Title: Medical Malpractice Risk Management
1Medical Malpractice Risk Management
- R. Monty Cary
- PA-C, M.Ed., DFAAPA
- Senior Partner
- Cary Associates, LLC.
2Disclaimer
- Not intended as legal advice
- The cases are real
- Best learning is by example
- No pharmaceutical support
3Failure to Diagnose
Referral
Examination
PITFALLS OF MEDICAL MALPRACTICE
SUPERVISION
Documentation
COMMUNICATIONS
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5Medical Malpractice Process
Being put on notice Discovery Deposition Preparati
on for trial Conclusion on the case.
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7Reaction To A Medical Malpractice Lawsuit
- That it cant be happening
- to me.
- You dont want to believe it.
- Youre thinking, Im too
- young to be sued.
8Reaction To A MedicalMalpractice Lawsuit
My career is over Ive been careful I know that
I didnt do anything wrong.
9Reaction To A MedicalMalpractice Lawsuit
You recognize its not a dream You are really
being sued The court room is not like the
office, hospital or clinic.
10In The Court Room
- Youre Like A
- Duck
- Out
- Of
- Water.
11After Learning About The Lawsuit
- Not being able to practice like you would like to
- Not being able to focus on patients like you
should - How do your co-workers feel about you?.
12After Learning About The Lawsuit
- You are distraught
- The very idea of someone questioning your ability
- What will you do the next time you see the
patient?.
13Higher Degree of Self Doubt
- Why do I feel guilty?
- Did I screw up?
- Did I cause the problem?
- Am I going to win or lose the case?.
14Common Sense Risk Management Strategies
15Risk Management Strategies
- Reduces medical liability exposure
- Ultimately provides better care for your patients.
16Risk Management Strategies
- A more organized office, clinic or hospital
operation - Fewer chances of important details to fall
through the cracks.
17Discovery Rule
- Statutes of Limitations Puts the Plaintiff on
Notice - When the Plaintiff knows or should have known
18Discovery Rule
- Twenty Two Months to be reported
- Thirty Four Months for the claim to be resolved
- Total of Fifty Five Months.
19Medical Malpractice Cost
- 17,000 - 25,000 for an Out-of-Court Settlement
- 75,000 - 112,000 to take it to verdict.
20Case In Point
- Four Years Later A Malignant Tumor
- Seven Years Surgical Towel
21Medical Malpractice Defined
- Medical Malpractice can be defined as Negligence
on the part of the Physician, Allied Healthcare
Provider or Hospital which causes Physical or
Emotional Damage to the patient.
22Medical Malpractice Defined
- Duty
- Breach
- Causation
- Injury - Damages
23Duty
- Provider Patient Relationship
- Implied Contract
24Breach
- Standard of Care
- External / Internal
25Causation
- Cause In Fact The providers negligence caused
the injury - Or a reasonable close connection existed between
the providers conduct and the patients injury - Must prove that the provider was the
Cause-In-Fact of the patients injury
26Injury / Damages
- Death Disability Deformity Severe Pain
- Special Lost Wages Out-of-Pocket Expenses
27Injuries / Damages
- General Intangible Losses Pain Suffering
Emotional Distress - Punitive Damages Fraudulent
- Case
28Medical Malpractice 1
- How would a reasonable, careful and prudent
doctor, allied health care professional or
hospital behave in the same or similar
circumstances?
29Medical Malpractice 2
- Did the doctor, allied healthcare professional or
hospital breach the Standard of Care in this
specific situation?
30Medical Malpractice 3
- Was the unreasonable, careless, inappropriate
behavior on the part of the doctor, allied
healthcare professional or hospital the proximate
cause of the injury to the patient?.
31National Practitioner Data Bank
- The Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986
- Public Law 99-660
- Doctors Dentist Allied Healthcare Providers
- Licensed Certified Registered
32National Practitioner Data Bank
- 62 of cases are dismissed or dropped
- 32 in favor of the plaintiff
- 6 of cases go to trial
-
33National Practitioner Data BankSept 1, 1990 to
Oct 11, 2008
- Physicians (All) 254,678
- Physician Assistants 1,299
- Nurse Practitioners 812
- Nurses 4,459
34National Practitioner Data BankSept 1, 1990 to
Oct 11, 2008 Physician Assistants
- New York 180
- Florida 131
- Texas 98
- California 96
- Michigan 77
- North Carolina 71
- Arizona 59
- Washington 51
- Georgia 45
- Pennsylvania 38
352004 NPDB StatisticsPhysician Assistants
- 135 Payments for 2004
- Average 180,787.00
- 63 Misdiagnosis
- 40 Treatment Errors
- 15 Medication Errors
- 6 Failure to Monitor
- 5 Surgical Errors
- 3 Miscellaneous
- 1 OB
- 1 Equipment Failure
- 1 IV / Blood Products Related
362005 NPDB StatisticsPhysician Assistants
- 110 Payments for 2005
- Average 98,875.00
- 64 Misdiagnosis
- 21 Treatment Errors
- 13 Medication Errors
- 1 Failure to Monitor
- 5 Surgical Errors
- 4 Miscellaneous
- 1 Equipment Failure
372006 NPDB StatisticsPhysician Assistants
- 113 Payments for 2006
- Average 234,635.02
- 65 Diagnosis related
- 33 Treatment related
- 4 Medication
- 4 Surgery
- 3 Monitoring
- 2 Anesthesia
- 1 Obstetrics
- 1 Miscellaneous
-
382007 NPDB StatisticsPhysician Assistants
- 94 Payments for 2007
- Average 90,875.00
- 45 Diagnosis Related
- 24 Treatment Related
- 11 Medication Related
- 5 Surgery Related
- 4 Monitoring Related
- 2 Other
- 2 Obstetrics Related
- 1 Anesthesia Related
-
39Physician Assistants
- Inadequate Supervision
- Inadequate Examination
- Untimely Referral
- Failure to Diagnose
- Lack of Documentation
- Poor Communications
40Physician Assistants
- Inadequate Supervision
- Legal requirements for the state are met.
- Three Visit Rule Narcotic Medications
- Limited physician supervision.
- Satellite Clinic Case
- Documentation of supervision is incomplete.
- If it is not written . . .
41Physician Assistants
- Inadequate Examination
- Always confirm expand on the Chief Complaint.
- Do not take some else's triage.
- You must always perform a complete physical
examination for the history taken.
42Physician Assistants
- Untimely Referrals
- All providers must ensure timely referrals
- Not sending the patient to the supervising
physician, Emergency Room, other medical
specialties.
43Physician Assistants
- Failure to Diagnose
- Uncertain about the assessment of a patient.
- Patients condition does not follow the
anticipated course. - Not understanding reports.
- 51.4 medical malpractice suits are Failure to
Diagnose.
44Physician Assistants
- Lack of Documentation
- Five years from now, if someone reads your record
on a patient you saw today, will they get an
accurate picture of your care or will what is
missing in the record speak louder than what you
noted?
45Documentation
- The Witness Whose Memory Never Fades
46Serves Three Purposes
- Reminds the healthcare professional what s/he has
done for and to the patient. - Alerts other healthcare professionals what has
been done for and to the patient. - It is a LEGAL RECORD.
47S.O.A.P.E.R.
- S Subjective
- O Objective
- A Assessment
- P Plan
- E Patient Education
- R Reaction to Patient Education. EBI
48 Strengthening The Medical Record
- Establish a consistent method of charting and
organizing the record. - Note ALL conversations with patients including
phone calls. - Initial and date the documents you review. Case
PSA.
49Strengthening The Medical Record
- Write a full note. Write the positives and the
negatives. - Limit Abbreviations Case STDs
- Do not use Dictated But Not Reviewed.
50Dictated But Not Reviewed
- The patient had a baloney amputation in 1989
A below the knee amputation. - Patient had a pabst beer today A pap smear.
- The patient was found in the bathroom without a
purse. Without a pulse.
51Documentation
- Dictating
- Easiest and best way to document
- Eliminates the hassle of writing messages on
slips of paper - Encourages a more complete note
52Documentation Dictating
- Phone conversations are less burdensome.
- Reduces the risk of communications being over
looked. - 175 words dictated vs. 87 words written.
53Legibility
- If the note is written, it must be Legible
- Case
54Legibility
- Texas Cardiologist / Pharmacist
- Rx Isordil 20 mgs Q 6 H
- Pharmacist filled with Plendil max daily does
of 10 mgs - Resulted in an MI and eventually death
55Legibility
- Court found Physicians illegible handwritten
prescription the cause - First verdict finding a physician culpable solely
due to poor penmanship - Each paid 225,000.00.
56Professionalism
- Professionalism
- and
- Documentation
- Go Hand In Hand
57Physician
- If the nurses around this hospital would read
the medication orders, we wouldnt have medical
emergencies like this one
58Nurses
- If the physicians around this hospital would
learn to write so we could read it, there
wouldnt be medication emergencies like his one.
59Do Not ALTER The Record
- SLIDE
- SL Single Line through the entry
- I Initial the late entry as an
- Error
- D Date the entry
- E Note ERROR in the area.
60Documentation
- Single Black Female seeks male companionship,
ethnicity unimportant. I am good looking and
love to play. I love long walks, riding in your
pick-up truck, hunting, camping, fishing and cozy
nights lying by the fire. The right person will
have me eating out of their hand. Rub me the
right way and watch me respond. I will meet you
at the door when you come home. Im yours. Call
404-875-6240 and ask for Daisy.
61Atlanta Humane Society
62Communications
63Communications
- Although you will not find POOR COMMUNICATIONS
listed anywhere as an official cause of MEDICAL
MALPRACTICE CLAIMS, it underlies almost every
malpractice action. - Contributing factor is 80.
64Communications
- It is the combination of long wait times and a
short visit with the physician that yields the
most negative results on patient satisfaction - Patients who have short wait times and adequate
patient-doctor exam room time are the most
satisfied patients
65Confidentially
- HIPAA Health Insurance Portability
Accountability Act of 1996 April 14, 2003 - Office
- Pharmacy EVERYWHERE!
- Hospital
- Clinic
66Confidentially
- 32 YO/WF who was not feeling well
- Went to see her Family Physician
- A pregnancy test was done
- Pt instructed the doctor not to even tell her
husband the results of the test - Mother-in-Law wanted to know !
- Laboratory worker told results.
67E-Mails
- Considered a business document
- Can be subpoenaed
-
- Subject to Discovery
- Civil / Criminal proceedings
68E-Mails
- No longer in your control once it is sent
- Sensitive information
- STOP and THINK before you SEND.
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70Tampering Alert Signals
- Asking For Original Records
- Missing Medical Records
- Records Conflict With Patients Testimony
- Different Ink on Single Entry
- Different Handwriting.
71Tampering Alert Signals
- Handwriting too neat
- Late entry or out of sequence
- Additions to the chart
- Erased Obliterated White Out
- Long dictated or hand written when usually
One-Liners.
72Tampering Alert Signals
- Dictating Weeks / Months After Patient is Seen
- Medical Malpractice cases have been won and lost
on the issues of tampering.
73Implications For The Plaintiff
- Will strengthen the case
- Appears to be Dishonest / Deceitful
- Will make a Good Case Better
- Will make a Poor Case Good
- Plaintiffs Attorney is in Control.
74Implications For The Plaintiff
- Seen as a Cover Up by The Jury
- Plaintiff is Awarded Punitive Damages
- Can Be in The Millions Case in point
- Juries Response is ANGER.
75Implications For The Defendant
- KISS OF DEATH
- Impossible to Defend
- Almost Certain to Settle
- Stops Your Power to Bargain
- MAYNOT be Covered by Medical Malpractice
Insurance Fraud!.
76Implications For The Defendant
- Defendant Will Lose Creditability
- Other Defendants Will Be Implicated
- May Lose Your License Criminal Offense.
77Why Patients Dont Sue
- Takes Too Long
- Too Little Value
- The Doctor is A Friend
78Thank You Enjoy The Conference
Thank You Enjoy The Conference
Thank You Enjoy The Conference
79The End
8012 Suggestion to keep in mind when being sued
- 1. No one cares as much about the case as you
do. - 2. Make sure your attorney is the best money
can buy. - 3. Your responsibility is to educate the
attorney on the medical aspects involved in the
case.
8112 Suggestions
- 4. A deposition is easier than the NCCPA Board
Exam - 5. Dont volunteer information to the
opposition, answer only the question given. - 6. Ask about any legal proceeding you dont
understand.
8212 Suggestions
- 7. Dont underestimate the plaintiffs
attorney. - 8. Dont argue with the plaintiff's attorney.
- 9. Accept support from colleagues, friends and
patients.
8312 Suggestions
- 10. If there is a good chance of loosing
Settle - 11. Know your deposition when you go to trail.
- 12. Your spouse is going through hell as well,
be kind to them.
84You
85The End
86Questions
- Question 1
- Developing risk management strategies in your
practice can - Reduce medical liability exposure
- Provide better care for the patient
- Provide a better organized office operation
- Fewer chances of important details to fall
through the cracks - All of the above
87Questions
- Question 2
- Your reaction to a medical malpractice law suit
are - You are distraught
- Your not going to be able to practice like you
would like to. - Your not going to be able to focus on patients
like you would like to - The very idea of someone questioning your ability
- All of the above
88Questions
- Question 3
- The Discovery Rule states that the
- Average claim takes about 22 months to be
reported after a medical incident - Statute of limitations does not begin to run
until the happenings of the event puts the
plaintiff on notice - Courts should not be faulted for blameless
ignorance - All of the above
89Questions
- Question 4
- All of the following except are elements of a
medical malpractice law suit - Duty
- Breach
- Blameless Ignorance
- Causation
- Injury Damage
-
90Questions
- Question 5
- True or False The Duty to care arises from the
provider-patient relationship that is an implied
contract - True
- False
91Questions
- Question 6
- The National Practitioner Data Bank was the
inception of - The Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986
- NSR 725-62
- Health Insurance Portability Accountability Act
of 1996 - CME 6082 - 2005
92Questions
- Question 7
- In a medical malpractice law suit, the most
difficult element to prove is - Duty
- Breach
- Causation
- Injury
93Questions
- Question 8
- The medical record has been known as
- The witness whose memory never fades
- A legal record
- What you will do for and to the patient
- What has been done to and for the patient
94Questions
- Question 9
- Dictating the medical record is the
- Easiest and best way to document
- Eliminates the hassle of writing messages on
slips of paper - Encourages a more complete note
- All of the above
95Questions
- Question 10
-
- All of the following except are a communication
success - Careful to explain what you are doing
- Encourage you patient to talk more
- Spend less than 15 minutes with the patient
- Use more humor and laughed more
- All of the above
96Answers
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98Before you return from your business trip, I just
want to let you know about the small accident I
had with the pick up truck when I turned into the
driveway. Fortunately, not too bad and I really
didn't get hurt, so please don't worry too much
about me. I was coming home from Wal-Mart, and
when I turned into the driveway I accidentally
pushed down on the accelerator instead of the
brake. The garage door is slightly bent, but
the pick up fortunately came to a halt when it
bumped into your car. I am really sorry, but
I know with your kind-hearted personality you
will forgive me. You know how much I love you
and care for you my sweetheart. I am enclosing
a picture for you. I cannot wait to hold you
in my arms again . Your loving wife. XXX
99PS. Your girlfriend called......................
PS. Your girlfriend called...................
...
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106. During a patient's two week follow-up
appointment with his Cardiologist, he gt gt
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told Me to put on a new one every six hours and
now I'm gt gt running out of places To put it!' gt
gt I had him quickly undress and discovered what I
hoped I W ouldn't see. gt gt Yes, the man had over
fifty patches on his body! Now, the Instructions
gt gt include removal of the old patch before
applying a new one. gt gt Submitted by Dr. Rebecca
St. Clair, Norfolk , VA
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