
Medical Malpractice Laws in Kansas (2026): Deadlines & Caps
Kansas medical malpractice law: a 2-year deadline, a 4-year repose limit, and noneconomic damage caps struck down in Hilburn v. Enerpipe (2019). Updated 2026.
Loading...
Browse our full library of legal guides, state law breakdowns, and practical legal information.
7905 articles
Browse by Category →
Kansas medical malpractice law: a 2-year deadline, a 4-year repose limit, and noneconomic damage caps struck down in Hilburn v. Enerpipe (2019). Updated 2026.

Iowa medical malpractice law in 2026: a 2-year deadline, a 6-year repose limit, the 2023 hard cap on noneconomic damages, and the certificate-of-merit rule.

Indiana medical malpractice law in 2026: a 2-year deadline, a $1.8M total damage cap, the Patient's Compensation Fund, and the required medical review panel.

Illinois medical malpractice law in 2026: a 2-year deadline, a 4-year repose limit, no damage cap after Lebron v. Gottlieb, and the Section 2-622 affidavit.

Idaho medical malpractice in 2026: a 2-year deadline from the act, a wage-indexed noneconomic cap above $500,000, and a required pre-litigation screening panel.

How medical malpractice claims work, plus a state-by-state guide to the deadline to sue, damage caps, and expert-affidavit rules across all 50 states and DC.

Hawaii medical malpractice in 2026: a 2-year discovery deadline, 6-year repose, a $375,000 pain-and-suffering cap, and the required pre-suit panel review.

Georgia medical malpractice in 2026: a 2-year deadline, 5-year repose, NO cap on noneconomic damages after Nestlehutt, and the OCGA 9-11-9.1 expert affidavit.

Florida medical malpractice law: a 2-year deadline and 4-year repose under Fla. Stat. 95.11, the Chapter 766 pre-suit notice, and no enforceable damages cap.

DC medical malpractice law in 2026: a 3-year deadline, no damage cap, a 90-day pre-suit notice (D.C. Code 16-2802), and the contributory negligence rule.

Delaware medical malpractice law: a 2-year deadline (3-year discovery limit) under 18 Del. C. 6856, the 18 Del. C. 6853 affidavit of merit, and no damage caps.

Connecticut medical malpractice law: a 2-year deadline and 3-year repose under Conn. Gen. Stat. 52-584, the 52-190a good-faith certificate, and no damage caps.