Medical Malpractice Wrongful Death Claims in Georgia & South Carolina
When a patient dies due to medical negligence, the family faces not only devastating grief but also the complexity of pursuing a wrongful death claim against healthcare providers and institutions. According to research published by Johns Hopkins University, medical errors are the third leading cause of death in the United States, claiming an estimated 250,000 lives annually. These preventable deaths include fatalities from surgical errors, misdiagnosis, medication mistakes, hospital-acquired infections, and failures of communication among medical teams.
At Roden Law, our medical malpractice wrongful death lawyers represent families across Georgia and South Carolina who have lost loved ones to preventable medical errors. These cases require both medical and legal expertise, and our attorneys work with board-certified medical experts to build compelling cases for accountability and compensation.
Georgia Wrongful Death and Medical Malpractice Requirements
Medical malpractice wrongful death claims in Georgia must comply with two overlapping legal frameworks: the wrongful death statute (O.C.G.A. § 51-4-1 et seq.) and the medical malpractice statute requiring an expert affidavit (O.C.G.A. § 9-11-9.1). The expert affidavit must be filed simultaneously with the complaint and must identify at least one act of negligence committed by each defendant healthcare provider.
Georgia’s statute of repose (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-71) imposes a 5-year outer deadline for medical malpractice claims, running from the date of the negligent act regardless of when the death occurred.
South Carolina Medical Malpractice Death Requirements
South Carolina’s wrongful death statute (S.C. Code § 15-51-10 et seq.) works in conjunction with the medical malpractice pre-suit requirements of S.C. Code § 15-79-125, which requires a Notice of Intent to File Suit accompanied by an expert opinion before a medical malpractice wrongful death lawsuit can proceed.
Common Causes of Medical Malpractice Deaths
Fatal medical errors include:
- Surgical errors — wrong-site surgery, uncontrolled hemorrhage, organ perforation
- Misdiagnosis and delayed diagnosis — allowing treatable conditions to become fatal
- Medication errors — fatal overdoses, allergic reactions, and drug interactions
- Anesthesia errors — oxygen deprivation leading to brain death
- Hospital-acquired infections — MRSA, C. diff, and sepsis progressing to fatal organ failure
- Emergency room negligence — premature discharge, failure to diagnose critical conditions
- Birth injuries — neonatal deaths from preventable delivery complications
Each of these sub-types of medical malpractice requires specialized expert analysis to establish the standard of care, the deviation from that standard, and the causal connection to the patient’s death. Our medical malpractice lawyers have the experience and resources to pursue these complex claims.
Damages in Medical Malpractice Death Cases
Families may recover compensation through both the wrongful death claim and a separate survival action. Wrongful death damages include the full value of the deceased’s life (future earnings and contributions), loss of companionship and consortium, and the family’s mental anguish. The survival action covers the deceased’s pre-death pain and suffering, medical expenses incurred before death, and funeral and burial costs.
Contact Roden Law for a Medical Malpractice Death Case
Medical malpractice death cases have strict procedural requirements and deadlines. Georgia’s 2-year statute of limitations (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33) and 5-year statute of repose, combined with the expert affidavit requirement, make early legal consultation essential. Contact Roden Law for a free, confidential consultation — there is no fee unless we recover compensation for your family.
