When dealing with a medical condition, prompt diagnosis and treatment is often essential to achieve the best outcome for a patient’s health.
If treatment is delayed for any reason, it can have serious consequences, such as making a condition harder to treat, requiring more invasive treatment or even meaning that the condition becomes untreatable.
Where delays in medical treatment are caused by medical negligence (also sometimes referred to as ‘clinical negligence’), compensation may be available for those affected.
When can Delayed Treatment be due to Medical Negligence?
Delays in medical treatment may be due to medical negligence if it can be shown that:
Treatment was started later than it should have been, or not at all, due to errors made in the diagnosis or treatment of a patient.
That those errors were so serious as to breach the duty of care owed to the patient.
The errors made resulted in a worse outcome for the patient’s health (including both their physical and psychological wellbeing).
Medical Negligence might be a factor in medical treatment delays
What are Examples of Medical Negligence regarding Delayed Treatment?
Examples of circumstances where Medical Negligence might be a factor in medical treatment delays include where:
A patient is not tested promptly and appropriately after showing symptoms that a competent clinical professional would be expected to recognise as significant.
Tests are not carried out correctly compromising the results and leading to a delay in diagnosis and treatment.
Test results are lost or not correctly interpreted.
The correct diagnosis is achieved but the appropriate treatment is not started within a reasonable timeframe.