Roden Law represents patients harmed by medical negligence in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina and throughout the Grand Strand — Murrells Inlet, Conway, Surfside Beach, Pawleys Island, and Georgetown. We handle every medical malpractice claim on a contingency fee basis: you pay nothing unless we win. Roden Law has recovered more than $300 million for injured clients across Georgia and South Carolina and holds a 4.9-star average from hundreds of client reviews. Call (843) 612-1980 for a free, confidential case review.
Why Choose Roden Law for a Myrtle Beach Medical Malpractice Claim
Medical malpractice is the most technical and heavily defended type of injury case in South Carolina — hospitals and their insurers retain specialized defense counsel and expert physicians from day one. What separates Roden Law is direct attorney involvement paired with the medical experts needed to prove a departure from the standard of care. We serve the Grand Strand from Murrells Inlet through Georgetown, and Horry County cases are filed at the courthouse in Conway — so investigation, records review, and filings happen without the delay of running a coastal case from a distant office.
- No fee unless we win — free consultation and no out-of-pocket cost to investigate your claim.
- Medical experts on every case — South Carolina requires an expert affidavit before suit, and we build that proof from the outset.
- Trial-ready — we prepare every claim for the Horry County courts in Conway, which is what moves hospital insurers to pay full value.
Grand Strand Medical Malpractice Cases We Handle
Grand Strand patients are served by Grand Strand Medical Center and the region’s Horry and Georgetown County hospitals, and the cases our attorneys see most often include:
- Surgical errors and anesthesia mistakes at Grand Strand Medical Center and neighboring coastal hospitals.
- Misdiagnosis and delayed diagnosis — cancer, stroke, heart attack, and infection missed or read too late.
- Emergency-room negligence — a particular concern in a tourism region where seasonal patient volume strains ERs.
- Birth injuries — oxygen deprivation, improper delivery, and maternal-care failures.
- Medication and hospital-acquired-infection claims — wrong drug or dose and preventable post-operative infections.
South Carolina Medical Malpractice Law: What Grand Strand Patients Need to Know
You Must File a Notice of Intent and Expert Affidavit First
Before you can sue for medical malpractice in South Carolina, you must file a Notice of Intent to File Suit accompanied by an expert affidavit under S.C. Code § 15-79-125, and the parties must complete a pre-suit mediation period before litigation begins. This expert requirement is why choosing an experienced malpractice firm early matters — the medical proof has to be in place before the case can even start.
The Deadline: 3 Years, Capped by a 6-Year Repose
The statute of limitations is generally three years from the date you discovered (or should have discovered) the injury, but no later than six years from the negligent act under S.C. Code § 15-3-545. A retained foreign object has its own two-year-from-discovery rule. These overlapping deadlines make prompt review essential.
South Carolina Caps Non-Economic Damages in Med-Mal
Unlike ordinary injury cases, South Carolina caps non-economic damages (pain and suffering) in medical malpractice under S.C. Code § 15-32-220 — roughly $596,001 per provider or institution and about $1,788,003 in aggregate as of 2026, adjusted annually for inflation. Economic damages — medical bills, lost earnings, and future care — are not capped, and the cap can be lifted entirely where the conduct was grossly negligent, reckless, or willful.
