Desert Cry
As someone currently involved in a Lasik Lawsuit (your case sounds so similar to mine), I am going to chime in with my cheap and definitely non legal opinion.
It's been a year since your surgery, right? Okay, that "6 months and you will be all better window" has now expired.
First thing: write down everything you remember telling them and what they told you. Everything.
As Rebecca mentioned, start with you surgeon. What do you want him/her to do? Obviousy, a better informed consent document/process but maybe he provides free care? I don't know but after a year, I would not expect much.
You will definitley get nothing if you don't ask.
If you are seriously considering legal action, get your medical records and very carefully review the IC document and the quiz you should have been required to take after viewing the IC Video. Any mention of chronic/severe/permanent dry eye? If not, then look for any reference to conversations regarding DES in your records. Carefully review your medical history document and any mention of your cl lens intolerance or any other eye issues you told them about.
Now, you should file a complaint one way or the other with your surgeon first and then the state medical board and the AAO if necessary. If the IC document and video does address Dry eye, then your legal avenue is going to pretty tough and not many lawyers will touch it and probably no one in your home state. File the complaints with the state and AAO anyway, even if they did address DES in the IC documents and quote what they told you and about the downplaying of your pre-lasik eye issues. It's not a legal outcome but hopefully it will prompt them to conform to more ethical, unbiased informed consent.
And if your state medical board blows you off, let me know and I will send you a copy of my letter from my state board reversing their original decision and their "improved" expectations for the ethical delivery of informed consent for Lasik. Heck, I'd send it to you before you file the complaint. If your state medical board takes some type of action, that's very helpful when talking with an attorney too.
If there was no mention of DES in the IC document/video tape/Quiz and nothing recorded in your records about that conversation, then you may have a case. If they did no testing for dry eye prior despite your symptoms, then it's a stronger potential claim.
In the words of my attorney:"to win an informed consent case, you need to show that you were not informed of a material risk of the surgery and that if you had been informed, you would not have undertaken the surgery." Many states also have the "reasonable" clause meaning that a reasonable person would not have had the surgery, not you specifically.
But again, from a legal perspective, how will this impact you, your job, your life, etc. That's a conversation to have with a lawyer. Is the expense of litigation worth any potential settlement? Malpractice cases are notoriously expensive and attorneys aren't going to spend $10K to recover $5K.
By the way, I met with 4 different attorneys before I found one willing to take the case and a good match for my personality.
I will tell your right up front that I have already spent over 1 1/2 years since my surgery preparing and now (finally) officially engaged in a lawsuit against my surgeon. Typically, the statute of limitations to file a claim is 3 years from the date of your surgery. That can vary by state. The actual case could take 2-3 years if they won't agree to settle. And there is NO guarantee that you will win.
If you can find a treatment for dry eye that works, then is it worth pursuing?
Only you can answer that.
Regardless, filing a complaint with your surgeon/medical authorities is the right thing to do, does make you feel more empowered and less victimized and hopefully helps someone else.
I wish you well and most of all I wish you and all of us find a cure for dry eyes.
And I hate that I have had to learn all this crap.
Natalie
As someone currently involved in a Lasik Lawsuit (your case sounds so similar to mine), I am going to chime in with my cheap and definitely non legal opinion.
It's been a year since your surgery, right? Okay, that "6 months and you will be all better window" has now expired.
First thing: write down everything you remember telling them and what they told you. Everything.
As Rebecca mentioned, start with you surgeon. What do you want him/her to do? Obviousy, a better informed consent document/process but maybe he provides free care? I don't know but after a year, I would not expect much.
You will definitley get nothing if you don't ask.
If you are seriously considering legal action, get your medical records and very carefully review the IC document and the quiz you should have been required to take after viewing the IC Video. Any mention of chronic/severe/permanent dry eye? If not, then look for any reference to conversations regarding DES in your records. Carefully review your medical history document and any mention of your cl lens intolerance or any other eye issues you told them about.
Now, you should file a complaint one way or the other with your surgeon first and then the state medical board and the AAO if necessary. If the IC document and video does address Dry eye, then your legal avenue is going to pretty tough and not many lawyers will touch it and probably no one in your home state. File the complaints with the state and AAO anyway, even if they did address DES in the IC documents and quote what they told you and about the downplaying of your pre-lasik eye issues. It's not a legal outcome but hopefully it will prompt them to conform to more ethical, unbiased informed consent.
And if your state medical board blows you off, let me know and I will send you a copy of my letter from my state board reversing their original decision and their "improved" expectations for the ethical delivery of informed consent for Lasik. Heck, I'd send it to you before you file the complaint. If your state medical board takes some type of action, that's very helpful when talking with an attorney too.
If there was no mention of DES in the IC document/video tape/Quiz and nothing recorded in your records about that conversation, then you may have a case. If they did no testing for dry eye prior despite your symptoms, then it's a stronger potential claim.
In the words of my attorney:"to win an informed consent case, you need to show that you were not informed of a material risk of the surgery and that if you had been informed, you would not have undertaken the surgery." Many states also have the "reasonable" clause meaning that a reasonable person would not have had the surgery, not you specifically.
But again, from a legal perspective, how will this impact you, your job, your life, etc. That's a conversation to have with a lawyer. Is the expense of litigation worth any potential settlement? Malpractice cases are notoriously expensive and attorneys aren't going to spend $10K to recover $5K.
By the way, I met with 4 different attorneys before I found one willing to take the case and a good match for my personality.
I will tell your right up front that I have already spent over 1 1/2 years since my surgery preparing and now (finally) officially engaged in a lawsuit against my surgeon. Typically, the statute of limitations to file a claim is 3 years from the date of your surgery. That can vary by state. The actual case could take 2-3 years if they won't agree to settle. And there is NO guarantee that you will win.
If you can find a treatment for dry eye that works, then is it worth pursuing?
Only you can answer that.
Regardless, filing a complaint with your surgeon/medical authorities is the right thing to do, does make you feel more empowered and less victimized and hopefully helps someone else.
I wish you well and most of all I wish you and all of us find a cure for dry eyes.
And I hate that I have had to learn all this crap.
Natalie
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