In a November 21, 2013 written opinion issued by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, the appellate court affirmed the federal district court’s decision, “Because [the plaintiff’s medical expert’s] report does not establish causation as medical probability or point to breach of the standard of care with the requisite specificity. man who was experiencing symptoms of reflux sought treatment from his primary care physicains, who referred him to the Jackson VA Medical Center (“JVAMC”) for an esophagogastroduodenoscopy (“EGD”) to examine his upper gastrointestinal tract. The man had the EGD performed on December 10, 2003 that discovered mass in his stomach (“fragments of adenomatous dysplatic mucosa, consistent with papillary adenoma” and “[c]omplete intestinal metaplasia”). During the summer of 2008, the man experienced weight loss and difficulty
Mississippi Medical Malpractice Plaintiff’s Expert Affidavit Ruled Insufficient – Medical Malpractice Lawyers
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