serve. Waiting too long to contact an attorney can severely limit your options. Even if you’re not certain whether you have a case, reaching out sooner gives our Arkansas medical malpractice attorneys more time to investigate, gather evidence, and build the strongest possible claim on your behalf.
How Our Medical Malpractice Lawyers Can Help
A serious medical malpractice case demands more than a general personal injury lawyer. It requires a team that understands the healthcare sector, knows how to challenge powerful institutions, and has the resources to take a complex case all the way to trial if necessary.
So what can you expect if you hire our Arkansas medical malpractice attorneys?
- A thorough independent investigation of what happened and why.
- Obtain and analyze medical records, imaging, test results, and treatment histories.
- Work with qualified medical experts to establish the standard of care and how it was breached.
- Identify all parties who may share responsibility for your harm.
- Handle all communications with hospitals, providers, and insurance companies.
- Calculate the full value of your claim—including future medical costs, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, and long-term care needs.
- Counter any attempts by insurance companies to minimize your injuries or shift blame to you.
- Prepare your case for trial if the other side refuses to offer fair compensation.
You and your family have been through enough. Call 800-671-4100 or contact us online to schedule a free consultation with our Arkansas medical malpractice lawyers and learn how we can help. We’re available 24/7—including evenings and weekends—and we’re ready to listen.
Read More: What Compensation Can You Seek In a Medical Malpractice Lawsuit?