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Medical Malpractice
Spinal surgery being performed in operating room

Maine Jury Awards $6.5 Million in Medical Malpractice Verdict Over Delayed Spinal Surgery

A Penobscot County jury awarded Travis Getchell $6.5 million on April 17, 2026, after finding Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center and neurosurgeon Dr. Kutluay Uluc negligent in the care that left the 41-year-old Eddington man partially paralyzed. Getchell arrived at the emergency room on August 30, 2021, with a herniated disc compressing his spinal nerves, a condition requiring emergency surgery to prevent permanent damage. Surgery was not performed until roughly 24 hours later. He now walks short distances only with leg braces and has lost bladder and bowel control. The verdict is reported as one of the highest ever returned in Penobscot County.Case at a Glance Verdict: $6.5 million Case Type: Medical Malpractice Court: Penobscot County, Maine Verdict Date: April 17, 2026 Plaintiff: Travis Getchell Defendants: Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center; Dr. Kutluay Uluc Plaintiff Attorneys: Meryl Poulin and Benjamin GideonWhat Happened at Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center? Getchell presented to the emergency room at Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center on August 30, 2021, reporting severe back symptoms. An MRI was ordered to evaluate his spine. According to evidence presented at trial, nearly four hours passed before a clinician reviewed the imaging results. The MRI showed a herniated disc pressing on nerves at the base of the spinal canal, a pattern consistent with cauda equina syndrome. Emergency neurosurgery is the accepted treatment when this condition is identified, with the surgical window measured in hours rather than days. Getchell's surgery was ultimately performed on August 31, 2021, about 24 hours after he first arrived in the emergency department.What Is Cauda Equina Syndrome and Why Does Timing Matter? Cauda equina syndrome occurs when the bundle of nerves at the lower end of the spinal cord is compressed, most often by a herniated disc. The condition can cause sudden, permanent loss of bladder and bowel function, sexual function, and lower-limb strength if pressure on the nerves is not promptly relieved. Medical guidance generally treats cauda equina syndrome as a surgical emergency. The longer the nerves remain compressed, the greater the risk that damage becomes permanent even after the disc material is removed. Those facts were central to the plaintiff's case. Getchell's attorneys argued that the delay between his arrival and his surgery cost him the chance to recover full function.Why Did the Jury Side with the Plaintiff? After roughly five days of testimony, the Penobscot County jury returned a verdict against Northern Light Health, Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center, and Dr. Kutluay Uluc. The jury found the defendants negligent and awarded Getchell $6.5 million in damages. The plaintiff was represented by Meryl Poulin and Benjamin Gideon. Their case centered on the nearly four-hour gap between the MRI and clinician review, and on the overall timeline that resulted in surgery occurring roughly a day after Getchell first sought care. In a statement following the verdict, Northern Light said, "We are disappointed with the jury's verdict, we respect it."What Does This Verdict Mean for Maine Medical Malpractice Cases? The award is reported as one of the highest medical malpractice verdicts ever returned in Penobscot County. Its size reflects the severity of the permanent injuries Getchell described to the jury: partial paralysis, loss of bladder and bowel control, and a life in which walking requires leg braces and is limited to short distances. For plaintiff lawyers in Maine, the case illustrates how focused timeline evidence, the time between arrival, imaging, review, and treatment, can drive verdicts in delayed-diagnosis claims. When medical literature treats a condition as a surgical emergency, juries are often willing to scrutinize every hour that passes before care is delivered. For patients and families, the verdict is a reminder that hospital systems can be held accountable when emergency care does not match the urgency of the diagnosis. Similar cases are aggregated in the personal injury verdict news hub, and attorneys in the state are listed in the Maine personal injury attorneys directory.Bottom Line The Getchell verdict shows what a Maine jury was willing to do when a plaintiff could document, hour by hour, how a hospital's response fell short of the urgency the diagnosis demanded. Verdicts like this one deserve to be seen. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys can publicly display their trial results and settlements, for free. Create your profile today and let your record speak for itself.Frequently Asked Questions Q: What is cauda equina syndrome? Cauda equina syndrome is a condition in which the bundle of nerves at the lower end of the spinal cord is compressed, often by a herniated disc. Symptoms can include severe lower-back pain, leg weakness, numbness in the saddle area, and loss of bladder or bowel control. It is generally considered a surgical emergency. Q: How quickly should hospitals treat suspected cauda equina syndrome? Medical guidance treats suspected cauda equina syndrome as a surgical emergency, with imaging and neurosurgical evaluation expected to occur without delay. Prolonged nerve compression increases the risk of permanent paralysis and loss of bladder and bowel function, which is why timeline evidence is often central in these lawsuits. Q: Can patients in Maine sue a hospital for a delayed diagnosis? Yes. Maine allows medical malpractice claims against hospitals and individual providers when a delay in diagnosis or treatment falls below the accepted standard of care and causes injury. Claims must generally be filed within the state's statute of limitations and, in many cases, presented to a pre-litigation screening panel before trial. Additional context is available in the Maine personal injury public resources.

Medical Malpractice

$750K Maine Medical Malpractice Verdict After Surgeon Leaves Gap in Patient's Femur

A nine-person jury in Ellsworth, Maine awarded $750,000 in damages to a 71-year-old woman on Friday after finding that her orthopedic surgeon and hospital provided negligent medical care during hip replacement surgery. The Maine medical malpractice verdict came after three days of witness testimony at Hancock County Superior Court and less than four hours of jury deliberation.What Happened to Mary Shea Mary Shea, a resident of Milbridge, Maine, sued orthopedic surgeon Peter Copithorne and Northern Light Maine Coast Hospital over right hip replacement surgeries performed in 2019. According to the lawsuit, Shea was 64 at the time and had previously undergone a successful left hip replacement in 2013 with no significant complications. Her right hip replacement, performed in February 2019, left a routine complication that should have been identified and repaired quickly. During a follow-up visit after surgery, Copithorne failed to read Shea's correct post-operative X-ray. He did not review the correct imaging until May 24, 2019, more than two months after the X-rays were taken on March 20, 2019. According to court testimony, Copithorne recorded in Shea's medical documentation that he had reviewed her March 20 X-rays with her. He later amended the note to reflect that he had read the wrong film. The original note was made with auto-generated language, a common practice for physicians.A Second Surgery Made Things Worse Because of the delayed diagnosis, Shea required a much more invasive procedure called an osteotomy to address the complication. During that second surgery, which the lawsuit said Copithorne had only performed alone once before, he sawed a centimeter-long gap in Shea's femur. He unsuccessfully attempted to close the opening with wire, according to the lawsuit. The femur is essential for mobility, and Shea's injuries from this procedure left her with permanent physical impairment. Two physicians testified at trial that the osteotomy would not have been necessary had Copithorne read Shea's X-rays on the day they were taken. During the two months between her March 20 imaging and her May 24 follow-up appointment, the muscles and tendons around Shea's femur atrophied, causing permanent weakness and mobility issues, according to plaintiff attorney Elizabeth Kayatta.Years of Treatment and $291,000 in Medical Bills After leaving Copithorne's care, Shea sought treatment from a Portland surgeon to fix her femur and undergo additional revision surgery. From there, she began years of injections, medication regimens, physical therapies, and various procedures to manage her pain, weakness, and mobility problems, according to testimony from Victoria Brander, a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist at Northwestern Medicine who served as an expert witness. Shea's right hip replacement treatment resulted in nearly $300,000 in medical bills, approximately $250,000 more than what her successful left hip replacement cost. Once an avid hiker and kayaker, Shea has faced significant physical limitations, along with mental health challenges, in the years since her surgeries with Copithorne.The Jury's Maine Medical Malpractice Verdict and Defense Arguments The Ellsworth jury found that both Copithorne and Northern Light Maine Coast Hospital provided negligent medical care that harmed Shea. Three of the nine jurors did not concur with the verdict. Maine civil suits do not require a unanimous jury. Defense attorney Douglas Morgan acknowledged that Copithorne's failure to read the correct X-ray was negligent but argued that this did not directly cause Shea's medical complications. Morgan contended that Shea would have needed the osteotomy regardless of when the X-ray was read. The jury disagreed with that position. "Though we are disappointed with the verdict in this matter, we respect the jury's decision," Morgan said. "More importantly, we wish Mary Shea the best and continued good health moving forward." Kayatta framed the verdict as a moment of accountability. "When doctors make medical errors, they need to be held accountable for those errors in a meaningful way," she told the Bangor Daily News. According to the lawsuit, Copithorne is the second-highest paid physician at Northern Light. ProPublica reported he earned $712,019 for the fiscal year ending in September 2024.Why Verdicts Like This Matter Medical malpractice verdicts in Maine provide critical public insight into how juries evaluate surgical errors, hospital accountability, and patient outcomes. For anyone researching what medical malpractice cases in Maine are worth at trial, cases like Shea's offer real data from real courtrooms. Verdicts like this one deserve to be seen. Major Verdict is the only platform where plaintiff attorneys can publicly display their trial results and settlements for free. Create your profile today and let your record speak for itself. If you or someone you love has been affected by a medical error, you can find a plaintiff lawyer on Major Verdict with a proven trial record in your state.


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