A surgical error can change your life in an instant. One moment you are trusting a medical team with your care. The next, you are dealing with unexpected complications, additional surgeries, prolonged recovery, or permanent harm -- all because something went wrong in the operating room.
If this has happened to you or someone you love in Connecticut, the decisions you make in the days and weeks following the error will significantly impact your ability to seek justice and fair compensation. This guide walks through exactly what to do, how to preserve your evidence, how the Connecticut legal process works, and what to expect at each stage.
Your health comes first. If you are experiencing complications from a surgical error, seek immediate medical attention. If you have concerns about returning to the surgeon or hospital where the error occurred, you have every right to seek care from a different provider.
Going to a different doctor or hospital is not disloyal, and it is not premature. It is smart. A fresh set of eyes may identify problems that the original surgical team missed or minimized. And the new provider's records will create an independent medical record of your condition -- documentation that can be critical to a later claim.
Start a written log as soon as you are able. Include:
This contemporaneous documentation is powerful evidence. Memories fade over weeks and months, but a written record made in real time is difficult to dispute.
Under both federal law (HIPAA) and Connecticut law (Conn. Gen. Stat. Section 20-7c), you have an absolute right to obtain copies of your medical records. Request records from:
Request the complete record, not a summary. You want operative reports, anesthesia records, nursing notes, pathology reports, imaging studies, and any incident or adverse event reports. Hospitals in Connecticut must provide copies within 30 days of a written request. There may be a reasonable copying fee, but they cannot refuse.
Why request records early? Because medical records can be altered. It is uncommon, but it happens. Requesting your records promptly creates a baseline. If records are later modified, the discrepancy between what you received and what the hospital produces in litigation can itself become evidence of wrongdoing.
After a surgical error, you may be approached by hospital risk management, patient advocates, or insurance representatives. They may ask you to sign documents -- incident reports, satisfaction surveys, or statements about what happened.
Do not sign anything without having it reviewed by an attorney. Some of these documents contain language that could be used against you later. A seemingly innocent "acknowledgment" form could include a release of liability or a statement that undermines your claim.
Similarly, be cautious about recorded statements. If a hospital representative or insurance adjuster asks to record your account of what happened, politely decline until you have spoken with a lawyer.
Defense attorneys routinely monitor plaintiffs' social media accounts. A photograph of you at a family gathering, a post about an activity, or even an optimistic status update can be taken out of context and used to argue that your injuries are not as severe as claimed.
The safest approach is to avoid posting about your health, your medical care, or your daily activities until your case is resolved. Adjust your privacy settings and ask family members to refrain from posting about your condition as well.
Medical malpractice cases are among the most complex areas of personal injury law. They require specialized knowledge of both medicine and Connecticut procedural rules. Consulting an attorney early -- ideally within weeks of the error, not months -- gives you the best chance of building a strong case.
Most medical malpractice attorneys in Connecticut offer free initial consultations. You do not need to commit to anything. You just need to understand your rights and your timeline.
Evidence preservation is not just a legal nicety -- it can make or break your case. Beyond your own documentation, your attorney can take steps to ensure that key evidence is not lost or destroyed.
Preservation letters. Your attorney can send a formal preservation letter to the hospital and surgical team, putting them on notice that they have a legal obligation to preserve all records, communications, and materials related to your surgery. This includes electronic medical records, emails between staff, incident reports, equipment logs, and surgical device tracking records.
Surgical device records. If an implant, tool, or piece of equipment may have malfunctioned during your surgery, the device itself and its maintenance and recall history may be relevant. Your attorney can issue discovery requests to obtain these records.
Witness identification. The operating room during a surgery typically includes the surgeon, an assistant, an anesthesiologist, a nurse anesthetist, a scrub nurse, a circulating nurse, and sometimes additional staff. Identifying these individuals early -- before they change jobs or move out of state -- is critical for depositions and trial testimony.
Every Connecticut medical malpractice case begins with a thorough expert review. Your attorney will send the complete medical records to a qualified medical expert -- a physician or surgeon in the same specialty as the defendant -- for an independent evaluation.
This step is not optional. Connecticut General Statutes Section 52-190a requires that before filing suit, your attorney must obtain a written opinion from a "similar health care provider" stating that there appears to be evidence of medical negligence.
The expert reviews the records and issues an opinion addressing three questions:
If the expert concludes that there is evidence of negligence, your attorney can proceed. If not, the attorney will explain why the case may not be viable -- and that honest assessment, while difficult to hear, can save you years of frustration.
Once the expert opinion is secured, your attorney files the complaint in Connecticut Superior Court along with a certificate of good faith. The complaint names the defendants -- the surgeon, the hospital, the anesthesiologist, and potentially others -- and describes the negligent acts and the resulting harm.
The complaint must be filed within the statute of limitations. For most surgical error cases, that means within two years of the date you discovered (or should have discovered) the injury, with an absolute three-year outer limit from the date of the surgery. Exceptions exist for foreign objects left in the body, minors, and cases involving fraudulent concealment.
After the lawsuit is filed, both sides engage in discovery -- the formal exchange of evidence and information. In a surgical error case, discovery typically involves:
Discovery is typically the longest phase, lasting 12 to 18 months in a straightforward case and potentially longer in complex matters involving multiple defendants or catastrophic injuries.
Connecticut medical malpractice cases require expert testimony at trial. Under Section 52-184c, the standard of care must be established by a "similar health care provider" -- an expert who practices or has recently practiced in the same specialty as the defendant.
Your expert must testify that:
The defense will present their own expert -- typically a surgeon who will testify that the defendant met the standard of care, or that the injury was an unavoidable complication rather than the result of negligence.
The credibility, qualifications, and communication skills of the expert witnesses often determine the outcome of the case. Juries are heavily influenced by which expert they find more persuasive and trustworthy.
The majority of Connecticut medical malpractice cases settle before trial. Settlement negotiations can happen at any point -- sometimes before the lawsuit is even filed, and often intensifying after depositions reveal the strength of each side's position.
Many cases go through court-ordered or voluntary mediation, where a neutral third party helps the parties negotiate a resolution. Mediation is not binding unless both sides agree to a settlement.
If settlement is not reached, the case proceeds to a jury trial in Connecticut Superior Court. Trials typically last one to three weeks. The plaintiff must prove each element of the claim by a preponderance of the evidence -- meaning it is more likely than not that the defendant's negligence caused the harm.
If you prevail in a Connecticut surgical error case, you may recover compensation in several categories.
Economic damages cover quantifiable financial losses:
Non-economic damages compensate for subjective harm:
Punitive damages are theoretically available in Connecticut but are rare in medical malpractice cases. They require proof that the defendant acted with reckless disregard for patient safety -- not mere negligence, but a conscious choice to disregard a known and serious risk.
One important note: Connecticut does not impose a statutory cap on medical malpractice damages. Unlike many states that limit non-economic damages to $250,000 or $500,000, Connecticut allows juries to award what the evidence supports. This means that in cases involving severe, life-altering injuries, Connecticut juries have the ability to fully compensate patients for the harm they suffered.
When a surgical error occurs, the hospital's risk management and legal teams activate immediately -- often before you even know something went wrong. They conduct an internal investigation, preserve relevant records, notify their malpractice insurance carrier, and often retain defense counsel within days.
This means the other side is building their defense while you are still in a hospital bed. That information imbalance is one of the strongest reasons to consult with an attorney as early as possible. You deserve someone advocating for your interests while the hospital is advocating for theirs.
If you or a family member has experienced a surgical error in Connecticut, you do not need to have all the answers right now. You do not need to know whether you have a case, how much it might be worth, or whether you want to go to court. You just need to talk to someone who can evaluate your situation and help you understand your options.
Start with our free assessment -- a Connecticut attorney will review the details of your situation, explain the deadlines that apply, and help you decide on the best path forward. There is no cost, no obligation, and no pressure. Just the information you need to make an informed decision about your future.