This is the final installment of our series aimed at providing a detailed examination of the challenges and pitfalls in different areas of medical negligence lawsuits, and approaches to overcoming them. Each article has focused on specific injuries and highlighted the obstacles a plaintiff faces in bringing their case to a successful conclusion. Our next series, which will debut in the Winter 2024 edition of The Verdict, will focus on practical and evidentiary issues in medical malpractice.
This article concludes our current series by considering one of the most critical and costly aspects of any medical malpractice lawsuit: the client’s care plan. It will proceed by describing the principles of autonomy, choice, and independence that underpin all cost of future care analyses, as repeatedly reiterated by the Supreme Court of Canada; flagging proposals for care that are commonly found in defence submissions and the case law, which contravene these principles; and providing specific advice on how to develop and present a care plan successfully in mediation and at trial.