When a family member dies after a bacterial infection acquired during an endoscopic procedure, the family's right to bring a case is its own legal question, separate from the infection that caused the death. Wrongful death claims have their own filing clock, their own list of who can file, and their own records that matter. This guide walks through them in plain English — written for the surviving family member who is trying to figure out their rights without becoming a legal expert.
Two Cases at the Same Time
Most U.S. states recognize two related but distinct claims after a death:
- Wrongful death — the family's claim for losses they suffer because of the death (loss of companionship, loss of financial support, funeral expenses).
- Survival action — a claim the family or estate brings on behalf of the deceased for the pain, suffering, and medical bills the patient incurred between the injury and the death.
In scope infection cases, these two claims are usually filed together. The combined claim covers the period between the contaminated procedure, the diagnosed infection, the hospitalization, and ultimately the death. Each state's rules on who can file each claim and what they can recover are different, but the basic two-claim structure is consistent.
Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim
State law decides who has standing. The most common structure looks like this:
- The personal representative of the estate typically has primary authority to bring the case. If the deceased had a will, that document usually names the personal representative. If not, the probate court will appoint one.
- The surviving spouse is generally first in line as a beneficiary.
- Children of the deceased — including adult children — are usually next, with state-specific rules on minor versus adult children.
- Parents of the deceased can sometimes bring a case, particularly when the deceased was unmarried or had no children.
- Other dependents — siblings, grandparents, or financially dependent partners — can file in some states, with restrictions.
These categories are not interchangeable. Most states have a strict hierarchy that determines who has primary standing. The first conversation in a free case review is usually about which family member is the right one to bring the claim — and that conversation can move quickly once we know the state.
The Filing Clock for Wrongful Death
Wrongful death statutes of limitations are state-specific and range from one to six years, with most states landing in the two-to-three-year window. The clock usually starts from the date of death, not the date of the contaminated procedure or the date of the infection diagnosis.
That distinction matters in scope cases. A patient may have had a contaminated procedure in 2020, developed an infection in 2021, declined in 2022, and died in 2023. The product liability claim the patient could have brought during life often runs from the procedure date or discovery date. The wrongful death claim runs from the death date. The two clocks are different, and they may or may not still be open at the same time.
The Discovery Rule for Wrongful Death
Many states extend the wrongful death clock under a discovery rule when the cause of death was not apparent at the time. If a family did not know — and reasonably could not have known — that an Olympus scope contributed to the death until later, the clock may not have started running until that moment of recognition.
This is common in scope cases. The death certificate may list "sepsis" or "septic shock" without identifying the source. The family may not learn about the documented Olympus duodenoscope contamination problem until they encounter the news, a relative shares an article, or an attorney inquiry surfaces the connection. The symptom timeline post covers the medical version of this same pattern.
The Records That Help Build a Wrongful Death Case
For families, the records request looks slightly different than for living patients. The personal representative typically has authority to request the deceased's full medical record under federal HIPAA rules. The key records:
- The endoscopic procedure record — date, hospital, scope identifier (UDI), reprocessing log if available.
- The infection workup — blood cultures, organism identification, and antibiotic sensitivity testing.
- The terminal admission record — the hospitalization during which the patient declined and died.
- The death certificate — the official cause-of-death documentation.
- The autopsy report, if one was performed.
- Financial records for the survival action portion — medical bills, lost income, end-of-life care costs.
Our step-by-step records request guide covers the HIPAA right of access process, including the additional documentation required to establish authority as a personal representative.
What a Wrongful Death Recovery Covers
State rules vary, but most wrongful death recoveries cover some combination of:
- Loss of financial support the deceased would have provided.
- Loss of household services the deceased performed.
- Loss of companionship and consortium — what some states call "loss of society" damages.
- Reasonable funeral and burial expenses.
- Medical expenses incurred between the injury and the death (typically through the survival action).
- The deceased's pain and suffering between injury and death (also through the survival action, where allowed).
What recovery looks like in any particular case depends on state law and case-specific facts. We do not estimate case values in advance, and we do not publish per-case projections — that is not how responsible product liability lawyers handle the early conversation.
If You Are a Family Member of Someone Who Died
The most important thing to understand: the filing clock is running, and it does not pause while the family processes the loss. We have seen cases where families wait until they feel ready and miss the window. The free case review is structured to be light-touch — we ask a few questions, identify whether the filing clock is open, and let you decide what to do next.
We represent families nationwide. A free case review takes about 15 minutes by phone, and we focus first on whether the wrongful death window is open in your state and whether the discovery rule applies to your situation.
- See if the case profile fits: 3-part qualification test.
- Read the documented outbreak history that may connect to your family member's case: Documented U.S. Hospital Outbreaks.
- Review the current litigation status: June 2026 Olympus Lawsuit Update.
Free case review. No Fees Unless We Recover Money for You.
Sources
- FindLaw — "Wrongful Death Claims: Time Limits and the 'Discovery' Rule." findlaw.com
- FindLaw — "Time Limits for Filing Product Liability Cases: State-by-State." findlaw.com
- U.S. Department of Health & Human Services — HIPAA Right of Access guidance, including personal representative authority. hhs.gov
- U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — CRE and healthcare-associated infection (HAI) mortality data. cdc.gov
- U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions — "Preventable Tragedies: Superbugs and How Ineffective Monitoring of Medical Device Safety Fails Patients" (January 2016). help.senate.gov
- U.S. FDA MAUDE Adverse Event Database — Olympus duodenoscope death and serious injury reports. accessdata.fda.gov
Think You May Have a Case?
The 3-part qualification test takes 2 minutes. If it fits your situation, a free case review is the next step. No Fees Unless We Recover Money for You.