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This medical malpractice physician
negligence case was brought on behalf of the mother of a seventeen year
old Boston youth who was misdiagnosed with migraine headaches when he
was actually suffering from bacterial meningitis. The claim was brought
for wrongful death and conscious pain and suffering of the child.
In December 1999, the 17-year old
young man, who was an outstanding student and leader in the organization
Bikes Not Bombs developed severe headaches. He went to his
pediatrician’s office and was seen by a doctor who was not his regular
pediatrician. That physician recommended he return the following day to
see his regular pediatrician of twelve years.
He returned to the clinic the next
day and saw his pediatrician and gave a history of four days of severe
headaches that were constant with lethargy. The defendant doctor, based
on a brief examination, diagnosed the patient as suffering from migraine
headaches without performing the proper examination to rule out more
serious causes.
One week later, the young man
returned to the defendant physician with complaints of severe headaches,
vomiting, photophobia and lethargy. The doctor committed medical
malpractice when he failed to rule out these new symptoms which were not
consistent with a diagnosis of migraine headache. The defendant
physician negligently prescribed anti-migraine medication and
recommended the patient see a neurologist in two days.
The patient returned home and was
found the following morning dead in his bedroom. The medical examiner
determined that the cause of death was bacterial meningitis.
Plaintiff claimed that the defendant
physician was negligent for failing to perform appropriate tests which
would have diagnosed the bacterial meningitis. Specifically, the
standard of care required that the defendant physician perform a brain
CT scan which would have revealed the meningitis and prevented the death
of this young man. The case settled right before the start of trial.
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