Could a missed diagnosis of appendicitis be medical negligence in NSW?

CONDITION: Missed Diagnosis of Appendicitis

Could a missed diagnosis of appendicitis be medical negligence in NSW?

When a doctor fails to diagnose appendicitis in time, the consequences can be life-threatening — and the law may hold that failure to account.
Appendicitis can kill within hours of a rupture. Every emergency clinician in Australia knows this. When a patient arrives with severe abdominal pain, fever, and nausea, the standard of care requires the treating doctor to actively consider appendicitis — not dismiss it. If a doctor sent you home without proper investigation, and your appendix later ruptured, you may be asking whether that failure was acceptable. This article explains what proper care looks like, where it breaks down, and what the law says about it.
What Should Have Happened: The Standard of Care for Suspected Appendicitis
STEP 1

Take a full history of abdominal pain, fever, nausea, and loss of appetite

STEP 2

Perform a physical examination including rebound tenderness at McBurney’s point

STEP 3

Order blood tests (white cell count) and imaging — ultrasound or CT scan

STEP 4

Refer urgently to a surgeon or admit for observation if appendicitis is suspected

STEP 5

Appendix removed before rupture — patient recovers safely

If a clinician skipped any of these steps and the appendix ruptured as a result, that gap in care may form the basis of a negligence claim.

Understanding appendicitis: what normally happens

The appendix is a small pouch attached to the large intestine, sitting in the lower right side of the abdomen. Appendicitis means the appendix has become inflamed — usually because something blocks it, causing bacteria to multiply inside. Left untreated, the appendix can rupture and spill infection throughout the abdominal cavity. That condition, called peritonitis, is life-threatening.

Appendicitis is one of the most common surgical emergencies in Australia. Doctors diagnose it regularly. Most patients who receive timely surgery recover fully within weeks. The operation — called an appendicectomy — removes the appendix before it bursts. When a surgeon performs this procedure early, the risk of serious complications drops dramatically.

Patients who arrive at an emergency department with classic symptoms should expect a doctor to consider appendicitis as a possibility from the outset. Healthdirect Australia describes appendicitis as a medical emergency requiring prompt treatment. That standard is well established across Australian hospitals.

Appendicitis affects all ages: It is most common in people aged 10 to 30, but doctors must consider it at any age.

Rupture risk rises sharply with time: The appendix can rupture within 24 to 72 hours of symptoms starting. Every hour of delay increases that risk.

Atypical presentations are common: In women, children, and older adults, symptoms often differ from the textbook pattern — making careful assessment even more important.

Missed diagnosis is a known risk: Studies consistently identify appendicitis as one of the most frequently missed diagnoses in emergency medicine worldwide.

When things start to go wrong

Appendicitis does not always announce itself clearly. Pain may begin around the navel before shifting to the lower right abdomen. Some patients feel nauseous but do not vomit. Others run only a mild fever. Because the symptoms can overlap with gastroenteritis, kidney stones, ovarian cysts, or bowel problems, a doctor who does not investigate carefully may reach the wrong conclusion.

The danger is not that a doctor considers other diagnoses. The danger is when a doctor dismisses appendicitis without ruling it out — and sends the patient home without proper investigation or a clear safety net.

Warning signs that should have prompted urgent investigation:

• Pain that started near the navel and moved to the lower right abdomen

• Fever above 37.5°C alongside abdominal pain

• Nausea, vomiting, or complete loss of appetite

• Tenderness when the doctor pressed and released the lower right abdomen (rebound tenderness)

• Pain that worsened with movement or deep breathing

• Elevated white blood cell count on a blood test

• Symptoms that persisted or worsened after an initial assessment

Any combination of these signs should prompt a clinician to investigate further — not discharge the patient with a diagnosis of “gastro” or “non-specific abdominal pain.” When a doctor observes these signs and still fails to act, that gap in care may become legally significant.

A common pattern — where care can break down

Missed appendicitis rarely happens because a doctor was unaware of the condition. More often, it happens because a clinician made a premature decision, skipped a step, or failed to follow up. The Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care identifies diagnostic errors as a leading source of preventable patient harm in Australian hospitals.

Premature diagnosis without investigation

Diagnosing gastroenteritis without ruling out appendicitis. A doctor who labels abdominal pain as “gastro” without ordering blood tests or imaging has made a diagnosis by exclusion — without actually excluding the more dangerous possibility. Gastroenteritis and appendicitis share symptoms. A competent clinician must rule out appendicitis before settling on a less serious explanation.

Failing to perform an adequate physical examination. The physical examination for suspected appendicitis includes specific tests — pressing on McBurney’s point, checking for rebound tenderness, and assessing guarding. When a doctor skips these steps or documents them without actually performing them, the examination is incomplete. An incomplete examination can lead directly to a missed diagnosis.

Failure to investigate or refer

Not ordering blood tests or imaging. A full blood count showing an elevated white cell count is a key indicator of infection and inflammation. Ultrasound and CT scanning can visualise the appendix directly. When a doctor discharges a patient with abdominal pain without ordering these tests, that decision may fall below the standard of care.

Failing to refer to a surgeon. Even when a doctor suspects appendicitis, some clinicians delay surgical referral — hoping symptoms will resolve. A competent clinician who suspects appendicitis refers the patient to a surgeon promptly. Waiting without a clear clinical reason for the delay can cause the appendix to rupture during that window.

Failures in follow-up and communication

Discharging without a safety net. Sometimes a doctor discharges a patient with instructions to “come back if it gets worse” — but does not explain what warning signs to watch for, or how urgently to return. When a patient follows those vague instructions and the appendix ruptures overnight, the discharge plan itself may have been inadequate.

Ignoring a return presentation. Some patients return to the emergency department a second time with worsening pain. A second presentation with the same symptoms should heighten clinical suspicion, not reduce it. When a doctor dismisses a returning patient without escalating the investigation, that failure is harder to justify.

Why this matters legally

Every doctor who treats a patient owes that patient a duty of care — a legal obligation to provide treatment that meets the standard of a competent clinician in the same field. This duty exists automatically the moment a clinical relationship begins. No contract or paperwork creates it. The relationship itself creates it.

Not every bad outcome from appendicitis is negligence. Appendicitis can progress quickly even with good care. Some patients present with atypical symptoms that genuinely make diagnosis difficult. A doctor who follows the correct process — examines the patient properly, orders appropriate tests, and makes a reasonable clinical judgment — has met the standard of care, even if the outcome is poor.

The legal question is not whether the outcome was bad. The question is whether the doctor’s actions fell below what a competent clinician would have done in the same situation. When the answer to that question is yes, and the patient suffered harm as a result, the law may recognise a claim. Learn more at Reframe Legal — Medical Negligence.

When Does a Care Failure Become Legal Negligence? — The Three Elements
1. Duty of Care
The treating clinician owed you a duty to provide competent care — including proper assessment for appendicitis

2. Breach
The care fell below the standard a competent clinician would have met — for example, discharging without investigation when appendicitis was a real possibility

3. Causation
The breach caused harm — specifically, the appendix ruptured and caused injury that timely surgery would have prevented

NOT necessarily negligence

An appendix that ruptured despite a doctor ordering appropriate tests and referring promptly — some cases progress faster than any intervention can prevent

MAY BE negligence

A doctor who discharged a patient with classic appendicitis symptoms without blood tests or imaging, and the appendix ruptured hours later causing peritonitis and permanent bowel damage

This is a general educational framework only. Each case is assessed on its individual facts.

When a missed appendicitis diagnosis may amount to medical negligence

The NSW Civil Liability Act 2002 sets the legal framework for medical negligence claims in this state. In plain terms, it means a court will ask what a reasonable clinician with the same training and experience would have done — and whether the treating doctor’s actions measured up to that standard.

Several specific scenarios may give rise to a negligence claim in appendicitis cases.

If a doctor dismissed your symptoms without examination. A clinician who takes a brief history and sends you home without physically examining your abdomen has not met the standard of care for a patient presenting with acute abdominal pain. That failure may constitute a breach.

If no blood tests or imaging were ordered. When a patient presents with fever, right-sided abdominal pain, and nausea, ordering a full blood count and imaging is standard practice. A doctor who skips these steps and discharges the patient may have fallen below the required standard.

If a second presentation was ignored. Returning to the emergency department with worsening symptoms is a clear escalation signal. A clinician who treats a second presentation as routine — without increasing the level of investigation — may have breached their duty of care.

If the surgical referral was unreasonably delayed. Once a doctor suspects appendicitis, prompt surgical referral is required. A delay of many hours without clinical justification, during which the appendix ruptured, may support a causation argument — that earlier referral would have prevented the rupture.

When harm becomes long-term or permanent

A ruptured appendix is not simply a more serious version of appendicitis. It is a different and far more dangerous condition. Once the appendix bursts, infection spreads through the abdominal cavity. The resulting condition — peritonitis — requires emergency surgery, intensive care, and prolonged recovery.

Physical consequences

Some patients develop abscesses that require multiple drainage procedures. Others develop adhesions — bands of scar tissue inside the abdomen — that cause chronic pain and can obstruct the bowel for years. Women of reproductive age face a particular risk: pelvic infection following a ruptured appendix can damage the fallopian tubes and reduce fertility. In severe cases, patients require bowel resection — the surgical removal of a section of the bowel — leaving them with permanent digestive changes.

Psychological and financial consequences

Many patients who survive a ruptured appendix describe lasting anxiety about their health. Some develop post-traumatic stress after an intensive care admission. The financial impact compounds the physical harm: extended hospital stays, repeated surgeries, and months away from work create significant economic pressure on patients and their families.

Outcome with timely diagnosis

Appendicectomy performed before rupture

Hospital stay of 1–3 days

Return to normal activity within 2–4 weeks

No long-term complications in most cases

Fertility unaffected

Outcome after missed diagnosis and rupture

Emergency surgery for peritonitis or abscess

Hospital stay of 1–4 weeks or longer

Possible ICU admission

Risk of bowel adhesions, chronic pain, and infertility

Months of recovery and potential permanent disability

What compensation can cover in missed appendicitis cases

NSW law allows people harmed by medical negligence to seek compensation for a range of losses. This includes pain and suffering, lost income during recovery, the cost of additional medical treatment, and the cost of ongoing care if the harm is permanent. In cases involving fertility damage, courts have also recognised the profound personal loss that follows.

Level of harm Typical compensation range
Moderate injury $50,000–$150,000
Serious injury $150,000–$500,000
Severe / life-changing injury $500,000+

Each case is assessed on its own facts. These figures are general ranges only. The severity of the rupture, the extent of ongoing harm, and the impact on your working life all affect the final figure.

Time limits apply in NSW. Generally, a person has three years from the date they knew — or ought to have known — about the harm and its connection to the clinical failure. Acting within that window matters.

Bringing it together — do the pieces fit?

Understanding whether your experience may amount to negligence starts with connecting three things: what happened to you, what should have happened, and whether the gap between those two things caused your harm.

Questions to ask yourself
These are not legal questions. They are prompts to help you think clearly about what happened.
?
Did the doctor examine your abdomen, or did they take a brief history and send you home?

?
Did anyone order blood tests or imaging before discharging you?

?
Did you return to the hospital with worsening symptoms, and did the clinical team treat that return as urgent?

?
Did the doctor give you a clear explanation of what to watch for, and how quickly to return if symptoms worsened?

?
Did your appendix rupture after you were discharged, and did that rupture cause harm that surgery before rupture would have prevented?

If several of these resonate with your experience, the circumstances may be worth examining more carefully.

If the answers to several of those questions point toward a gap in care, the next step is understanding how a formal claim works. Reframe Legal — How Medical Negligence Claims Work in NSW explains the process in plain terms.

You don’t need certainty to understand your position

Many people who experienced a missed appendicitis diagnosis spend months — sometimes years — wondering whether what happened to them was acceptable. Some blame themselves for not returning sooner. Others assume that because the hospital is a large institution, it must have done everything correctly.

Neither assumption is reliable. Legal clarity does not come from certainty about what went wrong. It comes from examining the facts carefully against the standard of care. A lawyer with experience in medical negligence can review your medical records, identify where the clinical process broke down, and give you an honest assessment of whether the care you received fell below the required standard.

Consent is also relevant in some appendicitis cases — particularly where a patient was not properly informed about the risks of discharge, or where a procedure was performed without adequate explanation. Reframe Legal — Informed Consent and Medical Negligence covers this area in detail.

If you have concerns about the conduct of a registered health practitioner, AHPRA — Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency accepts complaints about practitioners registered under the National Registration Scheme. A complaint to AHPRA is separate from a legal claim and does not affect your right to pursue compensation.

About the lawyer behind this article

Dr Rosemary Listing — Medical Negligence Lawyer

Dr Rosemary Listing is a NSW lawyer with a PhD focused on medical negligence. Her academic and legal work centres on the gap between the standard of care that patients are owed and the care they actually receive.

Missed appendicitis cases appear in her practice with troubling regularity. Many involve patients who presented to emergency departments with textbook symptoms, received a cursory assessment, and were discharged — only to return hours or days later in crisis. The harm in these cases does not come from the appendicitis itself. It comes from the delay.

Dr Listing works with clients who are not looking to punish anyone. Most want to understand what happened and whether the care they received was reasonable. That question — was the standard of care met? — sits at the centre of every case she assesses.

Her approach begins with the medical records. A careful review of what was documented, what was ordered, and what was not done often reveals the answer more clearly than any recollection of events.

Dr Listing practises in NSW and works with clients across the state who are navigating the aftermath of serious medical harm.

This article is general legal information only. It does not constitute legal advice. Each person’s circumstances are different. The law discussed applies to New South Wales, Australia. Time limits apply to legal claims.

Contact Dr Rosemary Listing At Peter Evans & Associates

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