"
skip to Main Content
    • Medical Negligence
    • Women’s Health
    • Hospital Negligence
    • Clinical Support
    • I need help
    • Personal Injury
    • Work Injury
    • Motor Vehicle Accidents
    • Public Liability
    • Abuse
    • Workers Compensation
    • Total & Permanent Disability (TPD)
    • School Negligence
    • I Need Help
    • Estate Planning & Administration
    • Estate Disputes
    • Probate & Deceased Estates
    • I Need Help
    • Other Services Overview
    • Professional Negligence
    • Malicious Prosecution
    • General Litigation
    • I Need Help
    • What to Expect
  • No Win/No Fee Options

Staff stories: Conrad Curry

I left school when I was 16. Being from a single parent family I was expected to work as soon as I could, so I did a trade at BHP as a fitter and turner. At the end of that I decided I couldn’t see a future for myself in industry. I was very interested in music so decided to go back to school to matriculate, years 11 and 12. My results were better than expected and the careers advisor suggested a number of courses.  Law was what I applied for, got into and became passionate about.

When I first started practising law, I was doing a mixture of family law, criminal law and contract disputes.  Five years later I handled a case for a young woman, who had a really bad fibroid that had been undiscovered. She was a young girl who had been let down very badly by a doctor, had to have a full abdominal hysterectomy and in the end couldn’t have children. It really struck a very big chord with me. I felt quite aggrieved by the fact that a doctor with so much privilege could change a life so irreparably.

My next case was a year later. It was a case where the birth had been managed very badly – there was a hypoxic event and the child ended up with cerebral palsy.  My passion for helping those affected by medical negligence developed from there.

I decided to set up the firm The Law Office of Conrad Curry because I wanted to set it up my way. We have efficiency in the conduct of files. At some other firms the efficiencies aren’t there, and clients are getting charged too high a proportion of the result. A case shouldn’t take years to get a result for a client. Because legal proceedings are so stressful for people, I want to reduce that stress by reducing the time that my clients are subjected to it.

As for medical negligence generally, why I want to do it here, my way, is that doctors have a very large obligation to their clients where their actions affect life and death and I want to be able to do what I can as a by-product of the litigation to change practices in medicine and make people more accountable and not so blasé about their work.

 

Recent Articles

Stay Updated With Legal News
Subscribe To Our Newsletter

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.