There’s an advertisement on the radio which proposes that you must not purchase a home from a cabdriver who tries to take you past the house. The assumption, obviously, is that the cabdriver has little or no understanding of the house or of you. The apparent truth of this straightforward message extends to nearly every facet of our own lives. With that fundamental assumption in mind, I find myself consistently surprised by how frequently someone will likely hire a lawyer to deal with a medical malpractice case (in addition to a number of other kinds of cases) without understanding who the lawyer is; what expertise they might have in the area; what their record of succeeding in the area may be; or, where they stand in the eyes of their peers and opponents.
When someone is injured from medical malpractice, a suit against a physician or health care provider is usually the furthest thing from their head. Issues about one’s well-being; one’s capability to keep working and providing for a family; and, the aptitude recover one’s place as a productive member of society are one of the a lot more pressing problems. It’s generally not until these concerns are dealt with or accepted that individuals even consider whether malpractice may have happened. However, the realization that one’s life changing harm could have been preventable frequently increases the problem of the scenario.
It’s within this emotionally energized and disturbing circumstance the hunt for a medical malpractice lawyer usually starts. Obviously, the majority of individuals have no idea which lawyers concentrate their practice in a particular region or which lawyers occur to focus their practice on the highly specialized and challenging subject of medical malpractice. Most lawyers advertising imply that the lawyer who paid for the advertisement is a specialist in every area of the law including medical malpractice. With the private pressures and with no means to separate out which lawyers actually understand the best way to take care of a medical malpractice case, a lot of people would hire the incorrect attorney.
An additional portion of the problem an injured man deals with when she or he considers a suit is the perceived function of suits in the current society. Suits aren’t and must not be about a „quick buck“ or holding an organization up for a „pay day“.
Medical Malpractice Lawyer Nyc
Ezra B. Glaser
Partner at Conde Glaser LLP
291 Broadway, 17th Floor
New York, New York 10007
Phone: (212) 385-9300
Fax: (347) 282-2296
info@trialattorneysny.com
http://trialattorneysny.com/