Manhattan Medical Malpractice Attorneys

We represent patients and families harmed by medical negligence at hospitals throughout Manhattan. We have litigated cases against NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell, NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia, Mount Sinai, NYU Langone, Lenox Hill Hospital, and NYC Health + Hospitals facilities including Bellevue, Metropolitan, and Harlem Hospital.

The single most important issue in any Manhattan malpractice case is whether your hospital is public or private. Three Manhattan hospitals — Bellevue, Metropolitan, and Harlem — are operated by NYC Health + Hospitals and require a Notice of Claim within 90 days under General Municipal Law § 50-e. Every other major Manhattan hospital is private and carries the standard 2.5-year statute of limitations under CPLR § 214-a.

Trusted and Award-Winning Representation

Key Facts for Manhattan Malpractice Cases

  • Bellevue, Metropolitan, and Harlem Hospital are public — a Notice of Claim is required within 90 days of the negligent act (Gen. Muni. Law § 50-e)
  • All other major Manhattan hospitals — NYU Langone, NYP/Weill Cornell, NYP/Columbia, Mount Sinai, Mount Sinai West, Lenox Hill, Hospital for Special Surgery, Memorial Sloan Kettering — are private with a 2.5-year statute of limitations (CPLR § 214-a)
  • Manhattan cases are filed in Supreme Court, New York County — 60 Centre Street, New York, NY 10007
  • New York requires expert medical testimony establishing departure from accepted standards and causation (PJI 2:150)
If your care occurred at Bellevue Hospital Center, NYC Health + Hospitals/Metropolitan, or NYC Health + Hospitals/Harlem, you must file a Notice of Claim within 90 days. This deadline is strict — courts rarely grant extensions. Contact us immediately.

Manhattan Hospitals: Public vs. Private Deadlines

Hospital Type Filing Deadline
Bellevue Hospital Center PUBLIC — NYC Health + Hospitals 90-day Notice of Claim, then 1 year 90 days (Gen. Muni. Law § 50-e)
NYC Health + Hospitals/Metropolitan PUBLIC — NYC Health + Hospitals 90-day Notice of Claim, then 1 year 90 days (Gen. Muni. Law § 50-e)
NYC Health + Hospitals/Harlem PUBLIC — NYC Health + Hospitals 90-day Notice of Claim, then 1 year 90 days (Gen. Muni. Law § 50-e)
NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
NYU Langone Medical Center Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
Mount Sinai Hospital Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
Mount Sinai West Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
Mount Sinai Beth Israel Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
Lenox Hill Hospital Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
Hospital for Special Surgery Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Private 2.5 years (CPLR § 214-a)

Manhattan Medical Malpractice Practice Areas

Birth Injuries

Delayed C-sections, improper use of forceps or vacuum extraction, failure to monitor fetal distress during labor and delivery.

Brain Injuries

Delayed diagnosis of brain bleeds, failure to monitor neurological changes, surgical errors affecting neurological function.

Cancer Malpractice

Missed or delayed cancer diagnoses. Lavern's Law provides a discovery rule with a 7-year outer limit for missed cancer diagnoses.

Diagnosis Errors

Misdiagnosis or delayed recognition of conditions — from appendicitis to pulmonary embolism — at any Manhattan facility.

Emergency Room Malpractice

Triage failures, premature discharge, failure to order appropriate testing in Manhattan emergency departments.

Heart Attack Malpractice

Delayed EKGs, missed ST elevations, catheterization lab failures. ACC/AHA requires door-to-balloon within 90 minutes.

Stroke Malpractice

Failure to recognize stroke symptoms, delayed CT imaging, missed tPA treatment windows at Manhattan hospitals.

Wrongful Death

When medical negligence proves fatal. Statute of limitations: 2 years from date of death (EPTL § 5-4.1).

Expert Witness Consultation

Board-certified specialists in cardiology, neurology, oncology, obstetrics, emergency medicine, and surgery.

Our Case Results

$12.2 Million

Emergency room malpractice leading to brain damage

$7.4 Million

Birth injury resulting in cerebral palsy

$3.5 Million

Steroid injection malpractice causing leg paralysis

$2.63 Million

Delayed diagnosis of pituitary tumor causing permanent hormonal changes

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Manhattan hospitals require a 90-day Notice of Claim?Three Manhattan hospitals are operated by NYC Health + Hospitals and require a Notice of Claim within 90 days: Bellevue Hospital Center, NYC Health + Hospitals/Metropolitan, and NYC Health + Hospitals/Harlem. All other major Manhattan hospitals — NewYork-Presbyterian, NYU Langone, Mount Sinai, Lenox Hill, Hospital for Special Surgery, Memorial Sloan Kettering — are private with a 2.5-year deadline under CPLR § 214-a.
Where are Manhattan medical malpractice cases filed?Supreme Court, New York County — 60 Centre Street, New York, NY 10007. New York County is the judicial name for Manhattan.
Is NYU Langone a public or private hospital?NYU Langone Medical Center is private. The standard 2.5-year statute of limitations under CPLR § 214-a applies. There is no 90-day Notice of Claim requirement.
Does the 90-day Notice of Claim deadline apply to NewYork-Presbyterian hospitals?No. NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell, NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia, and NewYork-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan are all private hospitals. The standard 2.5-year statute of limitations under CPLR § 214-a applies to all of them. The 90-day Notice of Claim requirement applies only to facilities directly operated by NYC Health + Hospitals.
What is the deadline for a case involving Bellevue Hospital?Bellevue Hospital Center is operated by NYC Health + Hospitals, a public entity. You must file a Notice of Claim within 90 days of the negligent act under General Municipal Law § 50-e. The lawsuit itself must then be filed within 1 year and 90 days. Missing the initial 90-day Notice of Claim deadline typically bars the case entirely.

Deutsch Law, PC — Manhattan Office

Ready to Discuss Your Question?

If you or someone close to you has experienced issues related to medical treatment in the New York City area, our local team is ready to help. We’ll take the time to understand your situation, review the specifics thoroughly, and explain your options along with any possible next steps.

Contact our Manhattan office for a free case evaluation.

We handle cases on a contingency basis — no fees unless we obtain a recovery.

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