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August 26, 2009 (NewYorkInjuryNews.com – Injury News)

New Source: JusticeNewsFlash.com

A South Carolina patient recovered a $2 million jury verdict against the dental clinic that accidentally pulled 13 additional teeth. The Florence County jury ruled against the Sexton Dental Clinic in a malpractice lawsuit asserting dentists pulled all 16 of the patient’s top teeth.

 

South Carolina medical malpractice lawsuit involving Sexton Dental Clinic in Florence County resulted in a $2 million jury verdict.

 

Columbia, SC–Personal injury lawyers representing a South Carolina patient, who fell victim to gross medical negligence by dentists at the Sexton Dental Clinic recovered a $2 million jury verdict in a Florence County court room. As reported by South Carolina Now, the plaintiff, Elizabeth Smith, a 28 year-old Sumter woman, sought treatment for a cracked tooth at the Sexton Dental Clinic, in Florence in May 2006. A Florence County jury returned a $2 million verdict in mid-August after hearing the personal injury claim that left the young woman with no upper teeth since 2006 when a rogue dentist removed all of her upper dentia.

 

According to court documents filed by South Carolina dental malpractice attorneys representing the seriously injured woman, three dentists at the Sexton Dental Clinic; Dr. Robert W. Scott, Dr. Robert G. Jamison, and Dr. John R. Clark, extracted all 16 of Smith’s upper teeth including 13 without any medical basis. The catastrophically damaged young woman further claimed in her malpractice suit the dentist falsified her medical records to cover up their mistake. Apparently, the dentist’s determined she needed to have a total of three teeth removed and ended up pulling all 16 teeth in her upper palate. The medical malpractice lawsuit named the Sexton Dental Clinic, CEO, and the three dentists who all denied the allegations of wrongdoing.

 

Lawyers representing the Sexton Dental Clinic may file an appeal of the jury verdict to a higher court. The South Carolina Board of Dentistry http://www.llr.state.sc.us/POL/Dentistry/ which operates under the South Carolina Department of Labor www.llr.state.sc.us/ division of Licensing and Regulation lists all three of the above named dentist’s licenses as active. During research of the three named dentists on the Board of Dentistry website information about a previous action involving Dr. Robert G. Jamison, D.M.D., around July 23, 1996 surfaced. According to public records, Dr. Jamison, admitted to violating South Carolina standards of care in the treatment of two patients and submitted to disciplinary and corrective actions under S.C. Code Ann. Section 40-15-200 (Supp. 1996). He was ordered to pain a fine, one year probation, and 32 hours of remedial education course in removable prosthodontics.

 

The South Carolina Board of Dentistry website states their primary purpose is to oversee examinations, licensing certification, annual re-registration and regulation of dentist and dental professionals including dental laboratory technicians. The Board also investigates complaints and disciplines dentists and dental professionals. If you or your family has suffered injury because of the negligence or malpractice of a dental professional you can file a complaint with the South Carolina Board of Dentistry at http://www.llr.state.sc.us/POL/Dentistry/index.asp?file=complaint.htm. Contacting a South Carolina personal injury trial attorney experienced with medical malpractice lawsuits, involving dental professionals, may help you recover from your damages and injuries.

 

South Carolina medical malpractice jury verdict alerts by legal news reporter Heather L. Ryan.

 

News Source: JusticeNewsFlash.com – Press Release Distribution

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Dental malpractice lawsuit over

Posted under: Uncategorized by DreamLegalTeam

Family of patient who died awarded
$11 million

Updated: Monday, 09 Mar 2009, 9:34 AM EDT
Published : Monday, 09 Mar 2009, 9:27 AM EDT

·         Chris Hurley

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP) – The family of a New Jersey man who died hours after having his wisdom teeth removed has won more than $11 million in damages.

A Middlesex County jury determined Friday that George Flugrad, a Perth Amboy oral surgeon, committed medical malpractice when he failed to get clearance from Francis Keller’s doctor to operate on the 21-year-old in 2005.

Keller told Flugrad he had a hereditary condition that caused his immune system to react to any trauma to his face or hands by swelling.

And that condition caused Keller’s throat, face and hands to swell and his airway to slowly close following the surgery.

The lawsuit named Flugrad and Keller’s family dentist, John Madaris of Woodbridge.

The two had blamed each other, but Madaris was cleared by the jury.

Copyright Associated Press, Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

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Jury awards $197K for ‘horse’ teeth

Posted under: Uncategorized by DreamLegalTeam

By DANIEL TEPFER
Staff writer, Connecticut Post

Updated: 12/25/2008 11:05:19 PM EST



BRIDGEPORT — A dentist promised a local woman he would give her a “celebrity smile,” but instead gave her a bite only a horse could love, she claimed in a lawsuit.

A Superior Court jury apparently agreed with her and on Monday awarded Marvalyn Foster nearly $200,000.

The jury deliberated less than two hours before returning the verdict of $196,880.50 against Darren Martinez, a Stamford dentist.

“The jury rejected the doctor’s claim that he could have committed malpractice without having harmed Marvalyn. Although I appreciated that the doctor stepped up and admitted he had made mistakes, the plain fact was that his neglect cost my client her smile. She now faces two to five years of expensive dental treatment to give her what he had promised her — a beautiful smile,” said Foster’s lawyer, Richard T. Meehan Jr.

Meehan said his 44-year-old client, who had just passed the exam to get a real estate license, went to Martinez after seeing an ad for his dental services in a phone book. She wanted a permanent bridge to replace a false tooth, the lawyer said.

“He told her he could give her a big, beautiful Hollywood celebrity smile by making a bridge from canine to canine, but when he finished the procedure she was shocked to see her three teeth on the tray next to the dental chair,” Meehan said.

He claimed that one bridge Martinez had made for his client resembled horse teeth.

Martinez’s lawyer, Bruce Gilpatrick, of Stamford, could not be reached Wednesday for comment.

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