What Counts as Medical Malpractice
Medical malpractice occurs when a healthcare provider fails to meet the accepted standard of care and a patient is harmed as a result. Common examples include misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis, surgical errors, anesthesia mistakes, medication and dosage errors, failure to monitor, and birth injuries to mother or child. Not every bad outcome is malpractice — medicine carries inherent risk — but when a competent provider would have acted differently and the patient was injured, a claim may exist.
Montana's Special Malpractice Rules
Montana applies special procedures to medical malpractice claims. Before filing most malpractice lawsuits, claims must go through the Montana Medical Legal Panel for review. Montana also caps non-economic (pain and suffering) damages in medical malpractice cases at $250,000, though this cap does not limit economic damages such as medical expenses and lost wages. The statute of limitations is generally three years from the date of injury, or two years from when the injury was or should have been discovered, with a five-year outer limit — and birth-injury claims for children follow different timing. These rules make experienced legal guidance especially important.
Proving a Montana Malpractice Case
Malpractice cases require qualified medical experts to establish the standard of care, explain how the provider deviated from it, and connect that deviation to the patient's harm. These are document-intensive, expert-driven cases. Our network attorneys work with medical specialists to build claims that stand up to the aggressive defense that hospitals and their insurers mount.
Montana deadline: Most medical malpractice claims must be filed within three years from the date of injury under the statute of limitations. Evidence fades fast — don't wait to learn your rights.
Medical Malpractice FAQs in Montana
Yes. Montana caps non-economic (pain and suffering) damages at $250,000 in malpractice cases. Economic damages like medical bills and lost wages are not capped.
In most cases, yes. Montana requires malpractice claims to be reviewed by the Montana Medical Legal Panel before a lawsuit is filed.
Generally three years from the injury, or two years from discovery, with a five-year outer limit. Birth-injury claims for children follow different rules. Consult an attorney promptly.