Medical Malpractice Live Transfers for Personal Injury Law Firms
Screened medical malpractice live transfers routed by state, provider type, injury facts, timing, review criteria, intake hours, and caps. Start with 5 free transfers when inventory exists in your target market.
Medical malpractice screening criteria for PI intake teams
Screened medical malpractice live transfers routed by state, provider type, injury facts, timing, review criteria, intake hours, and caps. Each campaign is built around your accepted states, case criteria, intake schedule, direct transfer number, daily cap, and written billable rules.
Best for firms that can review med-mal facts carefully and want stricter caller screening with lower, more controlled volume. Med-mal campaigns should use lower caps, senior intake review, and written exclusions before paid routing starts.
Medical Malpractice Screening Questions
These questions can be adjusted before launch so the campaign matches your intake checklist.
What provider or facility was involved?
Provider and facility details help your team confirm jurisdiction, conflict concerns, and whether the matter fits med mal intake.
What procedure, diagnosis, medication, or care issue occurred?
The specific care issue helps distinguish surgical error, misdiagnosis, medication error, birth injury, and other med mal categories.
When did the care happen?
Timing matters for review windows and whether the caller’s facts fit your accepted date range.
What injury or worsened condition resulted?
Resulting harm is central to med mal qualification and should be clear before routing.
Was follow-up treatment needed?
Follow-up care can show severity and documentation, which many med mal buyers require.
Has another attorney reviewed or rejected the matter?
Prior attorney review can affect whether the call should be routed, excluded, or flagged for extra review.
Medical Malpractice Disqualifiers
Set exclusions in writing before paid routing so your team knows what should not count as billable.
No injury or damages claimed
Mark this as excluded if your firm does not want these calls counted as qualified medical malpractice transfers.
Only poor bedside manner or billing dispute
Mark this as excluded if your firm does not want these calls counted as qualified medical malpractice transfers.
Outside accepted state or date range
Mark this as excluded if your firm does not want these calls counted as qualified medical malpractice transfers.
Already represented caller
Mark this as excluded if your firm does not want these calls counted as qualified medical malpractice transfers.
Previously rejected if buyer excludes it
Mark this as excluded if your firm does not want these calls counted as qualified medical malpractice transfers.
Caller only seeking medical advice
Mark this as excluded if your firm does not want these calls counted as qualified medical malpractice transfers.
State Routing Options
Route medical malpractice callers by priority state, metro, intake hours, daily cap, and backup line. Start narrow, then expand after reviewing accepted transfers and rejected reasons.
Pricing Notes for Medical Malpractice Live Transfers
Medical malpractice live transfers often cost more and have lower volume because screening is stricter and market supply is narrower.
Final pricing should be confirmed in writing before paid volume begins. Common price factors include target state, metro demand, case-type filters, injury or treatment requirements, transfer hours, exclusivity, daily cap, and replacement rules. LiveLeadHub does not guarantee signed retainers, settlements, or case outcomes.
Recommended Buyer Setup
Start with priority states
Pick one to three states or metros where your firm can answer live and evaluate medical malpractice calls quickly.
Use a realistic cap
Begin with 2 to 5 transfers per day until answer rate, rejected reasons, and signed consultation rate are clear.
Write the billable rules
Document accepted geography, screening questions, disqualifiers, transfer hours, replacement review, and connected-call standards before launch.
Medical Malpractice FAQ
Are these medical malpractice live transfers?
Yes. Medical Malpractice callers can be routed live to your intake line during approved hours when availability exists.
What screening questions are asked?
Questions can cover what provider or facility was involved?; what procedure, diagnosis, medication, or care issue occurred?; when did the care happen?; what injury or worsened condition resulted?, plus any written criteria your firm requires.
What disqualifies a medical malpractice transfer?
Common exclusions include no injury or damages claimed; only poor bedside manner or billing dispute; outside accepted state or date range; already represented caller. Your firm can add stricter written rules before launch.
Can I choose states or metros?
Yes. You can request priority states, selected metros, statewide routing, or exclusions where your firm does not want calls.
What should I expect on pricing?
Medical malpractice live transfers often cost more and have lower volume because screening is stricter and market supply is narrower.
Can I start with 5 free transfers?
Yes. The 5-transfer trial lets your team review routing, caller quality, notes, and billable rules before paid volume starts.
Get Medical Malpractice Live Transfers in Your Market
Send your target states, accepted criteria, disqualifiers, intake hours, daily cap, and direct transfer number. We will confirm availability before routing.
What makes Medical Malpractice Leads billable?
Medical Malpractice Leads are screened personal injury lead opportunities for law firms. Campaigns should be evaluated by qualified conversation rate, intake response, signed-case rate, and cost per signed case instead of raw lead count alone.