Brooklyn Stroke Misdiagnosis Lawyers

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A stroke often begins with symptoms that feel confusing or easy to dismiss. Dizziness, a sudden headache, trouble speaking, or a sense that something is not right. Many people go to the emergency room expecting answers and leave with reassurance that nothing serious is happening.

When that reassurance is wrong, the time that follows can carry lasting consequences. A stroke that is not recognized and treated promptly can lead to permanent injury that might have been reduced with earlier care.

If you or a family member were sent home from a Brooklyn hospital and later learned a stroke had occurred, you may be left with questions about what should have been done differently. A Brooklyn stroke misdiagnosis lawyer at Finz & Finz, P.C. can review the medical records and explain your legal options.

Contact Finz & Finz, P.C. today for a free case review and speak directly with a lawyer about your situation.

How Finz & Finz Approaches Brooklyn Stroke Misdiagnosis Cases

Stroke misdiagnosis cases hinge on a narrow window of time and the clinical decisions made within it. The attorneys at Finz & Finz, P.C., have litigated medical malpractice cases across New York for over 40 years, recovering more than $1 billion in combined verdicts and settlements. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes, and every case turns on its own facts.

Reconstructing Your ER Visit Hour by Hour

Lawyers of Distinction 2024When a stroke misdiagnosis lawyer at Finz & Finz takes on a Brooklyn case, the firm’s legal team obtains the complete emergency department record and works with retained neurologists and emergency medicine physicians to map the timeline of your visit. 

They compare the symptoms you presented with the workup the ER physician performed, looking for the gap between what was done and what a competent physician facing the same presentation would have done.

That analysis often reveals that a CT scan was never ordered, that a neurological screening was incomplete, or that a posterior circulation stroke was dismissed as an inner ear problem. These are specific, documentable failures, and they form the factual backbone of a stroke misdiagnosis claim.

Acting Quickly to Preserve ER Records

ER records may be amended or supplemented after a bad patient outcome. Finz & Finz moves to obtain and preserve triage logs, physician notes, nursing assessments, imaging orders, and lab results early in the process, before any changes are made. 

New York law requires a Certificate of Merit under CPLR § 3012-a before filing a medical malpractice lawsuit. The firm satisfies that requirement by engaging physicians with direct clinical experience in neurology and emergency medicine who confirm a reasonable basis for the claim.

Finz and Finz accident and medical malpractice attorneys in New York and Long Island