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St. Louis Surgical Error Attorneys Fighting for Operating Room Victims

When you placed your trust in a surgeon’s hands—or entrusted a loved one to their care—you expected precision, safety protocols, and the kind of vigilance that operating rooms are designed to provide. Instead, a preventable mistake during surgery has left you facing additional procedures, mounting medical bills, extended time away from work, and physical pain that compounds the emotional trauma of knowing this harm was avoidable. 

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    Let Us Make Your Case, Our Cause

    Right now, you may be wondering whether what happened was truly an error or simply an unfortunate complication, whether anyone will be held accountable, and how you’ll manage the financial burden while recovering from injuries that weren’t part of the original treatment plan.

    At OnderLaw, we understand these questions because we’ve guided hundreds of surgical error victims through this exact situation, and we want you to know that investigating your case costs you nothing upfront. Our attorneys have recovered millions in negotiated settlements for clients throughout Missouri who suffered harm in operating rooms where established safety protocols failed, and we’re ready to review your medical records at no charge to determine whether negligence occurred. Call us at (314) 408-6136 for a free consultation today, because Missouri law imposes strict time limits on medical negligence claims, and waiting too long can eliminate your right to seek compensation for the harm you’ve endured.

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    Understanding “Never Events” and Surgical Errors

    The medical community has established specific categories of surgical mistakes that should never occur when proper safety protocols are followed, and understanding these distinctions is crucial for victims evaluating potential claims.

    What Are "Never Events"

    Surgical procedures carry inherent risks even when performed flawlessly, which makes distinguishing between acceptable complications and inexcusable errors essential for anyone who suspects something went wrong during their operation. The medical community itself has created a category called “never events”—serious surgical mistakes that comprehensive safety protocols should completely prevent—and according to the Joint Commission (2023), more than 4,000 of these preventable errors occur annually in American hospitals despite decades of protocol development designed specifically to eliminate them. The term “never event” reflects the medical profession’s own acknowledgment that certain mistakes are so fundamentally preventable through proper procedures that their occurrence represents a clear departure from accepted standards of care.

    Types of Never Events in Missouri

    In Missouri operating rooms, never events include wrong-site surgery (operating on the incorrect body part), wrong-procedure surgery (performing an operation different from what was planned), and surgery performed on the wrong patient entirely—errors that seem almost impossible given the multiple verification steps required before any incision. The Joint Commission (2023) reports that wrong-site surgeries alone occur approximately 20 times weekly across the nation, despite universal protocols requiring surgical teams to mark the correct location, verify patient identity through multiple methods, and conduct a formal “time out” where every team member confirms the procedure before beginning.

    Your Legal Rights

    When these fundamental safety failures occur in St. Louis hospitals, they represent clear violations of established surgical standards that may entitle victims to compensation under Missouri law, because the very existence of mandatory prevention protocols demonstrates that the medical community recognizes these errors as entirely avoidable through proper care. Therefore, if you experienced an operation on the wrong body part, discovered that your surgical team performed a different procedure than planned, or learned that instruments or sponges were left inside your body after surgery, you may have grounds for a surgical negligence claim that extends beyond the typical risks disclosed during informed consent discussions.

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    Types of Surgical Errors Our Attorneys Handle

    While medical malpractice encompasses various healthcare mistakes across different settings, surgical negligence involves specific operating room failures that require specialized legal expertise to investigate, document, and prove through expert testimony. Our team has successfully pursued claims involving preventable errors that occur before incisions are made, during the procedure itself, and throughout the critical post-operative monitoring period when complications can escalate from treatable concerns to life-threatening emergencies. Understanding these distinct categories helps victims recognize when their experience crosses the line from an unfortunate complication—which can occur even with proper care—to actionable negligence that violated established surgical standards.

    Wrong-Site and Wrong-Procedure Surgery

    Despite mandatory “Sign Your Site” protocols that require surgeons to mark the correct surgical location with the patient’s participation when possible, and “Time Out” procedures that mandate full surgical team verification before beginning any operation, wrong-site surgeries continue to devastate patients throughout Missouri with alarming regularity. These comprehensive verification systems exist precisely because operating on the wrong body part, performing an incorrect procedure, or treating the wrong patient represents complete systemic failure rather than an individual practitioner’s momentary lapse in judgment, and Missouri hospitals must follow specific pre-operative protocols including patient identification bands, surgical site marking, and verbal confirmation by every team member present in the operating room. When surgical teams skip these verification steps, ignore discrepancies in patient records, or proceed despite team members raising concerns about the planned procedure, the resulting harm may constitute clear negligence because the medical community has established these protocols as the minimum standard of care that every surgical team must follow without exception. As a result, victims of wrong-site or wrong-procedure surgery often have strong legal claims because the evidence of protocol violations appears directly in the medical records, operative reports, and time-out documentation that hospitals are required to maintain for every surgical procedure.

    Retained Foreign Objects

    When surgical teams leave instruments, sponges, needles, or other materials inside patients’ bodies after closing incisions, the resulting complications can require emergency surgery to remove the foreign object, cause severe infections that spread throughout the body, or create permanent organ damage that affects victims for the rest of their lives. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2022) documents approximately 40 cases weekly nationwide of retained foreign objects, despite mandatory counting protocols that require surgical nurses to count every instrument and sponge before the procedure begins and again before closing the incision to ensure nothing remains inside the patient. These cases often involve clear documentation failures where surgical counts don’t match—indicating that an item is missing—yet teams proceed with closing incisions anyway, either because they assume the count was wrong or because they feel pressure to complete the surgery quickly and move to the next scheduled procedure. In practice, retained foreign object cases may establish negligence through the surgical team’s own records, because when count discrepancies are documented but ignored, the evidence of a protocol violation exists in the hospital’s files and demonstrates that the team knew or should have known that an item might be missing before they closed the surgical site.

    Surgical Equipment and Technology Failures

    Modern operating rooms increasingly rely on robotic surgical systems, laser equipment, electronic monitoring devices, and other advanced technology that can malfunction or be misused with catastrophic results for patients who trust that their surgical team knows how to operate these complex machines safely. When robotic arms move unexpectedly during a procedure, lasers burn healthy tissue surrounding the intended surgical site, cautery devices cause electrical injuries, or monitoring equipment fails to alert the team to dangerous changes in vital signs, determining liability requires examining whether the error stemmed from equipment defects, improper maintenance by the hospital, inadequate training of the surgical team, or surgeon misuse of technology they weren’t qualified to operate. These technology-related surgical errors represent an emerging area of malpractice that traditional surgical standards didn’t anticipate when they were developed, and they often involve multiple potentially liable parties including the surgeon, the hospital, the equipment manufacturer, and the maintenance company responsible for keeping devices in safe working condition. By contrast with traditional surgical errors that involve human technique, technology failures may require expert testimony from biomedical engineers, device manufacturers’ representatives, and specialists in robotic surgery to establish exactly what went wrong and who bears responsibility for the malfunction that caused your injuries.

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    The Surgical Team's Legal Responsibilities in Practice

    Surgeon Responsibilities

    The surgeon maintains ultimate responsibility for the procedure’s execution and must ensure all team members understand the surgical plan, verify patient identity and surgical site through multiple methods, personally confirm that the correct procedure is being performed on the correct body part, and maintain communication with anesthesiologists and nurses throughout the operation to address any concerns that arise.

    Anesthesiologist Duties

    Anesthesiologists carry independent duties to monitor vital signs continuously, maintain appropriate sedation levels that keep patients unconscious and pain-free without suppressing critical functions, immediately alert the surgeon to any physiological changes that could affect the procedure’s safety, and manage the patient’s airway and breathing throughout the operation.

    Nursing Staff Duties

    Surgical nurses and technicians also bear legal responsibilities for maintaining sterile fields that prevent infection, accurately counting instruments and sponges before and after procedures to ensure nothing is left inside patients, documenting every step of the operation in real-time nursing notes, and speaking up when they observe potential errors or safety violations even if doing so means challenging a surgeon’s authority in the moment.

    Hospital Liability

    Missouri hospitals themselves face liability for systemic failures including inadequate staffing that leaves surgical teams stretched too thin to follow proper protocols, insufficient training on new equipment or procedures, poor communication systems that allow critical information to be lost between team members, or institutional pressure to rush procedures that compromises safety protocols in favor of completing more surgeries per day.

    Operating room errors rarely involve just one person’s mistake, because modern surgery requires coordinated teamwork where each member has specific legal duties that, when breached, can establish liability and create grounds for compensation even when other team members performed their roles correctly.

    Understanding this hierarchy of responsibility helps determine which parties may share liability for surgical negligence, because in many cases, multiple defendants contributed to the conditions that allowed a preventable error to occur, and Missouri law allows victims to pursue compensation from all parties whose negligence played a role in causing harm.

    Pre-Operative and Post-Operative Negligence

    Although the surgery itself often receives primary attention when patients suspect something went wrong, negligence that occurs before the first incision or after the final suture can be equally devastating and may establish separate grounds for malpractice claims beyond operative errors that occurred in the operating room. Many surgical complications that appear during or after procedures actually stem from failures in the preparation phase or the monitoring phase, and recognizing these distinct categories of negligence helps victims understand the full scope of potential claims they may be able to pursue.

    Pre-Surgical Verification Failures

    Missouri law requires specific informed consent procedures where surgeons must explain the planned procedure in terms patients can understand, describe the risks and potential complications in sufficient detail for patients to make informed decisions, discuss alternative treatment options that might achieve similar results with different risk profiles, and obtain written patient agreement before proceeding with any non-emergency surgery. When surgical teams fail to verify patient allergies that could cause life-threatening anaphylactic reactions to medications used during surgery, neglect to review current medications that might interact dangerously with anesthesia or cause excessive bleeding, or overlook medical conditions such as diabetes or heart disease that affect surgical safety and require special precautions, these pre-operative oversights can cause complications that were entirely preventable through proper screening. Additionally, inadequate patient identification procedures that should prevent wrong-patient surgeries—including checking identification bands, verbally confirming patient name and date of birth, and reviewing medical records to ensure they match the person on the operating table—represent fundamental breaches of pre-surgical protocols that every hospital in Missouri is required to follow. In practice, pre-operative negligence claims often succeed when medical records show that critical information was available in the patient’s chart but wasn’t reviewed by the surgical team, or when required verification steps were skipped entirely despite hospital policies mandating their completion before every procedure.

    Post-Surgical Monitoring Breakdowns

    After surgery concludes and patients move to recovery rooms or hospital floors, medical teams must monitor them for complications including infection at the surgical site, internal bleeding that may not be immediately visible, adverse reactions to medications or anesthesia, blood clots that can travel to lungs or brain, and other post-operative emergencies that require immediate intervention to prevent permanent harm or death. When nursing staff fail to check vital signs at the intervals required by post-operative protocols, ignore warning signs such as fever, increased pain, or changes in consciousness that indicate developing complications, delay notifying physicians about concerning symptoms, or provide inadequate discharge instructions that leave patients unprepared to recognize danger signs at home, these post-surgical failures may constitute separate instances of negligence distinct from any errors during the operation itself. The critical post-operative period requires vigilance because many surgical complications are highly treatable if caught early through proper monitoring, but become life-threatening when missed or dismissed as normal post-surgical discomfort, and the difference between a full recovery and permanent disability often depends on how quickly medical staff recognize and respond to warning signs in the hours and days following surgery. As a result, if you experienced complications after being discharged from the hospital, or if a loved one’s condition deteriorated while under post-operative care, the negligence may have occurred during the monitoring phase rather than during the surgery itself, and investigating these claims requires examining nursing notes, vital sign records, and physician communication logs to determine whether staff met their legal duty to watch for and respond to post-surgical complications.

    Although the surgery itself often receives primary attention when patients suspect something went wrong, negligence that occurs before the first incision or after the final suture can be equally devastating and may establish separate grounds for malpractice claims beyond operative errors that occurred in the operating room. Many surgical complications that appear during or after procedures actually stem from failures in the preparation phase or the monitoring phase, and recognizing these distinct categories of negligence helps victims understand the full scope of potential claims they may be able to pursue.

    Take Action After a Surgical Error

    1. Document Your Symptoms

      Document all symptoms and complications in a daily journal that records pain levels, functional limitations, medical appointments, and how the injury affects your daily activities.

    2. Seek Immediate Medical Attention

      Seek immediate medical attention to prevent further harm and create a medical record of the complications you’re experiencing.

    3. Request Complete Medical Records

      Request complete medical records including operative reports, anesthesia records, nursing notes, and pathology results before memories fade or documentation becomes harder to obtain.

    4. Get a Second Opinion

      Consider obtaining a second medical opinion from a surgeon not affiliated with the hospital where the error occurred to understand what went wrong during your procedure and whether the complications you’re experiencing represent a departure from accepted surgical standards.

    5. Contact Experienced Attorneys

      Contact experienced surgical error attorneys promptly because Missouri law generally requires filing medical malpractice claims within two years of the surgical error under RSMo §516.105, though specific circumstances such as foreign objects left in the body or failure to inform patients of test results may alter these deadlines, and waiting too long can eliminate your right to pursue compensation regardless of how clear the negligence may be.

    Proving Surgical Malpractice Claims

    Because operating rooms maintain detailed documentation requirements that exceed those in most other medical settings, surgical malpractice claims often involve more extensive evidence than other medical negligence cases, though this comprehensive documentation can also reveal clear protocol violations that make liability easier to establish when records show that required steps were skipped or warning signs were ignored.

    Operative reports dictated by surgeons immediately after procedures, anesthesia records tracking every medication and vital sign change throughout surgery, surgical count sheets documenting instruments and sponges, time-out checklists confirming verification steps, and nursing notes recording observations and communications create a comprehensive timeline that expert witnesses can analyze to identify precisely where standards were breached and how those breaches caused the patient’s injuries. Additionally, some operating rooms now use video recording systems that can provide definitive evidence of surgical errors, though accessing these recordings requires prompt legal action before hospitals delete or overwrite them according to standard data retention policies that may preserve footage for only 30 to 90 days.

    Missouri law requires expert testimony from qualified surgeons who can explain how the defendant’s actions violated accepted surgical standards and directly caused the patient’s injuries rather than resulting from known risks that can occur even with proper care. These surgical experts must practice in the same specialty as the defendant, be familiar with the specific procedures involved, and base their opinions on current medical literature and widely accepted protocols rather than personal preferences or outdated practices. According to RSMo §538.225, plaintiffs must file an expert affidavit stating a reasonable basis for the claim within the statutory deadline, and courts enforce this requirement strictly—failure to file a compliant affidavit can result in dismissal of the entire case and may effectively bar refiling if the statute of limitations has passed.
    Therefore, investigating surgical error claims requires not only obtaining and reviewing extensive medical records, but also consulting with qualified surgical experts early in the process to ensure that the evidence supports a viable claim before filing, because Missouri’s procedural requirements create significant consequences for cases that proceed without proper expert foundation.

    Compensation for Surgical Error Victims

    Surgical errors often require extensive corrective procedures that multiply the original surgery’s costs while extending recovery periods far beyond initial expectations, and the financial impact compounds when victims lose income during prolonged disability periods or discover that their injuries prevent them from returning to their previous occupations.

    Economic Damages

    Victims may be able to recover economic damages including all additional medical expenses for corrective surgeries, emergency treatments, extended hospital stays, rehabilitation services, and ongoing care required because of the surgical error, as well as lost wages during recovery periods, future earnings if permanent disabilities result from the negligence, and costs for rehabilitation programs or home modifications necessitated by surgical injuries that create permanent physical limitations. Economic damages remain uncapped and can reach substantial amounts when surgical errors cause permanent disabilities requiring lifetime care. In practice, calculating full compensation requires examining not just current medical bills and lost wages, but also projecting future costs through expert testimony from life care planners, vocational rehabilitation specialists, and economists who can demonstrate the total financial impact of permanent injuries caused by surgical errors.

    Non-economic Damages

    According to the Missouri Department of Insurance (2025), non-economic damages for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of life’s enjoyment, disfigurement, and physical impairment face statutory caps of $473,444 for non-catastrophic injuries and $828,529 for catastrophic injuries or death.

    Surgical errors often require extensive corrective procedures that multiply the original surgery’s costs while extending recovery periods far beyond initial expectations, and the financial impact compounds when victims lose income during prolonged disability periods or discover that their injuries prevent them from returning to their previous occupations.

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    Why Choose OnderLaw  

    Our firm has recovered millions in negotiated settlements for surgical error victims throughout Missouri, helping clients secure compensation that covers not only their immediate medical costs but also the long-term financial impact of injuries that affect their ability to work, care for themselves, and enjoy activities they valued before the surgical negligence occurred.

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    Take Action Today—Your Recovery Can’t Wait

    Missouri law generally requires filing medical malpractice claims within two years of the surgical error under RSMo §516.105, though specific circumstances such as foreign objects left in the body or failure to inform patients of test results may alter these deadlines, and waiting too long can eliminate your right to pursue compensation regardless of how clear the negligence may be.

    Call OnderLaw at (314) 408-6136 for a free consultation where we’ll review your surgical records, explain your legal options in plain language without medical jargon, and begin investigating your claim with no upfront costs to you—you pay nothing unless we recover compensation in a negotiated settlement on your behalf.

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