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New Hampshire

New Hampshire Medical Malpractice Lawyer

When a doctor, hospital, or other provider falls below the accepted standard of care and you are harmed, New Hampshire law allows you to seek compensation.

What Counts as Medical Malpractice

Medical malpractice occurs when a healthcare provider fails to meet the accepted standard of care and that failure causes injury. Examples include misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis, surgical errors, medication mistakes, birth injuries, and failure to monitor a patient. Not every bad outcome is malpractice — the key question is whether the provider acted as a reasonably competent provider would have under the circumstances.

New Hampshire's Special Malpractice Rules

Medical malpractice claims in New Hampshire have specific procedural requirements. Most cases require expert testimony to establish the standard of care and how it was breached. The state also uses a pre-suit screening panel process for certain claims. The statute of limitations is generally three years, but the discovery rule can affect when that clock starts in cases where the injury was not immediately apparent. These complexities make experienced representation essential.

Compensation in Malpractice Cases

Victims of medical negligence may recover medical expenses, lost income, future care costs, and pain and suffering. These cases are among the most complex and hard-fought in personal injury law, and providers' insurers defend them vigorously. Strong expert support and thorough preparation are critical.
Common Questions

Medical Malpractice FAQs — New Hampshire

You generally need to show a provider breached the standard of care and caused you harm. Most cases require expert review. A free consultation is the first step.

Generally three years, but the discovery rule may apply when an injury was not immediately apparent. Because the rules are complex, consult an attorney promptly.

In most New Hampshire malpractice cases, yes — expert testimony is needed to establish the standard of care and how the provider departed from it.

Injured? Talk to a New Hampshire Medical Malpractice Specialist

Your case review is free and confidential. You pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you.

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