Emergency Room Negligence Claims in Georgia & South Carolina
Emergency rooms are high-pressure environments where life-and-death decisions must be made quickly. While the fast pace of ER medicine creates inherent challenges, patients still deserve competent care that meets the accepted standard. When ER doctors, nurses, and staff make negligent errors — misdiagnosing a heart attack, failing to triage a critical patient, or prematurely discharging someone with a serious condition — the consequences can be devastating. According to a study published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, diagnostic errors occur in an estimated 5.7% of emergency department visits, affecting approximately 7.4 million patients annually in the United States.
At Roden Law, our emergency room negligence lawyers represent patients across Georgia and South Carolina who are harmed by ER medical errors. We understand the unique legal and medical complexities of these cases and work with emergency medicine experts to establish the applicable standard of care.
Common Forms of Emergency Room Negligence
ER negligence takes many forms, including:
- Misdiagnosis or failure to diagnose: Missing heart attacks, strokes, appendicitis, pulmonary embolism, or meningitis
- Delayed treatment: Failure to triage critical patients promptly, resulting in deterioration
- Premature discharge: Sending patients home before their condition is properly evaluated or stabilized
- Medication errors: Wrong drugs, wrong doses, or failure to check for allergies and drug interactions
- Failure to order appropriate tests: Not performing CT scans, blood work, or imaging that would reveal a serious condition
- Inadequate follow-up instructions: Failing to advise patients on warning signs requiring return to the ER
ER misdiagnosis is the most frequently cited form of emergency room negligence. Medication errors in the ER are also common due to the chaotic environment and multiple simultaneous patients. When ER negligence results in death, our medical malpractice death lawyers help families pursue wrongful death claims.
EMTALA and the Duty to Screen and Stabilize
The federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) requires all hospitals that participate in Medicare (virtually all hospitals) to provide a medical screening examination to anyone who arrives at the ER and to stabilize emergency medical conditions before discharge or transfer. Violations of EMTALA may give rise to federal claims in addition to state medical malpractice claims.
Georgia & South Carolina ER Malpractice Requirements
Emergency room negligence claims are subject to the same procedural requirements as other medical malpractice cases. Georgia requires an expert affidavit under O.C.G.A. § 9-11-9.1, and South Carolina requires pre-suit notice and expert opinion under S.C. Code § 15-79-125.
An important consideration in ER negligence cases is the question of whether the ER physician is a hospital employee or an independent contractor. Many ERs are staffed by independent physician groups, which can affect hospital liability. Our attorneys investigate the employment structure to identify all liable parties.
The “Emergency” Standard of Care
While ER doctors are held to the standard of a reasonably competent emergency physician under similar circumstances, the emergency context is relevant. Courts recognize that ER physicians must often make rapid decisions with incomplete information. However, this does not excuse failure to order obvious tests, ignoring critical symptoms, or discharging patients without adequate evaluation. Georgia law considers the emergency circumstances but does not lower the fundamental duty of competent care.
Contact Roden Law After ER Negligence
If you or a loved one was harmed by emergency room negligence, contact Roden Law for a free consultation. Time is critical — Georgia’s 5-year statute of repose (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-71) creates an absolute outer deadline for filing. Our attorneys handle ER negligence cases on a contingency basis — no fee unless we win.
