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Thursday, Apr 09, 2026

  • Operating surgeon best judge of procedure- SC quas
  • Chandigarh Doctor Alleges Hospital Forcibly Keepin
  • 36-year-old dies after delivering baby girl in Sal
  • Woman dies during childbirth in Ludhiana, family a
  • Bombay HC refuses to quash criminal proceedings ag
  • IMA, KGMOA condemn attack on gynaecologist at her
  • Madhya Pradesh Horror: Doctor Leaves Surgical Napk
  • Medical negligence: Hyderabad consumer panel asks
  • Surgery delay: WB medical council finds surgeon gu
  • Newborn dies within 3 days of birth; family allege
Thursday, Apr 09, 2026

Latest Medlegal News

  • Operating surgeon best judge of procedure- SC quashes criminal proceedings...

  • Chandigarh Doctor Alleges Hospital Forcibly Keeping All Patients In ICU...

  • 36-year-old dies after delivering baby girl in Salem, hubby claims...

  • Woman dies during childbirth in Ludhiana, family alleges negligence ...

  • Bombay HC refuses to quash criminal proceedings against doctor in...

  • IMA, KGMOA condemn attack on gynaecologist at her clinic in...

  • Madhya Pradesh Horror: Doctor Leaves Surgical Napkin in Female Patient's...

  • Medical negligence: Hyderabad consumer panel asks Ankura Hospital, doctor to...

  • Surgery delay: WB medical council finds surgeon guilty of medical...

  • Newborn dies within 3 days of birth; family alleges negligence...

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Popular Articles

  • A failed knee outcome earned a refund — even without proven surgical negligence
  • A few stones left behind, but no fault found in laparoscopic surgery
  • Biopsy delayed — But for the patient’s safety, not out of negligence
  • Blood mismatch in this case wasn’t ruled as a mistake. Here’s why…
  • Aggressive AML care upheld as within standard protocol
  • 2D imaging limits accepted — Complaint dismissed
  • Care beyond cure: The responsibility to suspect
  • Complaint Number 20. But This One Didn’t Work Either.
  • Admission. Delay. Discharge. Death.
  • From deferred surgery to ICU: No Negligence, rules Commission
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A few stones left behind, but no fault found in laparoscopic surgery

Issue - March - 2026, Posted On:  March 01, 2026

The case concerned a patient who underwent laparoscopic surgery for removal of a large kidney stone detected on imaging. Following admission and surgery, the discharge summary recorded that the stones had been removed. However, subsequent imaging showed that a smaller residual stone remained. The patient continued to experience discomfort and, over time, required further treatment at another medical centre. Alleging that the surgery had been incomplete and that the discharge summary was misleading, the patient approached the consumer forum claiming medical negligence and deficiency in service.

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Failure to identify a bowel injury turned postnatal care into prolonged medical negligence

Issue - March - 2026, Posted On:  March 01, 2026

A woman was admitted for her second delivery and underwent a caesarean section along with sterilisation. She was discharged after surgery, but from the very beginning complained of persistent abdominal pain and discomfort at the surgical site. These complaints were repeatedly downplayed as routine post-operative symptoms, and she was reassured with pain medication and advice for rest.

Over the following weeks, her condition worsened. Fever developed, pain persisted, and discharge appeared at the surgical wound. Despite multiple consultations, the treating doctor continued to attribute the symptoms to minor infection or urinary issues, prescribing medicines and advising bed rest. Even when the patient was readmitted, the focus remained on wound care and drainage, without identifying the underlying cause.

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Manipulated records and missed CT scan seal negligence in nasal surgery case

Issue - March - 2026, Posted On:  March 01, 2026

A young patient approached a tertiary care hospital with long-standing unilateral nasal obstruction and discharge. After a brief clinical examination, the treating ENT surgeon diagnosed a nasal polyp and advised surgical removal, assuring the patient and family that it was a routine, low-risk procedure. The surgery was performed the very next day.

What followed immediately after the operation, however, was anything but routine. The patient developed severe and persistent headaches within hours. A CT scan conducted post-operatively revealed subarachnoid haemorrhage — a serious intracranial bleed. Despite this finding, the patient continued to be managed conservatively at the same hospital over the next several days, with repeated scans showing no meaningful improvement. It was only later, after an MRI was obtained elsewhere, that a skull-base defect with herniation of brain tissue into the nasal cavity was identified, necessitating neurosurgical intervention at another centre.

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No expert evidence, no negligence — The eye injury couldn’t be traced to the surgeon’s act

Issue - March - 2026, Posted On:  March 01, 2026

A patient with long-standing sinus complaints underwent surgery after clinical evaluation and investigations suggested chronic maxillary sinus disease. The procedure was carried out with consent, and no immediate intra-operative complication was recorded.

Soon after surgery, the patient developed swelling around one eye along with restricted eyelid and eyeball movement. When the condition failed to improve, the patient was referred to a higher centre, where CT imaging showed post-surgical bony defects in the sinus with air tracking into the orbital region. Over time, the affected eye suffered permanent damage.

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Patient died in the ICU, but the bills kept him alive for four more days – Hospital held liable

Issue - March - 2026, Posted On:  March 01, 2026

A critically injured patient was shifted to a super-specialty hospital after a road accident and placed under intensive neuro-care. Over the next few days, the treating team continued ventilatory support and ICU management, repeatedly informing the family that the patient remained critical but alive. Treatment charges continued to be raised and collected during this period.

The controversy arose after the patient was formally declared dead and the body sent for post-mortem. The post-mortem report recorded findings suggesting that death had occurred much earlier than the time disclosed by the hospital. Indicators such as advanced post-mortem changes and absence of rigor mortis were inconsistent with the hospital’s claim that death occurred only shortly before examination.

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Proper surgery overshadowed by careless handover of biopsy sample and delayed referral

Issue - March - 2026, Posted On:  March 01, 2026

A patient was admitted with abdominal pain and diagnosed with gallbladder stones. Surgery to remove the gallbladder was performed without complication, and the patient was discharged with post-operative advice. On the face of it, the surgical intervention itself raised no red flags. The trouble began after discharge.

As per standard protocol, the removed gallbladder should have been immediately preserved and sent for histopathological examination. Instead, the specimen was allowed to leave the hospital with the patient and reached the diagnostic centre much later. When the report eventually confirmed gallbladder cancer, valuable time had already been lost.

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Surgery halted mid-way — Court backs clinical judgment

Issue - March - 2026, Posted On:  March 01, 2026

The case arose from a complex brain surgery planned after imaging revealed a sizeable tumour compressing critical structures. The patient was admitted, investigations were completed, consent was taken after explaining risks, and surgery was undertaken by a specialised team. During the operation, the surgeons encountered severe swelling in the brain tissue. Continuing the procedure any further, they recorded, would have risked catastrophic injury or even death. The operation was therefore consciously abandoned after partial tumour removal, with clear documentation noting the reason for stopping and advising further reassessment at a later stage.

After discharge, follow-up imaging showed that a significant portion of the tumour remained. The patient subsequently underwent another surgery at a different centre and then approached the consumer forum alleging that the first surgery was either ineffective or falsely projected as successful. It was claimed that stating “partial removal” amounted to misrepresentation and that abandoning the procedure itself reflected medical negligence.

Read More

Popular Articles

  • Delayed complication does not imply delayed care
  • A heart attack — without cardiac evidence
  • A failed knee outcome earned a refund — even without proven surgical negligence
  • A few stones left behind, but no fault found in laparoscopic surgery
  • Biopsy delayed — But for the patient’s safety, not out of negligence
  • Blood mismatch in this case wasn’t ruled as a mistake. Here’s why…
  • Aggressive AML care upheld as within standard protocol
  • 2D imaging limits accepted — Complaint dismissed
  • Care beyond cure: The responsibility to suspect
  • A Risky Implant. A Fatal Outcome.

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Latest Medlegal News

  • Operating surgeon best judge of procedure- SC...
  • Chandigarh Doctor Alleges Hospital Forcibly Keeping All...
  • 36-year-old dies after delivering baby girl in...
  • Woman dies during childbirth in Ludhiana, family...
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