Malpractice Law Glossary: Key Terms and Legal Definitions

Malpractice law carries a dense vocabulary drawn from tort doctrine, procedural rules, and professional licensing frameworks. This glossary covers the core terms encountered across medical, legal, and professional malpractice claims in the United States, from foundational negligence concepts through procedural mechanisms and damages classifications. Precise understanding of these definitions shapes how claims are filed, litigated, and resolved under state and federal law.

Definition and scope

Malpractice refers to professional negligence — a failure by a licensed professional to meet the applicable standard of care, causing measurable harm to a client, patient, or third party. The term applies across professions: medical malpractice, legal malpractice, accounting malpractice, dental malpractice, and others. Each professional category is governed by its own licensing board standards and, in many states, specific statutory frameworks.

Key foundational terms in this glossary include:

  1. Standard of care — The level of skill and care that a reasonably competent professional in the same field and geographic region would provide under similar circumstances. Courts rely on expert testimony to establish this benchmark (elements of a malpractice claim).
  2. Duty — The legal obligation a professional owes to a patient, client, or third party, typically arising from the existence of a professional relationship.
  3. Breach — A departure from the applicable standard of care. Breach is a threshold element; without it, no negligence claim proceeds.
  4. Causation — The requirement that the breach directly caused the plaintiff's injury. Courts apply both "cause-in-fact" (actual causation, the "but-for" test) and "proximate cause" (legal causation) analyses. See malpractice causation challenges.
  5. Damages — Quantifiable harm suffered by the plaintiff as a result of the breach. Damages are classified as compensatory (economic and non-economic) or punitive. See malpractice damages: compensatory and punitive.
  6. Negligence per se — A finding that a professional's conduct violated a statute or regulation, making breach automatically established without further expert testimony.
  7. Res ipsa loquitur — Latin for "the thing speaks for itself." A doctrine permitting an inference of negligence when the harm would not ordinarily occur absent negligence and the defendant had exclusive control over the instrumentality causing harm. Detailed analysis appears at res ipsa loquitur in malpractice.

How it works

Malpractice claims proceed through a structured sequence of legal stages, each governed by specific procedural rules. The elements of a malpractice claim must all be established by the plaintiff, typically by a preponderance of the evidence (greater than 50% probability).

Procedural glossary terms:

Common scenarios

Damages and compensation terms:

Comparative fault terms:

Decision boundaries

Distinguishing malpractice from related legal concepts:

Term Distinguishing Feature
Malpractice Professional negligence by a licensed professional
Ordinary negligence Negligent conduct by a non-professional without specialized duty
Battery Intentional unconsented touching, not mere negligence
Fraud Intentional misrepresentation for gain
Breach of contract Failure to fulfill a specific contractual promise, not a duty of care

Institutional and regulatory terms:

Proof and evidentiary terms:

References

📜 5 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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