Available 24/7 (214) 333-3333
Available 24/7 (214) 333-3333
When you seek medical care, you trust doctors, nurses, surgeons, and hospitals to provide safe and competent treatment. When that trust is broken by a preventable medical error, the consequences can be devastating. A delayed diagnosis may allow a serious condition to worsen. A surgical mistake can lead to additional procedures and permanent complications. A medication error can cause life-threatening injuries. If you or a loved one was harmed by a healthcare provider in Dallas, you may have the right to seek compensation under Texas medical malpractice law.
Medical malpractice cases are among the most complex personal injury claims. They require a detailed review of medical records, testimony from qualified experts, and compliance with strict Texas legal requirements. Hospitals, physicians, and their insurance companies often have substantial resources dedicated to defending these claims. Acting quickly is important because critical deadlines can affect your ability to pursue compensation.
At Frenkel & Frenkel, our Dallas medical malpractice lawyers have spent decades helping patients and families hold negligent healthcare providers accountable. We work with respected medical experts, thoroughly investigate what went wrong, and fight for the compensation our clients deserve. We prepare every case as if it will go to trial because meaningful results often require a law firm that is willing to stand up to hospitals and insurance companies in court.
We offer free consultations and handle medical malpractice cases on a contingency fee basis. You pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you.
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KEY TAKEAWAYS
Quick Answer
What Does a Dallas Medical Malpractice Attorney Do?
If a doctor, hospital, or other care provider in Dallas hurt you, a medical attorney can review your case. We can protect evidence. We can find a doctor expert. We can handle court filings and deadlines. We can seek payment for medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, and future losses. Texas law is complex. It has notice rules, expert report rules, and damage caps. An experienced attorney helps you avoid costly mistakes while you focus on healing. Frenkel & Frenkel offers a free consultation and works on a no fee unless we recover basis.
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To prove a Texas claim, you must show four things: a doctor-patient relationship, a break in the standard of care, a link between that break and your injury, and real harm.
A bad result alone does not prove malpractice. Medicine is not perfect. Some patients have poor outcomes even with good care. In Texas, a doctor expert report usually shows whether the doctor or hospital fell below the accepted standard.
In Texas, you usually have two years to file a lawsuit. The clock usually starts on the date of the negligence or the date the treatment ended. Texas does not often use a discovery rule in these cases. There are limited exceptions. If the injured person was under 12, the deadline extends to the child’s 14th birthday. Claims involving a foreign object left inside the body after surgery may also follow different timelines. Texas also has a strict 10-year statute of repose.
Texas limits pain and suffering damages in these cases. These damages cover pain and suffering, mental anguish, physical harm, and loss of companionship. Under a 2003 Texas law change, pain and suffering damages are capped at $250,000 per doctor or individual provider and $250,000 per hospital, up to a total of $500,000 from multiple hospitals.
Money losses are not capped. These include past and future medical expenses, lost wages, and loss of earning power. If you need ongoing care, future surgery, or long-term rehab, those losses may be recovered in full. In wrongful death cases, a separate inflation-adjusted cap may also apply. As of 2025 and 2026, it can exceed two million dollars.
Common Questions About Medical Malpractice Claims
What if I Signed a Consent Form Before My Procedure?
Signing a consent form does not automatically end your claim. Consent forms cannot protect doctors or hospitals from negligence. If the medical provider failed to meet the standard of care, disclosed incorrect information, or made an error that a reasonable provider would not make, you may still have a valid malpractice claim.
Do I Need an Expert Witness for My Medical Malpractice Case?
Yes, in most cases. Texas law requires a qualified medical expert to review your case and certify that the standard of care was breached. This expert must practice in the same or similar specialty as the defendant. Our firm works with top medical experts who can evaluate your case and provide the necessary testimony.
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Our attorneys have spent decades fighting for patients harmed by medical negligence. We have the experience, knowledge, and resources to take on even the most complex medical malpractice cases against hospitals, healthcare providers, physicians, and other responsible parties.
Our founding attorneys used to defend insurance companies. Now, they use that inside knowledge to fight for injured people like you. We know the tactics companies use, and we know how to counter them.
We have recovered over $1 Billion in settlements and verdicts for our clients. For 16 straight years, our attorneys have been named among the Best Lawyers in Dallas.
Settlement - Catastrophic Injury Case
Verdict - Commercial Vehicle Collision
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Settlement - Serious Motor Vehicle Wreck
Understanding the scale and patterns of medical malpractice in Texas can help put your situation in context.
Misdiagnosis and delayed diagnosis of cancer, stroke, heart attack, infections, and other serious conditions.
Surgical malpractice, including wrong-site surgery, retained foreign objects, and preventable surgical complications.
Emergency room errors, including failure to diagnose life-threatening conditions or improper discharge.
Medication errors, including prescribing errors, pharmacy errors, and mistakes in dosage administration.
Anesthesia malpractice during surgery or other procedures.
Birth injuries affecting newborns, including brain injuries, cerebral palsy, Erb's palsy, and hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.
Maternal injuries during labor and delivery, including preventable hemorrhage, infection, or surgical complications.
Hospital negligence, including understaffing, poor supervision, failure to follow protocols, and hospital-acquired infections.
Nursing home and long-term care negligence, including pressure sores, falls, and medication mismanagement.
Radiology and pathology errors, including misread imaging results or laboratory specimen errors.
Failure to refer or failure to order needed testing when a condition required specialist review.
Cosmetic and elective procedure errors resulting in permanent injury or disfigurement.
Frenkel & Frenkel handles these cases on a contingency fee basis. You pay nothing up front. You owe no attorney fee unless we recover money for you. We also offer a free initial consultation.
In most cases, you have two years from the date of the negligent act or the end of the related treatment to file a lawsuit in Texas. For children under 12 at the time of the injury, the deadline extends to the child's 14th birthday. Texas also has a 10-year statute of repose.
Depending on the facts, you may be able to recover money losses such as past and future medical expenses, lost wages, loss of future earning power, and costs for rehab or long-term care. You may also be able to recover pain and suffering damages for pain and suffering, mental anguish, physical harm, and loss of companionship. Texas caps pain and suffering damages at $250,000 per doctor and $250,000 per hospital. Money losses are not capped.
No. If you give a recorded statement or accept a settlement before speaking with your own attorney, you could reduce or lose your recovery. Before you speak with any insurance representative, talk with a medical malpractice attorney.
These cases in Texas are much more complex than standard personal injury claims. They involve special rules, including 60-day pre-suit notice, an expert report that must be filed within 120 days of the defendant's answer, and strict caps on pain and suffering damages. They also require medical knowledge to evaluate and prove.
If you or a loved one had an unexpected outcome, a worse condition, a new injury after a procedure, or any situation that did not feel right, you should speak with an attorney. At Frenkel & Frenkel, we will review what happened, explain whether the standard of care may have been broken, and tell you your options honestly.
Yes. Surviving family members may be able to bring a wrongful death claim and, in some cases, a survival action for the estate. Wrongful death damages can include the loss of financial support, loss of companionship, and the family's mental anguish. A separate inflation-adjusted cap may apply to wrongful death pain and suffering damages, which as of 2025 and 2026 can exceed two million dollars.