
Board-Certified Medical Malpractice Attorneys in Atlanta, GA
Cambre & Associates represents injured patients across the Atlanta metro area whose medical providers delivered substandard care. When a doctor, hospital, or care team causes preventable harm, you deserve experienced legal counsel who understands both the medicine and the law. Call (770) 502-6116 now to speak with a board-certified medical malpractice attorney today.

Medical Negligence Lawyers Serving Injured Patients Across Georgia
Patients trust medical professionals with their health, and when that trust is violated through negligence, the consequences can permanently alter the course of a person’s life. According to the National Practitioner Data Bank, Georgia consistently ranks among the states with the highest volume of medical malpractice payment reports, with hundreds of payouts recorded annually against physicians, hospitals, and other licensed providers. Cambre & Associates combines decades of litigation experience with access to credentialed medical consultants to build the evidentiary foundation these cases demand in Fulton County and surrounding Georgia courts.

Hospital Negligence
Atlanta is home to several of the busiest hospital systems in the southeastern United States, including Grady Memorial Hospital, Emory University Hospital, Piedmont Atlanta, and the WellStar Health System network, each of which handles tens of thousands of inpatient admissions annually. When systemic failures in staffing ratios, equipment maintenance, infection control protocols, or patient oversight contribute to a worsened condition or death, Cambre & Associates pursues accountability directly against the institution under Georgia’s corporate liability doctrine.

Surgical Errors
Operative mistakes ranging from wrong-site procedures to retained surgical instruments constitute a recognized category of physician malpractice under Georgia law, and the Joint Commission has documented these so-called “never events” occurring at accredited facilities across the country each year. These cases often involve multiple responsible parties, including the operating surgeon, anesthesiologist, scrub technician, and the facility itself, and each must be identified and evaluated during the pre-litigation investigation phase.

Emergency Room Errors
Grady Memorial Hospital’s emergency department alone treats well over 100,000 patients annually, making it one of the highest-volume trauma centers in the region, and high patient volume under sustained time pressure is a documented contributor to misdiagnosis, delayed treatment, and premature discharge. When those conditions result in demonstrable patient harm, the responsible providers and the facility may be held liable under Georgia’s medical malpractice statutes.

Birth Injuries
Labor and delivery complications caused by practitioner inattention or delayed intervention can result in lasting neurological conditions, including cerebral palsy and brachial plexus injuries, outcomes that carry lifetime care costs routinely estimated in the millions of dollars by rehabilitation economists. Cambre & Associates evaluates obstetric records, fetal monitoring strips, and hospital delivery protocols to determine whether the standard of care was breached before, during, or immediately following delivery at Atlanta-area maternity facilities.
Atlanta Medical Malpractice Claims: What Injured Patients Must Establish
Georgia law imposes specific procedural and evidentiary requirements on medical malpractice plaintiffs that distinguish these cases from standard personal injury claims filed elsewhere in the state. Before a lawsuit can proceed in Fulton or DeKalb County Superior Court, the claimant must file an affidavit from a qualified medical expert affirming that the defendant’s conduct fell below the applicable standard of care, a threshold established under Georgia Code Section 9-11-9.1 that demands both legal precision and credentialed medical support. Studies published in peer-reviewed journals estimate that diagnostic errors alone affect approximately 12 million Americans annually, and Georgia patients are not exempt from that statistic.

Misdiagnosis and Delayed Diagnosis
Diagnostic errors are among the most frequently litigated categories of physician negligence in Georgia, particularly in oncology, cardiology, and infectious disease matters handled at major Atlanta medical centers. A delayed cancer diagnosis at a facility such as Emory’s Winship Cancer Institute or a missed cardiac event in a Piedmont emergency department can substantially reduce a patient’s treatment options, and in some cases the diagnostic delay proves fatal.

Medication and Prescription Errors
The Institute for Safe Medication Practices has documented that medication errors harm at least 1.5 million patients in the United States each year, and Georgia’s densely networked pharmacy and hospital dispensing systems are subject to the same failure patterns. These errors occur in both inpatient and outpatient settings across the Atlanta region, and the prescribing provider, dispensing pharmacist, or healthcare facility may each bear responsibility depending on where the breakdown in the medication administration process occurred.

Anesthesia Errors
The administration of anesthesia carries a narrow margin for error, and failures to review patient history, monitor vital signs intraoperatively, or respond to adverse reactions during a procedure at an Atlanta surgical center or hospital can produce catastrophic and irreversible harm. Georgia courts have consistently recognized anesthesiology negligence as a well-established basis for a malpractice claim when board-certified expert testimony confirms that the documented deviation caused the patient’s injury.
Why Choose Cambre & Associates for Your Atlanta Medical Malpractice Case
Medical malpractice litigation in Georgia is among the most technically demanding areas of civil law, requiring an attorney who can synthesize complex medical evidence, withstand aggressive defense tactics from hospital-employed counsel, and present a compelling narrative to a jury in Fulton, DeKalb, or Cobb County. Cambre & Associates has built its reputation in the Atlanta legal community on thorough case preparation and a willingness to take matters to verdict when insurers and hospital risk management teams refuse to offer fair compensation.
Here are four reasons Atlanta-area clients choose Cambre & Associates for medical malpractice representation:
Board-Certified Legal Credentials
Glenn Cambre holds board certification in civil trial law, a designation held by fewer than three percent of attorneys licensed in Georgia, reflecting a verified standard of trial competency directly relevant to complex malpractice litigation.
Access to Qualified Medical Experts
The firm maintains relationships with credentialed specialists across surgical, diagnostic, and obstetric disciplines whose testimony satisfies the expert affidavit requirements under Georgia Code Section 9-11-9.1 and withstands scrutiny from defense-retained specialists.
No Fees Unless You Recover
Cambre & Associates handles medical malpractice matters on a contingency basis, meaning Atlanta-area clients pay no attorney fees unless the firm obtains a settlement or jury verdict on their behalf.
Recognized Track Record in Georgia Courts
The firm’s litigation history in Atlanta-area civil courts reflects consistent preparation, disciplined case management, and sustained advocacy on behalf of seriously injured plaintiffs and their families throughout the metropolitan region.
Other Practice Areas at Cambre & Associates
Cambre & Associates represents clients across a broad range of personal injury matters throughout the Atlanta metro area, bringing the same standard of preparation and advocacy to every category of civil claim the firm handles. The firm’s injury practice extends well beyond medical negligence and covers the full spectrum of situations in which another party’s conduct causes preventable harm to Georgia residents.
Here are the other practice areas handled by Cambre & Associates:

Back & Neck Injuries

Bicycle & E-Scooter Accidents

Car Accidents

Catastrophic Injuries

Medical Malpractice

Motorcycle Accidents

Nursing Home Abuse

Pedestrian Accidents

Premises Liability

Product Liability

Public Transportation Accidents

Soft Tissue & Joint Injuries

Truck Accidents

Workplace Injuries

Wrongful Death
Areas We Serve
Cambre & Associates represents medical malpractice clients across a wide service territory that spans Fulton, DeKalb, Gwinnett, Cobb, and Bibb counties, reaching communities throughout the greater Atlanta region. The firm’s geographic reach allows injured patients in both urban and suburban areas to access experienced legal counsel without traveling far from home. Here are the communities served by Cambre & Associates:
Here are the communities where we provide representation:
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Speak With an Atlanta Medical Malpractice Attorney Now
Georgia’s two-year statute of limitations on malpractice claims runs from the date the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered, and the expert affidavit requirement means the investigation must begin well in advance of any filing deadline in Atlanta-area courts. Delaying a consultation reduces the time available to gather records, identify all responsible parties, and retain the specialists whose testimony will be central to the claim. Securing experienced legal representation now gives your case the strongest possible foundation under Georgia law.
Contact Cambre & Associates to schedule a free evaluation with a board-certified medical malpractice attorney serving the Atlanta metropolitan area. Call (770) 502-6116 now to discuss your situation with an attorney prepared to act on your behalf without delay.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the statute of limitations for a medical malpractice claim in Georgia?
Georgia law generally requires that a medical malpractice lawsuit be filed within two years of the date the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered. Certain exceptions apply to cases involving foreign objects left in the body, fraudulent concealment, or claims on behalf of minors, which is why consulting an Atlanta medical malpractice attorney as soon as possible is strongly advised.
What is the expert affidavit requirement for filing a medical malpractice case in Georgia?
Under Georgia Code Section 9-11-9.1, a plaintiff filing a malpractice claim must attach an affidavit from at least one qualified medical expert affirming that the defendant’s conduct fell below the applicable standard of care. This requirement distinguishes malpractice cases from other personal injury claims and makes early legal consultation with a Georgia-licensed attorney essential to preserving the right to file.
How do Atlanta medical malpractice attorneys determine whether a case is viable?
An attorney will request and review the complete medical records, consult with one or more specialists in the relevant field of medicine, and assess whether the documented treatment deviates from what a reasonably competent provider would have done under the same circumstances in an Atlanta-area clinical setting. That analysis forms the evidentiary foundation of every viable malpractice claim.
Does Georgia cap damages in medical malpractice cases?
The Georgia Supreme Court struck down the state’s statutory cap on noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases in 2010, meaning there is no fixed ceiling on pain and suffering awards in Atlanta-area civil courts. Economic damages covering lost wages, ongoing treatment costs, and future medical expenses are calculated and presented separately through vocational and medical expert testimony.
How long does a medical malpractice case typically take to resolve in Atlanta?
The duration varies considerably depending on the complexity of the medical issues, the number of defendants named, and whether the matter proceeds to trial in Fulton or DeKalb County Superior Court or resolves through pre-trial settlement negotiations. Many Georgia malpractice cases take between two and four years from initial filing to final resolution, which is one reason early and thorough case preparation is indispensable.
What types of compensation can a medical malpractice victim recover in Georgia?
Injured patients may recover economic damages covering past and future medical expenses, lost income, and rehabilitation costs, as well as noneconomic damages for physical pain, emotional distress, and diminished quality of life resulting from the provider’s negligence. In cases involving the death of a patient, eligible surviving family members may also pursue a separate wrongful death claim under Georgia Code Section 51-4-2.
