Failure to diagnose may not be malpractice. It depends on how obvious the symptoms and diagnois are. For example, if someone came into a hospital ER with a comnpound fracture of the arm poking through his skin and the doctor failed to diagnose that, I would say that's a pretty clear indication of malpractice. On the other hand, I know nothing about Coates disease, or its symptoms so I can't say whether it should have been diagnosed or not.
I will relate my own experience since it pertains. I was born a blue baby, due to incompatibility of the RH factor with my mother. At the time I was born the issue of RH incompatibility was just becoming known. Thanks to a doctor and nurse who were up on the latest science, the issue was diagnosed and I was given an exchange transfusion, otherwise I wouldn't be here to be writing this. However, if an exchnage transfusion had not been know to help the condition, there would have been no malpractice because it was a new technique.
This could be why two attorneys told you a malpractice suit was a waste of time.
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