Medical Negligence Solicitors Helping You Find Out Where You Stand
If medical treatment has left you injured, worse than before or without answers, Med-Cop can help you understand whether you may have a medical negligence claim.
We advise on NHS and private healthcare claims, including misdiagnosis, delayed diagnosis, hospital negligence, GP negligence, surgical errors, medication mistakes, maternity care concerns and No Win No Fee medical negligence claims across England and Wales.
Misdiagnosis & Delayed Diagnosis
Advice where warning signs, abnormal results, scans, referrals or urgent symptoms may not have been handled quickly or safely.
Read about misdiagnosis claimsHospital, GP & Surgical Errors
We can discuss treatment delays, poor monitoring, unsafe discharge, failure to refer, surgical mistakes and post-operative complications.
View claim typesNo Win No Fee Medical Negligence
Where suitable, eligible claims may be investigated under a No Win No Fee agreement, subject to evidence, prospects and terms.
Ask about fundingMedical Negligence Claims Start With Evidence, Not Guesswork.
It is natural to feel that something went wrong after a delayed diagnosis, failed treatment, unexpected complication or poor hospital experience. The legal question is more precise: did the healthcare provider act in a way that no reasonably competent professional would have done, and did that failure cause avoidable harm?
Med-Cop gives you a practical starting point. We listen to what happened, identify the clinical and legal issues, explain the evidence likely to be needed and help you decide whether the matter should be investigated further.
People often search for medical negligence lawyers, but in England and Wales these claims are normally handled by solicitors with experience in clinical negligence, medical evidence, causation and compensation.
What Is Medical Negligence?
Medical negligence can happen when care from a healthcare professional, clinic, hospital or other provider falls below an acceptable standard and causes harm that should reasonably have been avoided.
Not every medical mistake leads to a claim, and not every poor outcome is negligence. Some treatment carries recognised risks even when care is appropriate. A claim is usually investigated where the evidence suggests unacceptable care caused a worse outcome than would otherwise have occurred.
Check Your PositionThe care may have fallen below the standard expected from a reasonably competent medical professional or healthcare provider.
The failure must have caused injury, deterioration, delayed recovery, avoidable treatment or another measurable loss.
The claim must evidence the physical, psychological, financial and practical impact caused by the negligent treatment.
Examples of Medical Negligence We Can Discuss
Medical negligence claims can arise in many settings, including NHS hospitals, GP practices, private clinics, dental surgeries, maternity units, care homes and community healthcare services.
Misdiagnosis Claims
Missed, delayed or incorrect diagnosis, including red-flag symptoms, abnormal test results or scans not being acted on.
Learn moreDelayed Diagnosis Claims
Advice where a condition may have been diagnosed too late, causing deterioration, more invasive treatment or reduced recovery prospects.
Start enquiryFailure to Refer or Investigate
Claims involving delays in blood tests, scans, specialist referrals, repeat testing, urgent reviews or cancer pathway referrals.
Ask usHospital Negligence
A&E errors, ward mistakes, treatment delays, poor monitoring, unsafe discharge, infection concerns or inadequate aftercare.
Learn moreGP Negligence
Repeated appointments without diagnosis, missed symptoms, poor record keeping, prescription errors or failure to refer.
Start enquirySurgical Negligence
Avoidable surgical injury, wrong-site concerns, poor technique, consent issues, retained items or poor post-operative care.
Learn moreMedication Errors
Wrong medicine, wrong dose, allergy ignored, delayed medication, drug interaction issues or poor monitoring of side effects.
Start enquiryBirth Injury Claims
Maternity negligence involving poor fetal monitoring, delayed intervention, avoidable trauma, stillbirth or neonatal care concerns.
Learn moreDental Negligence
Nerve injury, failed extractions, poor implants, untreated gum disease, delayed oral cancer referral or avoidable tooth loss.
Learn morePressure Sore Claims
Pressure ulcers linked to poor risk assessment, repositioning, nutrition, hydration, equipment or skin monitoring.
Learn moreNursing & Care Failures
Inadequate nursing care, poor handovers, falls, medication handling, wound care failures or neglect in care settings.
Ask usFatal Medical Negligence
Support for families where avoidable clinical errors may have contributed to a death and further investigation is needed.
Speak to usTell us what happened
Start with the treatment date, provider, symptoms, outcome and why you believe something was missed or handled incorrectly.
Initial legal screening
We consider whether the issue appears to involve unacceptable care, avoidable harm and a realistic route to evidence.
Medical records and evidence
If the case is suitable for investigation, records, letters, test results, complaint responses and expert input may be needed.
Funding advice
Where appropriate, we explain whether No Win No Fee medical negligence funding may be available and what the terms mean.
Letter of claim and response
A formal claim sets out the alleged failures, how they caused harm and the compensation being pursued, supported by evidence.
Settlement or court proceedings
Many claims are resolved without a final trial, but strong preparation is essential if liability, causation or compensation is disputed.
What Can Compensation Cover?
Compensation depends on the facts, the medical evidence and the losses caused by the negligence. No page can safely promise an average payout, but a proper assessment should consider both the injury itself and the financial impact.
Injury and personal impact
This may include pain, suffering, loss of amenity, worsening condition, avoidable treatment, scarring, disability, psychological injury or reduced quality of life.
- Physical injury or deterioration
- Psychological distress or trauma
- Loss of independence or daily function
- Reduced recovery prospects
Financial and practical losses
A claim may also consider the measurable costs and consequences caused by the negligent treatment, provided they can be evidenced.
- Lost earnings and pension loss
- Care, support and rehabilitation costs
- Private treatment or therapy expenses
- Travel, equipment and home adaptations
Practical, UK-Focused Advice for Medical Negligence Claims
Our role is to reduce confusion, identify the key evidence and give you a clear next step.
We explain whether the issue appears to involve breach of duty, causation and loss, without legal jargon or false certainty.
Based in Bradford, we can discuss NHS and private healthcare claims involving hospitals, GPs, dentists, surgeons and other providers.
We explain whether the case may be suitable for No Win No Fee investigation and what information is needed before you proceed.
Based in Bradford, Helping Clients Across England and Wales
You do not need to prove your claim before contacting us. Tell us what happened, and we will help you understand whether the matter should be investigated.
Request a Free ConsultationMed-Cop | Clinical Negligence Solicitors
13-15 Claremont
Bradford
West Yorkshire
BD7 1BG
Telephone: [Placeholder Number]
Email: [Placeholder Email]
Office hours: Monday to Friday, 9:00am to 5:30pm
Free Medical Negligence Consultation
Complete the form below and a member of the team will contact you. Your enquiry is confidential and there is no obligation to proceed.
Got a Question About Medical Negligence Claims?
These answers are general information for England and Wales. The correct advice depends on the facts, evidence and limitation position.
Medical negligence can occur when care from a healthcare professional or organisation falls below an acceptable standard and causes avoidable injury, deterioration or loss. The claim usually needs evidence of unacceptable care and evidence that the failure caused harm.
Examples can include misdiagnosis, delayed diagnosis, failure to refer, hospital errors, GP negligence, surgical negligence, medication mistakes, dental negligence, birth injuries, poor aftercare, pressure sores and poor communication between providers.
Yes, medical negligence claims can involve NHS treatment as well as private healthcare. The key question is whether the evidence shows that the care fell below an acceptable standard and caused avoidable harm.
Many claims can be considered for No Win No Fee funding if the case has reasonable prospects of success and is suitable for investigation. The terms should be explained clearly before you decide whether to proceed.
In many adult cases, the general time limit is three years from the negligent treatment or from the date you first knew that negligence may have caused harm. Different rules can apply for children, people who lack mental capacity and fatal claims, so you should get advice as soon as possible.
No. It can help if you have appointment letters, discharge notes, complaint responses, photographs, prescriptions or test results, but you can contact us before you have every document ready.
Compensation depends on the injury, prognosis, losses and evidence. A claim may consider pain and suffering, lost earnings, treatment costs, care, rehabilitation, travel expenses, equipment and other losses caused by the negligence.
Timescales vary. Straightforward cases may resolve sooner, while complex claims involving expert evidence, serious injury or disputed causation can take longer. The priority is to build the claim properly rather than rush weak evidence.
Yes. Family members often contact us where a loved one has been seriously injured, lacks capacity, is a child or has died. We can explain what information is needed and who may be able to bring the claim.