| You're Loved One's Died-
You Suspect Foul Play
By
Gerry
Oginski
Death- Who said it's a natural part of life?
Whoever said it might be right, but when you're at the
hospital and the emergency room doctor tells you your 50
year-old husband just died after collapsing at work, you want
answers.
An autopsy investigation reveals that your husband had a
leaking aortic aneurysm (a weakened blood vessel) that ruptured.
You remember that your husaband had complained of increasing
back pain for the last few weeks, and a visit to his primary
care doctor resulted in a prescription only for muscle
relaxants. You then learn that if your husband had the aneurysm
detected, it could have been treated electively, and he'd have
lived a long healthy life. Now you want even more answers.
Doing nothing simply causes the unanswered questions to
linger, fester and build steam. Family members often point a
finger at those close to the victim. The guilt surfaces rapidly.
"Why didn't you do more to help?" "Why didn't you make him go to
the doctor again?" "Why didn't you take him to the hospital?"
When a family member dies unrelated to any accident, we all
want to know, why? Since we can't look into a body and determine
what was the cause of death, we look to doctors who perform an
examination of the body after death. This is called an autopsy.
These doctors are called pathologists, or medical examiners.
The doctor literally opens up and looks inside and
investigates. The medical examiner is supposed to look at each
of our body systems, circulation (heart, arteries, veins),
respiration (lungs, mouth, trachea), renal (kidneys, ureters,
urethra)...literally all of our internal organs and our external
organs.
By the end of the examination, the doctor reaches conclusions
about the cause of death. Since we are a generally litigious
society, many medical examiners are mindful of being blunt and
pointing fingers at a culprit who may have caused a person's
death. However, in their own subtle way, a medical examiner can
and often indicates the precise reason for your loved one's
death.
Once you know why your loved one died, it is often possible
to work backwards and review his condition in the weeks and
months leading up to his death. Medical records are invaluable,
as are doctor visits made close in time to the death. The
questions that a good medical malpractice lawyer always wants to
know are:
(1)Was there wrongdoing or a misdiagnosis that should have
been detected? (2) Did the wrongdoing or misdiagnosis cause or
contribute to the death?
Finally, a good lawyer wants to know, If the condition had
been detected and treated earlier, would the outcome be
different? Would the death have been preventable?
If the answer is 'yes' to each of these questions, then it
sounds as if you'd have a valid case in the State of New York.
How do we know if the answer to each would be 'yes'? We have to
hire a medical expert to review all of your loved one's records.
A medical expert needs to put all the pieces of the puzzle
together to answer all of your "WHY" questions. Hospital
records, doctors visits, interviews with family members, and the
autopsy report are all part of the puzzle.
Sitting around doing nothing solves nothing. Getting answers
when your loved one dies is crucial- especially when you suspect
foul play or wrongdoing.
Attorney Oginski has been in practice for over 17 years as a
trial lawyer practicing exclusively in the State of New York.
Having his own law firm, he is able to provide the utmost in
personalized, individualized attention to each and every client.
In our office, a client is not a file number. Client's are
always treated with the respect they deserve and expect from a
professional. Mr. Oginski is always aware of every aspect of a
client's case from start to finish.
Gerry represents injured people in injury cases and medical
malpractice matters in Brooklyn, Queens, New York City, the
Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau and Suffolk Counties. You can reach
him at
http://www.oginski-law.com, or 516-487-8207. All inquiries
are free and totally confidential.
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