Signing a consent form before a medical procedure does not mean you gave up the right to hold a negligent provider accountable. This is one of the most common misunderstandings patients bring to us, and it matters. Consent forms have a specific legal purpose, and that purpose is not to shield providers from the consequences of careless or substandard care. If you were harmed because a provider failed to disclose a material risk, performed a procedure you never agreed to, or simply did not meet the accepted standard of care, you may still have a valid malpractice claim in Michigan.
A consent form documents that you were told about a procedure and that you understood its known risks before agreeing to it. That is what the form covers. It is a record of communication between you and your provider, not a release from professional responsibility.
Providers are still required to deliver care that meets the accepted medical standard regardless of whether a form was signed. A form cannot legally protect a provider from the consequences of negligence, surgical errors, misdiagnosis, or failure to monitor. The form and the care itself are two separate things.
Michigan law requires that providers give patients enough information to make a genuine, voluntary decision about their care. This is called the doctrine of informed consent. Under Michigan’s informed consent standard, a provider must disclose the risks that a reasonable patient would consider significant in deciding whether to proceed.
Informed consent has several components that all need to be present:
If any of these elements were missing, the consent you gave may not be legally valid, and your right to pursue a claim may be fully intact.
There are specific circumstances where a signed consent form has little or no legal weight as a defense against a malpractice claim.
If your provider knew about a risk that a reasonable patient would have wanted to know before agreeing to a procedure, and they did not disclose it, the consent you gave was not truly informed. Michigan courts recognize that patients cannot make meaningful decisions without complete information. If you would have chosen differently had you known the full picture, that gap in disclosure can form the basis of a malpractice claim.
A consent form covers the specific procedure described in that document. If a provider performed a different procedure, operated on the wrong site, or went significantly beyond the scope of what was discussed, your consent for the original procedure does not apply. This situation can constitute both a malpractice claim and, in some cases, a battery claim under Michigan law.
Even when consent is valid and complete, it does not give a provider permission to be careless. The standard of care is the baseline of competence that every licensed provider is expected to meet. A consent form cannot lower that bar. If your provider’s decisions or actions fell below what a similarly trained professional would have done in the same situation, you may have grounds for a claim regardless of what you signed.
Michigan uses a patient-based standard to evaluate informed consent disputes. The central question is whether a reasonable patient in your position, with access to the information that was withheld, would have made a different decision. This is not about whether your provider believed the risk was significant. It is about what a patient deserved to know.
Michigan’s informed consent requirements are governed under MCL 600.2912d and related case law. Courts look at the totality of the communication between patient and provider, including what was said, what was written, and what was left out.
A consent form is not the end of your case. If you or someone you love was harmed by a provider who failed to meet their professional obligations, you deserve a straight answer about your options. Monument Legal is an aggressive trial law firm serving clients in Lansing and greater Michigan area.
No. Signing a consent form does not prevent you from filing a medical malpractice claim. A consent form documents that you were informed about a procedure and its known risks. It does not grant your provider immunity from negligence, deviation from the standard of care, or failure to disclose material information. Michigan courts consistently distinguish between valid informed consent and a provider’s ongoing duty to deliver competent care. For more detail, see the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs, which oversees provider standards in the state.
A material risk is one that a reasonable patient would consider important when deciding whether to undergo a procedure. This includes risks that are serious even if uncommon, and risks that are common even if not typically severe. If a provider knew about a risk that could have changed your decision and did not tell you, that may support an informed consent claim. Michigan courts apply a reasonable patient standard, meaning the focus is on what you deserved to know, not on what your provider thought was necessary to share. See MCL 600.2912d for Michigan’s codified standard.
Emergency exceptions exist in Michigan law when a patient is unable to consent and delay would cause serious harm. However, that exception is narrow. Providers cannot use emergency circumstances as a general justification for performing procedures beyond what was immediately necessary. If additional procedures were performed without consent once you were stable, that may fall outside the scope of the emergency exception and warrant further review. The State Bar of Michigan maintains resources on patient rights.
Michigan’s statute of limitations for medical malpractice is generally two years from the date of the negligent act or from the date you discovered the injury, but no more than six years from the act itself. There are exceptions for cases involving minors or situations where the injury was fraudulently concealed. Missing this deadline almost always means losing the right to pursue your claim entirely. See MCL 600.5838a for Michigan’s malpractice filing deadlines.