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When a Louisiana Hospital Makes You Sicker: Understanding Lost Chance of Survival and Hospital Infection Claims

Legal Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information about medical malpractice claims in Louisiana, including lost chance of survival and hospital-acquired infections. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such.

Every case is unique, and outcomes depend on specific facts and circumstances. If you or a loved one has been harmed by medical negligence, consult with a qualified Louisiana attorney to discuss your individual situation.


Table of Contents

  1. Lost Chance of Survival: What It Means and Why It Matters
  2. Hospital-Acquired Infections: You Came In for Help, Not to Get Sicker
  3. Hospitals Have a Duty to Keep You Safe
  4. How Medical Malpractice Claims Actually Work in Louisiana
  5. What You Need to Prove
  6. Do Not Wait
  7. You Deserve Answers. Call the Ikerd Law Firm Today.
  8. Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, you can sue a Louisiana hospital for making you sick.

Louisiana law offers the lost chance of survival doctrine. This doctrine is vital for patients let down by the medical system.

It exists because Louisiana courts recognized a key truth: if a doctor’s negligence robs you of a chance to heal, you deserve compensation. Even if no one can predict the exact outcome.

For families waiting in hospital rooms, patients hit by infections they should not have gotten, and those grieving someone who might still be alive if a doctor had done their job, this doctrine is the line between justice and nothing.

If you or someone you love was harmed by a hospital’s negligence, you do not have to sort through the legal questions alone.

The Ikerd Law Firm offers consultations to families dealing with medical malpractice in Louisiana. Call us at (337) 366-8994. We are here to listen and help you understand your options.


Lost Chance of Survival: What It Means and Why It Matters

Hospital ward with empty bed at clinical facility for health problems treatment, surgery recovery and intensive care. Nobody in emergency room designed with equipment for healingIn a typical negligence case, you have to prove the other person’s actions “more likely than not” caused your harm.

That works fine when someone runs a red light and hits your car. Cause and effect are clear.

But it is different with medical malpractice. Patients are often sick, and outcomes are uncertain. Under old rules, if a patient had less than a 50% chance of survival (even with perfect care), the family could not recover anything.

The Louisiana Supreme Court recognized the lost-chance doctrine specifically because the traditional standard left too many families without recourse.

Under this doctrine, you do not have to prove your loved one would have survived. You have to prove the doctor’s negligence reduced their chance of surviving or achieving a better outcome. That is an important distinction, and it opens the courthouse doors to cases that would otherwise be shut out.

As the Court put it: “The law does not require the plaintiff to prove to a certainty that the patient would have lived had he received more prompt diagnosis and treatment.” A lost chance of survival in any degree may be compensated.

So How Are Damages Calculated?

Think of it this way. A woman goes to her doctor with symptoms that should raise red flags for cancer. The doctor waves them off.

Months pass. By the time the cancer is finally diagnosed, it has progressed significantly. With timely treatment, she had a 60% chance of beating it. Now, because of the delay, her odds have dropped to 25%.

That 35% gap (the difference between what she had and what negligence left her with) is the lost chance.

A jury can apply that percentage to the total damages in the case. It is a proportional approach, and it was recognized by the Louisiana Supreme Court in cases like Smith v. State, Department of

Health and Hospitals, 676 So. 2d 543 (La. 1996).

A negligent doctor should not escape accountability simply because a patient was already facing a tough fight.


Hospital-Acquired Infections: You Came In for Help, Not to Get Sicker

Patients Sleeping On The Bed At HospitalA hospital-acquired infection (HAI) is exactly what it sounds like: an infection you picked up at the hospital. You did not walk in with it. It was not part of your original diagnosis.

It developed because something went wrong during your care: contaminated equipment, poor hand hygiene, or a surgical site that was not properly monitored.

And it happens far more often than most people realize. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports that roughly 1 in 31 hospital patients has at least one healthcare-associated infection on any given day.

Most of them are preventable. When a hospital cuts corners on infection control, and you pay the price, that is not bad luck. That may be malpractice.

The Most Common Hospital-Acquired Infections

  • Surgical site infections (SSIs) happen when bacteria get into a wound during or after surgery. Proper sterility in the operating room and careful post-op wound care are supposed to prevent this. When they do not, the hospital has some explaining to do.
  • Catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs) develop when bacteria travel along a urinary catheter. A proper insertion, regular cleaning, and removal of the catheter as soon as it is no longer needed. All of that is within the hospital’s control.
  • Central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs) are among the most dangerous. Bacteria enter the bloodstream through a central venous catheter and can lead to sepsis. These infections are taken so seriously because they are so preventable, but deadly when missed.
  • Clostridioides difficile (C. diff) causes severe gastrointestinal illness and spreads through contact with contaminated surfaces or equipment. It is often linked to antibiotic overuse and sloppy sanitation practices.
  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) strikes patients on mechanical ventilators. Contaminated equipment or careless respiratory care can introduce bacteria directly into the lungs of patients who are already in a vulnerable state.

Hospitals Have a Duty to Keep You Safe

Louisiana law holds hospitals to a standard of reasonable care, and that includes something basic: do not make your patients sicker.

Maintaining a clean, sanitary environment is not optional. When hospitals fall short, it tends to look like one (or more) of these failures:

  • They did not sterilize their equipment. Surgical instruments, IV lines, catheters, and ventilator components. All of it must be properly sterilized. If contaminated equipment caused your infection, the hospital is on the hook.
  • Staff did not wash their hands. It sounds almost too simple to be a legal issue, but hand-to-patient transmission is one of the most common ways infections spread in hospitals. A facility that does not enforce basic hand hygiene is failing its patients.
  • They missed the warning signs. Post-surgical patients and anyone with an invasive device need close monitoring. When hospital staff overlooks them, a manageable infection can turn fatal.
  • They were too slow to treat the infection. Catching an infection is only half the battle. The hospital has to respond quickly with the right antibiotics or interventions. Delays let infections escalate into sepsis, septic shock, and death.

This is where the lost chance doctrine connects directly to hospital infections. If a hospital’s failure to catch or treat your infection in time reduced your chance of surviving sepsis, you or your family may recover damages for that lost chance. Even if the infection was already serious by the time anyone noticed.


How Medical Malpractice Claims Actually Work in Louisiana

Louisiana does things differently than most states when it comes to medical malpractice. If you are considering a claim, you need to know the rules of the road before you start.

You Cannot Go Straight to Court

Before filing a malpractice lawsuit, Louisiana requires most claims to go through a Medical Review Panel first (La. R.S. 40:1231.8).

The panel is made up of three healthcare providers and one attorney chairperson. They review the evidence and issue an opinion on whether the healthcare provider fell below the standard of care.

That opinion is not the final word. A jury can see it differently, but it carries weight. The good news is that while the panel does its work, your filing deadline is paused. The clock does not keep ticking while you wait.

Louisiana’s Filing Deadline is Short

Louisiana calls it a prescription, not a statute of limitations. You have one year from the date you discovered (or reasonably should have discovered) the malpractice, with a hard outer limit of three years from the date it happened (La. R.S. 9:5628).

For comparison, Mississippi gives you three years. Texas gives you two. Louisiana gives you one.

There is a Damages Cap. But It Has Exceptions

Under the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act (La. R.S. 40:1231.2), total general damages against a qualified healthcare provider are capped at $500,000.

Past and future medical care costs are not capped. When damages exceed $100,000, the Louisiana Patient’s Compensation Fund picks up the rest up to the cap.

For patients dealing with long-term consequences of a hospital infection, such as ongoing treatment, rehabilitation, and additional surgeries, those uncapped medical expenses can be substantial.


What You Need to Prove

African american girl patient sitting on bed in patient room at hospital, copy space. Hospital, childhood, medicine and healthcare, unaltered.Whether your claim involves a lost chance of survival, a hospital-acquired infection, or both, the core of the case comes down to:

1. The hospital or doctor owed you a duty of care.

2. They breached that duty. The care you received fell below what a competent healthcare professional would have provided in the same situation. In HAI cases, this often means the hospital ignored its own infection prevention protocols.

3. That breach cost you a real chance at a better outcome. You do not need to prove that the negligence definitely caused your injury or your loved one’s death. You need to show it took away a meaningful chance of recovery or survival. This almost always requires expert medical testimony.

4. You suffered real damages. Medical bills, lost income, pain, and loss of enjoyment of life. And in wrongful death cases, the loss of a parent, a spouse, or a provider. These numbers represent what negligence costs your family.


Do Not Wait

Hospital records, infection control logs, and staffing schedules do not last forever. Evidence gets harder to obtain with every month that passes. And Louisiana’s one-year prescription is unforgiving.

Filing a request with the Medical Review Panel pauses the clock. Which is exactly why talking to an attorney early matters.


You Deserve Answers. Call the Ikerd Law Firm Today.

Dealing with a hospital-acquired infection or the loss of a loved one because a doctor did not act in time is overwhelming. You are grieving and frustrated, and you are trying to figure out whether anything can be done.

We understand that.

We have sat across the table from people in your exact position, and we know how much it matters to have someone in your corner who will tell you the truth about your case.

At the Ikerd Law Firm, we handle medical malpractice cases involving lost chance of survival and hospital-acquired infections. We know the medicine. We know the law. And we know how to hold hospitals accountable when they fail the people who trusted them with their lives.

No cost, no obligation. Just a straightforward conversation about your situation and what your options look like. That is how it should work.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sue a hospital in Louisiana for an infection I got during my stay?

Yes. If the infection resulted from the hospital’s failure to follow accepted infection control standards. You may have grounds for a medical malpractice claim.

How long do I have to file a medical malpractice claim in Louisiana?

One year from the date of discovery, with a hard three-year outer limit.

Do I have to go through a medical review panel before filing a lawsuit?

In most cases, yes. Louisiana law requires a panel of three healthcare professionals and an attorney chairperson to review your claim first. Their opinion is not binding, but it carries weight with juries.

Is there a cap on damages in Louisiana medical malpractice cases?

General damages are capped at $500,000. However, past and future medical care costs are not capped. Which matters in long-term treatment for hospital-acquired infections.

What types of hospital-acquired infections can lead to a lawsuit?

Surgical site infections, catheter-associated UTIs, central line bloodstream infections, and ventilator-associated pneumonia are the most common. Any infection caused by a hospital’s failure to meet the standard of care could support a claim.


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