Blog & Articles
[9 MIN READ]
Remember paper T sheets? Your patient has back pain, so you grab a paper T sheet from the anatomical rack, walk into the exam room, get your history, make some circles and slashes, and your history and physical is all but complete by the time you get back to your desk. Write in (remember writing?) some MDM and ‘ba-da-boom’, the chart is done. The focus was on easy documentation and receiving appropriate reimbursement for the care provided.
Mitigating the Consequences of Burnout, Medical Errors, and Liability
In 2019, the World Health Organization categorized burnout as a syndrome resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed. While burnout was a concern before COVID-19, its onset has exacerbated the problem.
According to an ACEP October 2020 poll, 87% of emergency physicians reported feeling more stressed since the start of the pandemic, and 72% reported experiencing more burnout on the job.
On the surface, burnout may be classified as a workforce issue; however, its far-reaching effects can threaten patient safety. In fact, research suggests that physicians experiencing burnout are twice as likely to make a medical error. Burnout should absolutely be considered one of the root causes of medical error.
Anchoring: Its Role in Diagnostic Error
[8 MIN READ]
Why was the diagnosis really missed?
In my previous position as Manager of Risk, Claims & Insurance for our physician group, the available methods of error analysis never satisfied my quest for the ultimate answer to this recurring question in any given case. The majority of our group practice was emergency medicine; our claims data mirrored the national trends showing that most claims were related to diagnostic error, which contained the allegation that a clinician was negligent by either not making the diagnosis in a timely fashion or failing to make the diagnosis entirely.
[3 MIN READ]
Apology laws have always been a quandary. I have repeatedly said they make docs feel more comfortable about apology but have little legal value. Most would assume apology laws reduce medial malpractice claims but a study by Stanford Law Review shows that this is not the case. In states with apology laws, non-surgeon physicians saw higher rates of medical malpractice lawsuits and dollars paid out. Defense lawyers should want to use the evidence created in a disclosure process if a case goes to trial.