Florida Anesthesia Error Lawyers
For more than 30 years, the Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A., has represented Florida families in medical malpractice cases, drawing on prior experience from the defense side of the very hospitals, anesthesia providers, and carriers now being sued. The firm knows how operating-room events are documented, disclosed, and defended.
The firm handles civil medical malpractice cases exclusively; no auto accidents, no slip-and-fall matters, and no workers’ compensation work. Anesthesia malpractice claims governed by Florida Statute § 766.102 and the pre-suit framework of § 766.106 are a recurring part of the docket. When anesthesia goes wrong, the harm is usually catastrophic.
If a loved one suffered brain injury, awareness, or death during or after a procedure, you have a limited window to act and a right to answers.
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I spent three decades on the defense side of these cases. I deposed anesthesiologists. I argued that adverse events were unavoidable complications, not malpractice. I know the defense playbook. I use that knowledge now for Florida families.
What qualifies as an anesthesia error under Florida law
A Florida anesthesia malpractice claim requires proof that an anesthesiologist, CRNA, or facility accepted the patient for care, then fell below the “prevailing professional standard of care” under § 766.102, and that this failure directly caused significant harm. The four elements (duty, breach, causation, damages) are the same as any Florida malpractice case. What makes an anesthesia case distinctive is how the standard of care itself is defined.
Anesthesia is one of the few specialties with formally published, widely adopted standards. The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) publishes the Standards for Basic Anesthetic Monitoring, which set the baseline for oxygenation, ventilation, circulation, and temperature monitoring during every anesthetic. The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF) publishes additional patient-safety recommendations on topics like drug labeling, airway rescue, and medication reconciliation. Hospital and ambulatory surgery center policies frequently adopt these standards by reference.
In practical terms, the anesthesia expert compares what happened against these published standards plus the clinical judgment of a reasonably careful provider in the same subspecialty. Causation in anesthesia cases is often easier to establish than in diagnosis cases because the anesthesia record itself timestamps the breach. Damages must be significant: brain injury, stroke, cardiac arrest, paralysis, death, or post-traumatic stress from awareness.
For the broader explanation of what qualifies as medical malpractice under Florida law, see What Qualifies as Medical Malpractice in Florida?
The four categories of anesthesia error
Anesthesia errors fall into four phases of care.
Pre-operative errors
- Inadequate pre-anesthetic evaluation
- Failure to screen for drug allergies or interactions
- Missed cardiac, pulmonary, or airway risk factors
- Failure to identify malignant hyperthermia susceptibility
- NPO (nothing-by-mouth) instructions not confirmed
Intraoperative errors
- Wrong drug, wrong dose, or wrong route
- Failure to intubate or failure to recognize esophageal intubation
- Airway loss without a documented rescue plan
- Failure to monitor vital signs, oxygen saturation, or end-tidal CO2
- Equipment failure that went unnoticed
- Inadequate depth of anesthesia, leading to awareness
Post-operative and PACU errors
- Delayed or premature extubation
- Failure to recognize post-operative respiratory depression
- Opioid overdose in recovery
- Inadequate PACU staffing or monitoring
- Premature discharge from the PACU
Specialty and sub-type errors
Certain procedures carry specific anesthesia risks. Obstetric anesthesia (epidural injuries, failed spinal, maternal hypotension), pediatric anesthesia, regional blocks, and cases involving malignant hyperthermia require specialized analysis. Birth-related anesthesia injuries are often evaluated alongside the delivery; see our Birth Injury pillar. Oxygen deprivation during or after anesthesia can produce lasting brain damage; see our Anoxic Brain Injury pillar.
Anesthesia awareness and post-traumatic stress disorder
Anesthesia awareness happens when a patient under general anesthesia regains consciousness during surgery. They cannot move, speak, or signal. They can sometimes feel and hear.
Incidence is roughly 1 in 1,000 general anesthetics. Many resolve without lasting injury. A subset produce post-traumatic stress disorder severe enough to meet DSM-5 criteria, with flashbacks, hypervigilance, avoidance, and sleep disturbance lasting for years.
Whether a Florida awareness case is viable depends on whether the record shows a preventable breach.
The BIS monitor (bispectral index) is the technology most often at issue. Standard-of-care arguments increasingly turn on whether BIS or a similar monitor was used in high-risk cases and whether the readings were acted on.
The anesthesia record as evidence
Anesthesia cases are records cases. The anesthesia record itself is usually the single most important document in the file.
Modern hospitals use an Anesthesia Information Management System (AIMS). Vitals, drugs, ventilator settings, and events are logged second by second. The printed summary is a snapshot. The raw AIMS data contains timestamps, alarm histories, and gaps the summary smooths over.
A complete anesthesia record includes:
- Vitals. Heart rate, blood pressure, oxygen saturation, end-tidal CO2, temperature
- Drugs. Every medication, dose, time, and route
- Airway. Intubation attempts, tube placement confirmation, ventilator settings
- Fluids and blood products. Volumes, timing, and hemodynamic response
- Staffing. Who was present in the room at each point in the case
- Events. Alarm history, interventions, rescue attempts, unusual findings
The strongest anesthesia cases are the ones where the record shows what should not have happened. A monitoring gap. A medication entered but never given. A rescue attempt that is undocumented. Defense counsel reads the record the same way. If the record is clean, the defense wins. If it is not, the case can be very strong.
For this reason, the first step in any Florida anesthesia case is obtaining the complete anesthesia record, including the raw AIMS data where available. Ordering only the printed summary misses most of what matters.
Who is liable for an anesthesia error in Florida
Florida anesthesia cases often have multiple proper defendants. Liability is fact-specific.
The Florida legal framework
Every Florida anesthesia malpractice case follows the same statutory sequence.
Deadlines under § 95.11(4)(b)
Under § 95.11(4)(b), adults generally have two years from discovery, with a four-year outer limit. Minors injured at birth have through their eighth birthday (Tony’s Law). Fraud or concealment can toll these deadlines in specific circumstances.
Missing the deadline ends the case regardless of the strength of the medical evidence. Because pre-suit investigation itself takes months, families should consult counsel well before the statutory clock runs.
Damages in a Florida anesthesia case
Florida malpractice damages fall into two categories.
- Economic. Past and future medical treatment, lost wages, loss of earning capacity, cost of long-term care, and therapy costs.
- Non-economic. Pain, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life. PTSD from awareness falls here when psychiatrically documented.
Wrongful death
Where an anesthesia error causes death, Florida’s Wrongful Death Act governs who may recover. Under Fla. Stat. § 768.21(8), adult children cannot recover non-economic damages for the death of a parent caused by medical malpractice, and parents cannot recover non-economic damages for the death of an adult child caused by medical malpractice. This provision, sometimes called the “Free Kill” exclusion, has no parallel in any other state and does not apply to non-medical wrongful-death cases. Economic damages (lost wages, funeral expenses, estate charges) are still recoverable; the restriction is limited to pain and suffering and loss-of-companionship damages.
Punitive damages
Punitive damages are available in rare Florida anesthesia cases where the plaintiff can show intentional misconduct or gross negligence by clear and convincing evidence. Most anesthesia errors do not meet this bar. Substance-impaired providers and providers with documented histories of the same error may.
Procedurally, Florida treats punitive damages as a gatekept claim. Under Fla. Stat. § 768.72, a plaintiff cannot plead punitive damages in the initial complaint. Counsel must first gather evidence through discovery, then move for leave to amend the complaint, supported by a proffer that establishes a reasonable evidentiary basis. No financial-worth discovery is permitted until the court grants leave. This procedural step often shapes the timing and cost of a Florida anesthesia case where punitive damages are a realistic target. For a deeper treatment of when punitive damages are available in Florida medical malpractice, see our Punitive vs Compensatory pillar.
How damages are calculated
Catastrophic anesthesia injuries require multiple specialists to quantify.
- Life care planners project decades of future medical and attendant care
- Forensic economists calculate present value of lost earnings and reduced capacity
- Vocational experts assess residual work capacity
- Psychiatrists and psychologists document awareness-related PTSD
For Florida’s current damage-cap framework and the no-cap exceptions, see our Maximum Payout pillar.
How Florida anesthesia cases are proved
Records first, experts second.
The records. Complete anesthesia record with raw AIMS data. Operative report. PACU record. Pre-anesthetic evaluation. All imaging, labs, and EKGs from the admission. Pharmacy dispensing records. Equipment maintenance logs. Hospital protocols in effect on the date of the event.
The experts. Florida requires active same-specialty providers. An anesthesiologist evaluates an anesthesiologist. A CRNA evaluates a CRNA. For OB anesthesia cases, the expert typically has obstetric subspecialty experience. The expert reviews the record, applies clinical judgment, and signs the affidavit that allows the case to be filed.
Families do not assemble any of this. The firm does. For a realistic picture of how many Florida medical malpractice cases survive pre-suit, see our How Hard Is It to Sue pillar.
Selected case results
Recent matters from the Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A. See our full Case Results page for additional matters.
The results above are hospital-negligence matters where the firm recovered for catastrophic harm caused by provider failures similar to those in anesthesia cases: missed monitoring, delayed response to clinical deterioration, and failure to act on the record. Anesthesia case outcomes are fact-specific; the firm welcomes the opportunity to discuss specific anesthesia matters at no cost.
Recognized by peers, rated by clients
The Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A., is peer-reviewed by fellow Florida attorneys and publicly rated by clients. The recognitions below reflect independent third-party evaluation of the firm.
Florida anesthesia error FAQs
What qualifies as an anesthesia error under Florida law?
Can I sue a CRNA directly in Florida?
How long do I have to file a Florida anesthesia malpractice case?
Do I need to complete pre-suit before filing?
Is anesthesia awareness a viable claim?
What is the anesthesia record, and why does it matter?
Who can be held liable besides the anesthesiologist?
How much is a Florida anesthesia case worth?
What does it cost to hire a Florida anesthesia error lawyer?
How long does a Florida anesthesia case take?
Florida anesthesia cases, statewide
Florida anesthesia cases turn on Florida-specific rules. Ambulatory surgery centers operating under AHCA Chapter 395 licensure are held to different monitoring, staffing, and transfer-protocol standards than Level I office surgery facilities. An anesthesia event at a physician-owned office that takes Level I patients can trigger different regulatory and liability questions than the same event at a fully licensed ASC or hospital operating room.
Venue also matters. Miami-Dade anesthesia cases are filed in the 11th Judicial Circuit, which has its own defense bar, mediator pool, and jury expectations. Tampa-area cases go to the 13th Circuit; Orlando cases to the 9th. Anesthesia expert selection and mediator familiarity with each circuit affect how a case is worked up.
The firm is based in Miami and handles anesthesia cases statewide, in English or Spanish. Consultations by phone, video, or in person at the family’s preference.
