Residents in Southfield rely on doctors, nurses, and hospitals for safe and skilled care. When a medical provider fails to meet accepted standards and someone suffers harm, families deal with sudden disruptions in their routines, health, and plans.
A Southfield medical malpractice lawyer can guide you through the legal process while you focus on healing or supporting a loved one. Many people want answers, accountability, and financial support for the losses they carry after medical negligence. A skilled attorney can investigate what went wrong and build a strong claim.
Medical malpractice occurs when a medical provider does not follow accepted medical standards and the patient suffers harm as a result. Michigan law sets out specific legal requirements to prove malpractice and explains what must be shown to hold a provider accountable.
A malpractice claim requires several parts:
The standard of care refers to what a similarly trained professional would have done in the same situation. Surgeons, primary doctors, specialists, and nurses each follow standards based on their field. When a provider’s choices fall below these expectations and the patient suffers harm, malpractice may have occurred.
Not every medical error qualifies as malpractice. Some poor outcomes occur even with proper care. Malpractice involves a provider whose actions fail to meet accepted standards and cause harm. The difference often becomes clear after reviewing records, speaking with experts, and studying how the provider handled the situation.
Medical malpractice can happen in many medical settings. Patients may experience harm during surgeries, emergency room visits, diagnostic evaluations, childbirth, or routine care.

Surgical errors may involve wrong site surgery, leaving tools inside a patient, or causing preventable tissue damage. These mistakes often lead to additional procedures, longer recovery, or lasting health issues.
A correct diagnosis guides treatment. When providers overlook symptoms, misread tests, or fail to order needed screenings, patients may lose valuable time. A delayed diagnosis can allow a condition to worsen and may lead to unnecessary treatment.
Medication errors may occur in pharmacies, hospitals, or doctors’ offices. These mistakes include giving the wrong drug, incorrect dosages, or unsafe drug combinations. Even small errors may cause severe reactions or long-term health problems.
Obstetric providers must monitor both mother and child. Errors during prenatal care or delivery may cause brachial plexus injuries, oxygen deprivation, or avoidable trauma. Some injuries require lifelong care.
Anesthesiologists must track oxygen levels, vital signs, and medication doses. Mistakes such as administering too much anesthesia or failing to monitor changes in the patient’s condition may lead to serious consequences.
Emergency rooms require quick and accurate decisions. When providers fail to diagnose life threatening conditions, misread symptoms, or make poor triage decisions, patients may suffer harm that proper care would have prevented.
Most claims must be filed within two years of the date the provider committed the alleged negligence. If the provider made a surgical mistake on a certain date, you generally have two years from that date to file.
Some injuries appear later. Michigan allows additional time in limited circumstances. When you discover an injury after the event, you may have six months from the date you learned or should have learned about the malpractice.
Michigan’s statute of repose bars most claims filed more than six years after the alleged error. Even if the injury was discovered later, the six year cap usually applies unless fraud or a foreign object left inside the patient is involved.
Children often receive extra time. Michigan typically allows a child until age 10 when the malpractice occurred at a very young age. Incapacitated patients may also receive additional time, depending on when someone steps in to act on their behalf.
Damages in a malpractice case help measure how much the injury affected your life. Michigan divides these damages into several categories. The right categories depend on your situation and the type of harm you experienced.

Economic damages refer to measurable financial losses. These losses may include:
Non-economic damages cover the effects of the injury that do not have a fixed dollar value. Examples include ongoing pain, stress, difficulty enjoying daily activities, and changes in relationships caused by the injury.
Michigan places a cap on non-economic damages. The state adjusts these limits each year. The amount you may receive depends on the severity of the injury and which cap level applies. Economic damages remain uncapped.
When malpractice leads to the loss of a loved one, the family may file a wrongful death claim. Damages may include funeral costs, medical bills before death, and loss of companionship and support.
Michigan relies heavily on expert testimony in malpractice cases. Experts help explain medical standards and describe how the provider’s actions caused harm.
Michigan requires an Affidavit of Merit from a qualified medical expert at the start of a malpractice case. The expert must review the facts and state that the claim has a reasonable basis.
Expert witnesses must work in the same field as the provider accused of malpractice. They must stay current in their profession and meet Michigan’s legal standards for testimony.
Experts explain complex medical concepts, review records, and offer opinions that help support your claim. Their insights strengthen the case by showing what should have happened and how the provider’s choices caused harm.
Michigan requires a formal notice before filing a malpractice lawsuit. This helps both sides prepare early and share required information.
You must send written notice to the provider at least 182 days before filing a lawsuit. This period gives the provider time to review the situation and respond.
The notice must outline:
If your remaining time under the statute of limitations is less than six months, the notice period may shorten to 91 days. Fraud and other special factors may also create exceptions.
Comparative negligence deals with situations where both the patient and provider share responsibility for the harm. Michigan uses a modified comparative fault system.
If your actions contributed to the harm, your recovery may be reduced based on your percentage of fault. For example, missing important follow up appointments may affect the overall outcome.
Actions such as ignoring medical advice or failing to report symptoms may influence how the provider responded. Courts review all relevant behavior when assigning percentages of fault.
Michigan prevents recovery of non-economic damages when the patient holds more than 50 percent of the fault. Economic damages may still be available even when patient fault exceeds 50 percent.
Medical malpractice cases often involve complex science, technical documents, and strong defenses from healthcare providers. These challenges shape how attorneys prepare each claim.
Attorneys must review medical records, diagnostic images, and test results. Understanding these materials helps build a clear timeline of what happened.
Healthcare providers often have strong legal teams and insurance companies supporting them. These groups may argue that the injury came from an unrelated cause or dispute key facts.
Insurance companies sometimes try to reduce payments by questioning symptoms or blaming outside factors. Detailed evidence and expert analysis help counter these tactics.
Malpractice claims require medical experts, document reviews, and testimony. These expenses add to the overall cost of the case. Attorneys prepare thoroughly to support each claim.
Goodman Acker PC supports patients in Southfield who suffered harm because a medical provider did not follow accepted standards. Our team studies your treatment records, speaks with experts, and reviews the timeline of events to understand exactly what happened. We look for the signs of negligence, identify where proper medical care should have looked different, and gather the evidence needed to show how the provider’s actions led to your injury.
We handle communication with healthcare providers and insurance companies so you do not have to deal with those conversations on your own. Our attorneys collect medical records, organize documents, and work with specialists who can explain complex medical issues in simple terms. This helps build a clear case that outlines how the mistake occurred and how it affected your health and daily life.
We also prepare for the possibility that the at fault party refuses to offer a reasonable amount during the negotiation process. When that happens, our team presents your case in court with expert testimony, medical analysis, and strong supporting evidence. Throughout the process, we keep you updated, answer your questions, and help you understand each step so you feel supported and informed.
Yes. You may sue a hospital when staff such as nurses, technicians, or other employees caused the harm. Claims may also involve unsafe practices or the hiring of unqualified staff.
Each case differs based on medical costs, long term effects, time missed from work, and how the injury influences your life. Michigan’s cap on non-economic damages also affects the final outcome.
An admission may help, but evidence remains necessary. Experts and records play a key role in determining what occurred and how it affected you.
Many patients see another doctor to treat the injury caused by malpractice. This visit may also help document what went wrong.
Yes. A consent form does not excuse negligent care. Providers must still follow accepted medical standards.

Medical malpractice cases follow strict time limits, and delays may affect your ability to take action. Goodman Acker PC is ready to review your situation, explain your options, and help you move forward.