When a doctor, hospital, or healthcare provider in Middletown fails to meet the required standard of care, the consequences can be devastating — permanent disability, worsened illness, or death. The Henry Law Firm holds Ohio medical professionals accountable for negligence and fights to recover the compensation victims and families deserve.
Hospitals and Insurers Have Powerful Legal Teams
The moment a potential malpractice claim arises, healthcare providers and their insurers lawyer up. Risk management departments investigate, records may be altered, and experts are retained. Without an equally experienced attorney on your side, the system is stacked against you.
Types of Medical Malpractice
- Misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis — failing to identify a condition in time
- Surgical errors — wrong-site surgery, retained instruments, anesthesia mistakes
- Medication errors — wrong drug, wrong dose, dangerous drug interactions
- Birth injuries — injuries to mother or child during labor and delivery
- Emergency room errors — misdiagnosis under time pressure
- Failure to treat — discharging patients prematurely
- Hospital-acquired infections — unsanitary conditions causing infections
- Radiology errors — misreading imaging studies
Ohio Medical Malpractice Laws
Statute of Limitations
Under Ohio Revised Code § 2305.113, you generally have one year from the date you discovered (or should have discovered) the injury to file a medical malpractice lawsuit, with an absolute maximum of four years from the date of the negligent act. There are exceptions for cases involving foreign objects or fraud.
Affidavit of Merit
Ohio law requires that a medical malpractice complaint be accompanied by an affidavit from a qualified medical expert stating that the claim has merit. This requirement exists to prevent frivolous lawsuits and ensures that cases have a valid medical basis before proceeding.
Damage Caps
Ohio places caps on non-economic damages (pain and suffering) in medical malpractice cases. Non-economic damages are capped at the greater of $250,000 or three times the economic damages, up to a maximum of $350,000 per plaintiff or $500,000 per occurrence (Ohio Revised Code § 2323.43).
Ohio law requires an affidavit of merit — signed by a medical expert in the same specialty as the defendant — to be filed with a medical malpractice complaint. Without this affidavit, your case will be dismissed. The Henry Law Firm secures this expert review before filing, ensuring your Butler County malpractice case meets Ohio's procedural requirements.
Complex Case Experience
Medical malpractice cases require attorneys who understand medicine as well as law. The Henry Law Firm's team has handled diagnostic errors, surgical complications, medication errors, and birth injury cases across Ohio — with the depth of knowledge these complex cases demand.
Your Attorney: Eric Henry
When Eric Henry takes your case, he is your attorney — not a case number, not a file on a stack. Direct communication, personal attention, and a proven record of $50M+ recovered for Ohio clients.
Eric and his team proudly serve residents of Middletown and Butler County from offices in Chagrin Falls and Cleveland.
What Our Clients Say
"The Henry Law Firm did an outstanding job handling my medical malpractice case. They were professional, compassionate, and really took the time to explain all my options. I felt supported throughout." — Henry P., Google Review
"I couldn't have asked for a more courteous and professional experience. The team regularly kept me up to date with the status of my case. Highly recommend — they will be my first call." — Kevin G., Google Review
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if I have a medical malpractice case in Middletown?
You may have a case if a healthcare provider failed to meet the accepted standard of care and that failure directly caused your injury. Common examples include misdiagnosis, surgical errors, medication mistakes, and birth injuries. Ohio law requires an affidavit of merit from a qualified medical expert to proceed.
What is the statute of limitations for medical malpractice in Ohio?
Under Ohio Revised Code § 2305.113, you generally have one year from discovering the injury (or when you should have discovered it) to file suit, with a four-year maximum from the date of the negligent act. Exceptions exist for foreign objects left in the body and cases involving fraud.
Are there caps on medical malpractice damages in Ohio?
Yes. Ohio caps non-economic damages at the greater of $250,000 or three times your economic damages, up to $350,000 per plaintiff or $500,000 per occurrence (Ohio Revised Code § 2323.43). There are no caps on economic damages like medical bills and lost wages.
Other Practice Areas in Middletown
The Henry Law Firm handles a full range of personal injury cases for Middletown residents. Explore our other practice areas:
Car Accident Lawyer
Truck Accident Lawyer
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer
Wrongful Death Lawyer
Nursing Home Abuse Lawyer
Slip and Fall Lawyer
Premises Liability Lawyer
Bicycle Accident Lawyer
Serving Middletown from Our Ohio Offices
The Henry Law Firm serves Middletown and all of Butler County from two convenient locations:
- 8401 Chagrin Road, Suite 18, Chagrin Falls, OH 44023
- 850 Euclid Ave, Suite 1012, Cleveland, OH 44114
We offer free consultations by phone, video, or in person. If your injuries prevent you from traveling, we can come to you anywhere in Butler County. Call (216) 302-9500 to schedule.
Hold Negligent Healthcare Providers Accountable in Middletown
You deserve answers — and you deserve compensation. The Henry Law Firm evaluates medical malpractice claims in Middletown for free. Call (216) 302-9500 today.
Content reviewed by Eric Henry, Esq. — Last updated April 2026.
