Healthcare Fraud

Should I Be Concerned About Patient Abandonment?

Todd Spodek, Managing Partner

Prominently Featured In:

CNN
Netflix
Newsweek
Business Insider
Time

You terminated a patient relationship. Maybe you gave notice, maybe you didn’t. Maybe there was an emergency, maybe there wasn’t. Either way, something happened – and now you’re on this page trying to figure out if you should be worried.

Welcome to Federal Lawyers. Our goal is to give you real information about patient abandonment claims – not the sanitized version you find on hospital compliance websites. We’re going to tell you what actually happens when these allegations surface, what the real risks are, and what most doctors get completely wrong about protecting themselves.

Heres the uncomfortable truth that nobody wants to say out loud: the patient abandonment claim itself is rarely the thing that destroys your career. The investigation is. The process is. The two to five years of professional limbo while a medical board decides whether to believe your side of the story – thats what ends careers. And by the time most healthcare providers realize this, the damage is already done.

The Phone Call That Changes Everything

Picture this. Your practicing medicine like you have for fifteen years. Then one afternoon your office manager hands you a certified letter from the state medical board. A patient has filed a complaint. They’re alleging you abandoned them.

You dont even remember this patient. Maybe it was a scheduling conflict. Maybe they no-showed three appointments and you assumed they found another provider. Maybe you DID send a termination letter but they claim they never recieved it. Doesn’t matter. The complaint is now part of your permanant record.

Most doctors assume these alegations get dismissed quickly. They assume the board will look at the facts, realize the complaint is baseless, and close the file. Thats not how it works. Medical boards have manditory investigation protocols. Every complaint – no matter how frivolous – triggers the same beauracratic process. The board has to interview witnesses. They have to review medical records. They have to give you an oportunity to respond. And all of this takes time. Alot of time.

Heres the kicker – before the board has investigated a single fact, before anyone has determined if you did anything wrong, your professional life starts falling apart. Your hospital privileges get put “under review.” Your malpractice insurance company wants to “discuss your coverage.” Every credentialing application for the next decade will ask: “Have you ever been the subject of a medical board investigation?”

Let that sink in. You havent been found guilty of anything. The complaint might be completly baseless. But the cascade has already started.

The investigation takes two to five years. During that time, you cant get hired anywhere that requires board certification. Your insurance rates spike. Other physicians dont want to associate with someone “under investigation.” And when the board finally dismisses the complaint – which happens more often then you’d think – nobody sends out a press release announcing your innocence. The damage is permanant.

This is why you should be concerned about patient abandonment. Not becuase of the lawsuit. Because of everything that happens before anyone determines if you did anything wrong.

FREE CONSULTATION

Need Help With Your Case?

Don't face criminal charges alone. Our experienced defense attorneys are ready to fight for your rights and freedom.

  • 100% Confidential
  • Response Within 1 Hour
  • No Obligation Consultation

Or call us directly:

(212) 300-5196

What Abandonment Actually Means Under The Law

Most healthcare providers think they understand patient abandonment. They’re usually wrong.

The legal definition sounds simple: abandonment occurs when a healthcare provider unilaterally terminates a patient relationship without giving the patient adequate time and opportunity to find alternative care. Simple, right?

But heres were it gets complicated. Courts dont care what you INTENDED to do. They care what a reasonable patient would PERCEIVE.

You might have sent three termination letters. You might have documented every phone call. You might have given six months notice instead of the standard thirty days. None of that matters if the patient reasonably believed you abandoned them in the middle of treatment.

Think about what that means. Your internal documentation – the notes you wrote to protect yourself – becomes irrelevant if the patients perception tells a different story. And guess whose perception the board is going to credit when your facing a complaint?

Todd Spodek
DEFENSE TEAM SPOTLIGHT

Todd Spodek

Lead Attorney & Founder

Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

NY Bar Admitted Multi-State Licensed Federal Courts
Meet the Full Team

The legal elements of abandonment are straightforward:

  1. A physician-patient relationship existed
  2. The physician unilaterally terminated that relationship
  3. The termination occurred without reasonable notice
  4. The patient suffered harm as a result

Each of these elements has legal nuances that matter. The first element – the existance of a physician-patient relationship – sounds obvious, but its actualy contested more often then you’d think. Did a brief phone consultation create a relationship? What about a curbside consult with another physician? What about a patient you saw once in the emergency room but never followed up with? Courts have ruled different ways on all of these senarios.

The second element matters becuase of WHO terminated the relationship. If the patient stopped showing up, stopped returning calls, and basicly dissapeared for six months – did YOU terminate, or did THEY? This distinction is critical. Patient-initiated terminations arent abandonment. But proving the patient initiated the break often requires documentation you dont have.

That last element – harm – is were things get interesting. And we’ll talk about that in a minute. But first, you need to understand why focusing on the lawsuit is focusing on the wrong thing entirely.

The Investigation Is The Punishment

Share This Article:
Todd Spodek
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
View Attorney Profile

Schedule Your Free, No Cost, No Obligation Consultation Today

Every minute matters when you are facing criminal charges. Contact us immediately for a free, confidential consultation.

Federal Lawyers By The Numbers

36 Cases Handled This Year and counting
15,536+ Total Clients Served since 2005
95% Case Success Rate dismissals & reduced charges
50+ Years Combined Experience in criminal defense

Data as of February 2026

URGENT

Take Control of Your Situation

Our team is standing by to discuss your legal options

Get Advice From An Experienced Criminal Defense Lawyer

All You Have To Do Is Call (212) 300-5196 To Receive Your Free Case Evaluation.