Medical Malpractice Lawyers South Hackensack NJ
Something went wrong during your care. You left the hospital worse than when you arrived — or someone in your family didn’t come home at all. You deserve honest answers about whether that was negligence.
Gencarelli & Rimassa Law Firm represents South Hackensack residents against hospitals, surgeons, and outpatient providers. We work on contingency, so there’s no cost to get started.
Malpractice isn’t every bad outcome. Medicine has risks, and not every complication means someone did something wrong.
Malpractice is when a provider fails to deliver the care a competent colleague would have given — and that failure directly causes your harm. Four things must be true:
Errors in the operating room — and in the hours after surgery — are among the most common malpractice claims from patients treated at Hackensack UMC. Common failures include:
Postoperative failures are especially common. Multiple providers see a deteriorating patient — and each one misses it.
A delayed cancer diagnosis can mean the difference between a curative surgery and a terminal prognosis. Common diagnostic failures include:
Hackensack UMC’s ER processes thousands of patients a week. Under that pressure, serious conditions get missed. We handle cases involving:
When labor goes wrong and the clinical team doesn’t act fast enough, children suffer permanent harm. We look at:
Wrong drug, wrong dose, or dangerous interactions that weren’t screened — these happen at every level of care, from the hospital floor to the outpatient prescription pad.
South Hackensack is directly adjacent to Hackensack UMC — one of Bergen County’s largest and busiest hospitals. That proximity is valuable. It also creates real risk.
High-volume academic hospitals are prone to specific failures:
The outpatient corridor along Route 46 also generates delayed cancer diagnosis claims — the most common form of outpatient malpractice in this area.
Malpractice cases take longer than most personal injury claims. Here’s why: every case requires a qualified medical expert to confirm the breach before it can move forward.
| Stage | What Happens | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Case Evaluation | Attorney reviews your records and identifies negligence | Weeks 1–4 |
| Expert Review | Medical expert analyzes the care and confirms the breach | Weeks 4–12 |
| Filing Complaint | Lawsuit filed in Superior Court, Bergen County Vicinage | Before 2-year deadline |
| Affidavit of Merit | Expert opinion filed within 60 days of defendant’s answer | Required by statute |
| Discovery | Depositions, records exchange, expert designations | 12–18 months |
| Resolution | Settlement negotiation or trial verdict | 18–36+ months |
The 2-year statute of limitations runs from discovery — the day you knew or should have known your injury came from negligence. For minors, it typically starts at age 18. Miss the deadline and you lose the right to sue, no matter how strong the case.
There’s no cap on economic damages in malpractice cases in this state. Recoverable compensation includes:
For serious injuries, Gencarelli & Rimassa Law Firm brings in medical economists and life care planners to document every dollar of future loss.
Two years from the date of discovery — when you knew or reasonably should have known the injury came from negligence. For children, it typically starts at age 18. Don’t assume you know your deadline. Have an attorney look at the specific facts.
Nothing upfront. Gencarelli & Rimassa Law Firm works on a contingency fee — we only get paid if we win. We also advance all litigation costs, including expert fees and deposition expenses. If we don’t recover, you owe nothing.
It’s a sworn statement from a doctor in the same specialty as the defendant, filed within 60 days of their answer. It confirms the standard of care was breached. Miss this deadline and the case gets dismissed automatically. Gencarelli & Rimassa Law Firm manages this from day one.
Yes — and in most cases you should pursue both. The hospital faces liability for its own institutional failures. The individual provider faces liability for their own decisions. Naming both maximizes your recovery and keeps everyone accountable.
Postoperative negligence is some of the most actionable malpractice. If warning signs were present in your chart — abnormal vitals, rising infection markers, deteriorating output — and no one acted on them in time, that’s a breach. We see this frequently in Hackensack UMC cases.
We know Hackensack UMC’s defense team. We know how they build their cases — and how to counter them. Our attorneys understand the clinical record well enough to read an operative note, spot a missed lab value, and identify the moment care went wrong.
We take these cases to trial when the evidence calls for it. Hospital insurers know that — and it changes how they negotiate.
If you or someone in your family was seriously harmed by negligent care in South Hackensack or anywhere in Bergen County, call Gencarelli & Rimassa Law Firm. The consultation is free, confidential, and carries no obligation. No fee unless we win.