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Chicago Medical Malpractice Attorney

Doctor-Attorney Handling Medical Malpractice Lawsuits in Chicago

Chicago is home to world-class teaching hospitals like Northwestern Memorial and Rush University Medical Center, yet serious preventable mistakes still harm patients every day. The World Health Organization estimates that one in ten people worldwide is injured while receiving medical treatment, and half of that harm could be avoided with proper safeguards (WHO Patient-Safety Fact Sheet). If you or someone you love suffered an injury in a Chicago hospital, clinic, or surgery center, you deserve answers and compensation. Janda Law Firm can help you secure both. Dr. Janda is a licensed physician and a seasoned personal-injury trial lawyer, giving you medical insight and litigation firepower in one advisor.

Why Choose Janda Law Firm for Your Medical Malpractice Case?

Many firms handle injury claims, but few bring a dual M.D./J.D. perspective to the table. Because Dr. Janda has practiced medicine, he can read charts without relying solely on outside experts, spot breaches in the standard of care quickly, and question opposing witnesses with clinical precision. That depth translates into stronger expert affidavits, sharper cross-examinations, and settlement offers that reflect the true cost of lifelong care. The firm’s track record speaks for itself—over $100 million recovered for malpractice victims and a 98 percent success rate in negotiated settlements.

What Counts as Medical Malpractice in Chicago?

Illinois law defines malpractice as a health-care provider’s failure to act with the same skill and diligence that a reasonably careful professional would use in similar circumstances. Plaintiffs must prove duty, breach, causation, and damages. The duty element is rarely disputed; once a hospital admits you through its emergency room on Erie Street or a doctor treats you in a private office in Oak Park, a professional relationship exists. Breach is established with expert testimony showing how the provider deviated from accepted practice. Causation links that breach to a specific injury—such as a stroke after a missed hypertension diagnosis. Damages capture everything from added surgeries to lost wages at a Loop tech job.

Common Types of Medical Negligence Our Clients Face

  • Misdiagnosed or delayed diagnosis of heart attack, stroke, or cancer
  • Surgical errors, including retained foreign objects and wrong-site procedures
  • Anesthesia mistakes that cause brain injury or death
  • Medication errors—overdoses, contraindicated drugs, and pharmacy mix-ups
  • Birth injuries such as cerebral palsy from delayed C-section

The National Practitioner Data Bank’s 2025 public file lists 434 Illinois malpractice payment reports in 2024, with payouts topping $283.5 million and an average of $650,000 per claim (NPDB 2025 PUF; ConsumerShield 2025 analysis). Those figures underscore just how frequently things go wrong—even in top-ranked facilities.

Illinois Deadlines and Patient Rights

The statute of limitations for medical malpractice appears in 735 ILCS 5/13-212. Adults generally have two years from the date they knew or should have known of the injury, and no more than four years from the negligent act itself. Minors may file up to eight years after the event but no later than age 22. Missing these cut-offs can forever bar recovery, so act quickly if you suspect negligence.

If the Hospital Hides Records, What Can You Do?

Illinois allows injured patients to subpoena complete electronic health records—including audit trails that show edits and deletions. Dr. Janda regularly consults forensic IT professionals to track unauthorized changes and build a timeline the defense cannot dispute.

What Your Case May Be Worth

Illinois juries do not shy away from eight-figure awards. In 2025, a Cook County jury awarded $56 million to the family of a woman who bled to death after outpatient liposuction ($56 M verdict report). Average statewide settlement values hover around $646,000, according to NPDB’s 2022 summary, yet catastrophic claims routinely top $10 million when lifelong care or permanent disability is involved.

Damages You Can Recover

  • Past and future medical treatment, rehabilitation, and assistive technology
  • Lost earnings, diminished earning capacity, and lost household services
  • Pain, suffering, disfigurement, and loss of normal life
  • Wrongful-death compensation for surviving families

How Our Medical and Legal Background Helps Your Claim

Because Dr. Janda speaks the same language as the defendant doctors, he can depose them in depth without pausing for translation from hired experts. That efficiency lowers costs and often prompts quicker settlements. When cases proceed to trial at the Daley Center, jurors respond favorably to counsel who can explain complex physiology in plain Midwestern language.

Our Step-by-Step Litigation Process

  1. Free case review and medical-chart screening within 48 hours
  2. Detailed expert affidavit under 735 ILCS 5/2-622
  3. Early preservation letters to safeguard imaging and device data
  4. Comprehensive damages package built with life-care planners
  5. Pre-trial settlement conference backed by demonstrative exhibits
  6. Trial by jury if fair resolution is not reached

Chicago Malpractice by the Numbers

The Illinois Department of Insurance’s 2024 Cost-Containment Report shows a 58.8 percent loss ratio for medical-malpractice insurers—up 20.5 points from 2022. Rising defense expenses and concentrated market share mean carriers have strong incentives to settle clear-liability claims rather than risk runaway jury awards.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a medical expert to sue?

Yes. Illinois requires an affidavit of merit signed by a health-care professional in the same field as the defendant. Janda Law Firm maintains a nationwide panel of board-certified experts who can review your records quickly.

What will it cost me up front?

Nothing. We advance all costs and work on a contingency fee. You pay fees only if we secure a settlement or verdict.

How long will my case take?

Most Chicago malpractice claims resolve in 18 to 36 months. Complex birth-injury or paralysis cases can take longer because future-care costs must be fully documented.

Can I sue a public hospital like Stroger?

Yes, but shorter notice requirements under the Illinois Court of Claims Act may apply. Contact us as soon as possible to preserve every option.

Will filing a claim hurt my relationship with my doctor?

A malpractice lawsuit targets the provider’s insurance policy, not personal assets in most cases. You have a right to safe care and full compensation when harm occurs.

What if I signed a consent form?

Informed-consent paperwork does not excuse negligence. Providers must still act with reasonable skill and disclose key risks. When they fail to do so, liability can attach.

Nearby Cities & Towns

  • Evanston
  • Oak Park
  • Schaumburg
  • Naperville
  • Skokie
  • Joliet
  • Aurora
  • Arlington Heights
  • Cicero

Ready for answers? Call Janda Law Firm or use our secure online form for a free, same-day case assessment. Medical mistakes stole your health; let us fight to restore your future.