¶ … tort case, I will refer to Matsuyama v Birnbaum, which is a tort case involving wrongful death, with healthcare defendants. This is an interesting case because malpractice suits of various types are one of the causes cited by casual observers as being contributory factors in the high cost of health care in the United States. This case relates to standard of care, wherein the medical practitioner was accused of not delivering an acceptable standard of care, and that this failure was the cause of the deceased's passing. At issue in this case was the use of medical experts to determine whether the physician in the case met the acceptable standard of care. Such standards are used as benchmarks in tort cases involving malpractice, so determining what the acceptable standard of care is a critical issue in any such case. The methodology by which that standard is established was one of the key issues in this case. So the standard of care doctrine is the critical one by which this case was judged, as is common in tort law. One must provide a reasonable standard of care based, which is medicine is based on evidence and past practice. Expert testimony is often used to establish the baseline for what an established standard of care is in a given situation. Recent rulings have shifted somewhat the standard, in that the standard of care now holds that a doctor's negligence cannot reduce someone's chance for recovery, even when the chance initially was relatively low. Traditionally, if a patient had less than 50% chance of recovery, there would not likely be an award, but...
This is known as the loss of chance doctrine, and is now available to be applied to malpractice suits under tort law (Jayasankar & Curi, 2010).Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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