Dental Malpractice Case #5 with Dr. Marc Leffler of MedPro Group - Dose of Dental Podcast #185 episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 10, 2025 · 46 MIN

Dental Malpractice Case #5 with Dr. Marc Leffler of MedPro Group - Dose of Dental Podcast #185

from Dr. Gallagher's Podcast · host Brendan Gallagher, DDS

Top 5 Topics:- When Surgeons Get Sued: The Real Story Behind a Lawsuit That Could Happen to Any Dentist- Trigeminal Neuralgia? Legal Nightmare? When Pain Turns Into a Court Case That Might Not Necessarily Be Trigeminal Neuralgia- Think Like a Surgeon: Why Board Exams Make You Better (Even If They Don’t Benefit More Tangibly)- What Every Dentist NEEDS To Know About Documentation — Before It’s Too Late- Inside the Courtroom: How One Sentence Decided the Fate of Two Dentists(Dental Cases = Even # Episodes; OMFS Cases = Odd # Episodes)Quotes & Wisdom:[03:12] Marc Leffler: “If you’re an oral surgeon, you’re achievement-oriented—and the OMFS Board Certification is the highest you can go in the profession.”[07:44] Marc Leffler: “Don’t tell the patient, ‘come back in a month if it’s not better.’ You initiate the return visit and follow tightly.”[10:31] Marc Leffler: “A single legal decision can direct the entire pathway of a case.”[28:35] Marc Leffler: “Files break. No negligence—files break.”[29:34] Marc Leffler (on TN causation): “This isn’t caused by a peripheral insult; it’s due to an anatomic relationship between vessel and nerve.”[36:59] Marc Leffler: “There’s no way to say, ‘you must see a patient X times after procedure Y.’ Make a judgment you can defend.”[40:54] Marc Leffler: “Once the patient leaves your sphere of influence, you’re subject to whatever another practitioner says—and that becomes the record.”[44:25] Marc Leffler: “Documentation is critical—paint a contemporaneous picture of what you saw, thought, diagnosed, and recommended.”[45:07] Marc Leffler: “Addendums are fine if you legitimately left something out—not so fine the day after a lawyer’s letter.”[42:44] Marc Leffler: “Healthcare is collaborative; litigation is adversarial—and it can get there very quickly.”[37:56] Marc Leffler: “You can’t guarantee a good result. The best you can do is a prudent approach a reasonably prudent practitioner would take.”Questions:[04:31] Can an apicoectomy incision realistically injure the infraorbital nerve and trigger trigeminal neuralgia?[07:44] From a risk-management standpoint, how tightly should we follow a patient who reports persistent post-op pain?[03:12] If boards don’t lower malpractice, raise reimbursements, or add other tangible benefits, why pursue certification?[10:31] How do plaintiff strategy and jury instructions shape outcomes when “trigeminal neuralgia” is alleged?[35:24] How many follow-up visits are “enough,” and when should we schedule them after apicos, coronectomies, or wisdom teeth?[36:59] With no rigid standard for follow-up counts, what’s the prudent, defensible judgment a surgeon should make?[38:50] What documentation habits best protect clinicians if a complication becomes a lawsuit?[43:09] In high-litigation environments, what can providers do to protect themselves when routine complications (e.g., separated files) occur?Now available on:- Dr. Gallagher’s Podcast & YouTube Channel- Dose of Dental Podcast #185- Malpractice Case #5My watch in this episode = Tag Heuer Aquaracer Calibre 16 Chrono- 10.2025This episode is a partnership with MedPro Group, and Dr. Marc Leffler, Lead Dental Risk Consultant.#podcast #dentalpodcast #doctor #dentist #dentistry #oralsurgery #dental #dentalschool #dentalstudent #dentistlife #oralsurgeon #doctorgallagher #medpro

Top 5 Topics:- When Surgeons Get Sued: The Real Story Behind a Lawsuit That Could Happen to Any Dentist- Trigeminal Neuralgia? Legal Nightmare? When Pain Turns Into a Court Case That Might Not Necessarily Be Trigeminal Neuralgia- Think Like a Surgeon: Why Board Exams Make You Better (Even If They Don’t Benefit More Tangibly)- What Every Dentist NEEDS To Know About Documentation — Before It’s Too Late- Inside the Courtroom: How One Sentence Decided the Fate of Two Dentists(Dental Cases = Even # Episodes; OMFS Cases = Odd # Episodes)Quotes & Wisdom:[03:12] Marc Leffler: “If you’re an oral surgeon, you’re achievement-oriented—and the OMFS Board Certification is the highest you can go in the profession.”[07:44] Marc Leffler: “Don’t tell the patient, ‘come back in a month if it’s not better.’ You initiate the return visit and follow tightly.”[10:31] Marc Leffler: “A single legal decision can direct the entire pathway of a case.”[28:35] Marc Leffler: “Files break. No negligence—files break.”[29:34] Marc Leffler (on TN causation): “This isn’t caused by a peripheral insult; it’s due to an anatomic relationship between vessel and nerve.”[36:59] Marc Leffler: “There’s no way to say, ‘you must see a patient X times after procedure Y.’ Make a judgment you can defend.”[40:54] Marc Leffler: “Once the patient leaves your sphere of influence, you’re subject to whatever another practitioner says—and that becomes the record.”[44:25] Marc Leffler: “Documentation is critical—paint a contemporaneous picture of what you saw, thought, diagnosed, and recommended.”[45:07] Marc Leffler: “Addendums are fine if you legitimately left something out—not so fine the day after a lawyer’s letter.”[42:44] Marc Leffler: “Healthcare is collaborative; litigation is adversarial—and it can get there very quickly.”[37:56] Marc Leffler: “You can’t guarantee a good result. The best you can do is a prudent approach a reasonably prudent practitioner would take.”Questions:[04:31] Can an apicoectomy incision realistically injure the infraorbital nerve and trigger trigeminal neuralgia?[07:44] From a risk-management standpoint, how tightly should we follow a patient who reports persistent post-op pain?[03:12] If boards don’t lower malpractice, raise reimbursements, or add other tangible benefits, why pursue certification?[10:31] How do plaintiff strategy and jury instructions shape outcomes when “trigeminal neuralgia” is alleged?[35:24] How many follow-up visits are “enough,” and when should we schedule them after apicos, coronectomies, or wisdom teeth?[36:59] With no rigid standard for follow-up counts, what’s the prudent, defensible judgment a surgeon should make?[38:50] What documentation habits best protect clinicians if a complication becomes a lawsuit?[43:09] In high-litigation environments, what can providers do to protect themselves when routine complications (e.g., separated files) occur?Now available on:- Dr. Gallagher’s Podcast & YouTube Channel- Dose of Dental Podcast #185- Malpractice Case #5My watch in this episode = Tag Heuer Aquaracer Calibre 16 Chrono- 10.2025This episode is a partnership with MedPro Group, and Dr. Marc Leffler, Lead Dental Risk Consultant.#podcast #dentalpodcast #doctor #dentist #dentistry #oralsurgery #dental #dentalschool #dentalstudent #dentistlife #oralsurgeon #doctorgallagher #medpro

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Dental Malpractice Case #5 with Dr. Marc Leffler of MedPro Group - Dose of Dental Podcast #185

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Top 5 Topics:- When Surgeons Get Sued: The Real Story Behind a Lawsuit That Could Happen to Any Dentist- Trigeminal Neuralgia? Legal Nightmare? When Pain Turns Into a Court Case That Might Not Necessarily Be Trigeminal Neuralgia- Think Like a...

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