It can be disconcerting for parents to listen to evidence about how long their child will live during trial. Parents will understandably be sensitive to that testimony—they have often been taking care of a tragically injured child for years (if not decades) until the case is brought to trial. It is crucial testimony because, if the jury believes that the health care provider acted inappropriately, the jury must decide on what damages are appropriate.
Damages is a legal term that means money. That money can be for many different things. In a personal injury lawsuit, like a medical malpractice birth injury, there are often two types of damages—economic damages and non-economic damages.
Economic damages are, simply, anything that can be added up with a calculator. That may be a bit simplistic, because things like lost wages and costs of future care can be the subject of different assumptions. But, non-economic damages typically include:
Non-economic damages are those damages that cannot be calculated to the penny. A jury must decide, using their general life experiences, what these items are “worth.” Though each state has a specific list of what’s recoverable, in general these damages are for intangibles, like:
The future is not written—in the end, a jury must simply make an educated guess, based on the evidence available, about how long they think the child will live. They will have the advantage of physician experts who will explain, using their own experience and national statistics, how long children with specific medical problems typically survive. Of course, they will also inform the jury that the life expectancy is directly related to the quality of treatment—the better (and sometimes more expensive) the medical treatment, the longer the child is likely to survive.
Having decided how long the child will live, a jury must then decide the value associate with each of the economic and non-economic damages. A person who lives to age 80 will have a different level of non-economic damages, like physical pain and suffering, than someone who lives with the same condition but dies at 40. Likewise, medical expenses and lost wages will be higher for someone with a longer lifespan.
For more information on the value of your child’s medical malpractice lawsuit, call our birth injury attorneys at (440) 252-4399 or contact them online for a free consultation.