Failure to Diagnose: All Specialties at Risk. A Letter from the. Chair of the Board. Dear Colleague:

Similar documents
I m Sorry may be more complicated than you think. A Letter from the. Chair of the Board. Volume 14, No. 1 Spring 2006.

BE A SUPERHERO! Learn how to protect your practice from unnecessary claims 2017 PHYSICIAN RISK MANAGEMENT PROGRAM PHYSICIAN

Summer Box 8016, 225 International Circle. Home Office: Professionals Advocate Insurance Company

BE A SUPERHERO! Learn how to protect your practice from unnecessary claims 2017 OFFICE STAFF RISK MANAGEMENT PROGRAM OFFICE STAFF

SMILE! find out... Volume 24, No. 1 MD Spring/Summer The Doctor Will See You Now! What is telemedicine? Telemedicine and Maryland law

Sage Medical Center New Patient Forms

Esophageal and Lung Institute presents Bernard Dallemagne Lectureship in Surgical Innovation

Diagnostic Errors: A Persistent Risk

PENNSYLVANIA Advance Directive Planning for Important Health Care Decisions

Connection March 2013

RED SIGNAL REPORTSM RADIOLOGY. August 2018 Vol. 1 No. 1. Claims Data Signals & Solutions to Reduce Risks and Improve Patient Safety.

Health Professions Review Board

ACOG COMMITTEE OPINION

Benign Breast Disease

THE COUNSELING PLACE ADULT INTAKE FORM Yearly Family Income:

We Get Letters May 2004 Number 11

9129 Dickey Drive Mechanicsville, VA 23116

Participant Handbook

List of Lists Updated: January 2012

Chapter 5 Policies and Procedures to Receive Payment for Treatment of Colorectal Cancers, Large Polyp Removals & Adverse Events

Medicare 2010 Hot Topics. About This Manual. Mary Jean Sage The Sage Associates 1/13/ Oak Park Blvd.

GEISINGER HEALTH PLAN GEISINGER INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY GEISINGER QUALITY OPTIONS, INC. PRACTITIONER CREDENTIALING CRITERIA

Essential Skills for Evidence-based Practice: Strength of Evidence

The Most Common Billing Mistakes for PA Services

Flossmoor: (708) Harvey: (708) Tinley Park: (708) ICOR: (708) Crestwood: (708) Patient Signature:

Improve Access to Care for the Initial Patient Visit to the Gastroenterology Clinic

Guidelines for Graduate APRN Clinical Experiences

Few non-clinical issues have created as

Compliant Documentation for Coding and Billing. Caren Swartz CPC,CPMA,CPC-H,CPC-I

Appendix: Assessments from Coping with Cancer

Presented by Copyright 2013, all rights reserved

California HIPAA Privacy Implementation Survey: Appendix A. Stakeholder Interviews

Physician Compensation in 1997: Rightsized and Stagnant

LICENSED CLINICAL SOCIAL WORKER-PATIENT SERVICES AGREEMENT

Wait Times in Canada: The Wait Time Alliance (WTA) Perspective

RIVER CITY ADVOCACY COUNSELING SERVICES 145 Landa Street New Braunfels, TX (830)

Wednesday, May 20, :00 p.m. Eastern

1. Create a heightened awareness of clinical risks and enterprise-wide challenges associated with misuse of copy and paste.

SELF HARM RISK ASSESSMENT

Your Medical Record Rights in Guam

DELINEATION OF PRIVILEGES - FAMILY MEDICINE

SB 420 Medical Marijuana Identification Card MMIC Program

Informed Consent for Assessment

Informed Consent Session Goals

HOSPITAL STAFF. Identify hospital services, staff, specialties, specilaists by means of pictures and flowcharts. Aims:

EXPERT REPORTS ON THE NEW EMTALA GUIDELINES. from Emergency Physician LEGAL BULLETIN Volume 9, Number 5, 1999

CHAPTER 1. Documentation is a vital part of nursing practice.

Gotcha! The Medical Chart: Anticipating the Lawyer s Review

Your Medical Record Rights in i Maryland

ADVANCE HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVE HEALTH CARE POWER OF ATTORNEY AND LIVING WILL

3-Steps to Organizing Your Medical Life Program Overview

Your Medical Record Rights in New Mexico

A17/B17: Addressing Diagnostic Error: Creating Reliable Systems for Diagnosis and Tracking in Primary Care

Physician peer review is critically important to safe care, but it can be difficult

From The Editor. EMTALA Update. In This Issue... If you plan on attending the ACEP Scientific Assembly, please stop by to see what s new.

case review Treating friends and relatives as patients can lead to malpractice litigation. Unfortunately, sometimes such relationships result

Address City, State Zip Code Phone

Resident Supervision and Progressive Responsibility

Colorectal Multi Disciplinary Team

Medicare Quality Payment Program: Deep Dive FAQs for 2017 Performance Year Hospital-Employed Physicians

Request for Special Testing Accommodations for the NCLEX-RN

P. R. E. P. Prevention Reward Employee Program. Tolleson Union High School District Plan Document

(A Guide to Consumer Rights under HIPAA)

Credentialing Are We There Yet? By: Kelly Mattingly

Radiology. in the Desert Registration Information. Radiology. March 4-8, in the Desert. Omni Scottsdale Resort & Spa at Montelucia

Take ACTION: A Collaborative Approach to Creating a Culture of Safety

Quality Health Network 1/6

If you have any questions about this notice, please contact the SSHS Privacy Officer at:

CODING WORKSHOP OVeRVIeW

The Chronicle. Spring Ph From the desk of: Mary Ellen Hamner, M.Ed.,NCED. LEDA President

2015 Associations Matter Study Interim Results

Putting the Pieces Together

SUCCESSION PLANNING: FILLING A LABORATORY DIRECTOR S SHOES PART ONE

Ethics and the Practice of Aesthetic Medicine

Preparing for your visit to the Gattuso Rapid Diagnostic Centre

Person to Contact in Case of Emergency. THE COUNSELING PLACE YOUTH INTAKE FORM Yearly Family Income:

Disclosures. How To Avoid Malpractice. What is Malpractice? 4/17/2018 RISK MANAGEMENT: AVOIDING MEDICAL MALPRACTICE

Dear Family Caregiver, Yes, you.

Sandra V Heinsz, Ph.D. Informed Consent Services Agreement

Welcome to the Office of Dr. Sam Van Kirk!

See the Time chapter for complete instructions regarding how to code using time as the controlling E/M factor.

WELCOME TO OUR OFFICE!

Indiana. Your Medical Record Rights in. (A Guide to Consumer Rights under HIPAA)

E & M Coding. Welcome To The Digital Learning Center. Today s Presentation. Course Faculty. Beyond the Basics. Presented by

The in-office ancillary services (IOAS)

7 Steps. Federal ambulatory meaningful use (MU) regulations provide potential bonus. for Implementing Meaningful Use

MODULE 1: Exploring Career Goals in Health Care

Your Medical Record Rights in Hawaii

Welcome to University Family Healthcare, PA.

Provider Rights. As a network provider, you have the right to:

Medical Decision Making

Doctors, Patients & Social Media

In Their Own Words. Aetna Members Tell Their Stories

A Journal of Rhetoric in Society. Interview: Transplant Deliberations and Patient Advocacy. Staff

Center for Clinical Standards and Quality/Survey & Certification Group

Fullerton Physical Therapy and Sports Care, Inc.

November 2008 Report No

The process has been designed to be user friendly and involves a few simple steps.

Meaningful Use Roadmap

VERMONT. Introduction to Medical Aid in Dying

Transcription:

Volume 8, No. 2 Fall/Winter 2000 A Letter from the Chair of the Board Dear Colleague: A patient comes in and explains he already knows the diagnosis "because that s what it says on the Internet." A woman calls at 2:00 a.m. wondering if she should take an antacid for her heartburn. A man in his 40s comes in asking you to check to make sure he doesn t have prostate cancer. These are just some of the diagnostic challenges that face MEDICAL MUTUAL Insureds. This issue of Doctors RX addresses "Failure to Diagnose," a silent, but all-too-frequent cause of malpractice lawsuits. D. Ted Lewers, M.D. Chair of the Board Failure to Diagnose: All Specialties at Risk When busy physicians think about leading causes of malpractice risk, failure-to-diagnose seldom comes to mind. Why? Because failure-to-diagnose (FTD) claims are typically caused not by what the doctor did, but rather what the doctor didn t do! FTD is one of the few malpractice allegations that cuts across the board. Pathologists, did you know that 59% of your claims involve FTD? that puts you in first place. Almost half 48% of ER doctors claims arise from FTD. Radiologists sit in third place at 42%. About one-third of lawsuits against primary care practitioners are for FTD: family practice, 32%; and internal medicine, 28%. Appendicitis, AMI, breast cancer, and colon cancer are the main worries here. Pediatricians 31% of cases need to look for obscure cases of meningitis. Gynecologists, 23% of your lawsuits arise from FTD, mostly breast cancer cases. Surgeons, don t think your specialty goes unscathed. By odd coincidence, 14% of claims against general surgeons, urologists, and ENT specialists involve FTD. Twelve percent of claims filed against orthopedists involve FTD. For ophthalmologists and psychiatrists, it s slightly less at 11%. Did you pick out the one specialty with few FTD claims? If you picked Anesthesiology, you re right!

Failure to Diagnose: Just the Facts, Please Failure-to-diagnose lawsuits represent about one in five claims for medical malpractice. Overall, this number has remained fairly stable the past 10 years, with one important exception claims for FTD breast cancer are showing a definite upward trend. What s really worrisome, though, is claim severity. A look at the bar chart below reveals that the average indemnity payment for these claims has climbed rapidly. According to the Physicians Insurance Association of America (PIAA), the average indemnity for FTD claims was $85,776 in 1985. By 1996, doctor-owned insurance companies were paying out $221,704 for the typical FTD claim. I N D E M N I T Y $ 250,000 $ 200,000 $ 150,000 $ 100,000 $ 50,000 $ 0 Growth in FTD Average Indemnity Payments Doctors RX Elizabeth A. Svoysky, J.D., Editor Director of Risk Management Services Years: 1985-1996 D. Ted Lewers, M.D., Chair of the Board c Copyright, 2000 All rights reserved. Articles reprinted in this newsletter are used with permission. The information contained in this newsletter is obtained from sources generally considered to be reliable, however, accuracy and completeness are not guaranteed. The information is intended as risk management advice. It does not constitute a legal opinion, nor is it a substitute for legal advice. Legal inquiries about topics covered in this newsletter should be directed to your attorney. All faculty participating in continuing medical education programs sponsored by Medical Mutual are expected to disclose to the program participants any real or apparent conflict(s) of interest related to the content of their presentation(s). Myocardial Infarction Eight Leading Causes of FTD Claims Appendictis Lung Colorectal Vertebral Column Fracture Numbers you should know! Ectopic Pregnancy Breast Meningitis The pie chart above tells us which are the most common conditions among all FTD claims, according to the PIAA: 1. Breast cancer 33.5% 2. Lung cancer 16.9% 3. Myocardial infarction 13.1% 4. Appendicitis 10.3% 5. Colorectal cancer 9.7% 6. Vertebral column fracture 6.8% 7. Ectopic pregnancy 6.0% 8. Meningitis 3.6% As you can see, cancer is the biggest category, with cancers of the breast, lung, and colorectal of greatest concern. Home Office Switchboard 410-785-0050 Toll Free 800-492-0193 Incident/Claim/ Lawsuit Reporting ext. 228 Risk Management Seminar Info ext. 268 or 280 Risk Management Questions ext. 269 Main Fax 410-785-2631 Claims Department Fax 410-785-1670 Web Site www.weinsuredocs.com CASE STUDY Never Forget the Lethal Diagnosis Case Summary: The patient is a 46-year-old married white man. He had been a patient of this doctor since 1979, and was diagnosed with hypertension in 1982. Clinical Course: Over a several-month period, the patient made seven visits to the primary care doctor complaining of congestion, heartburn, flatulence, and bloating. The patient was treated empirically with Tagamet, Librax, and Bentyl. The symptoms would appear to improve, only to later return. A gallbladder series and sonogram were normal. The nurse practitioner saw the patient at two visits, and continued the Tagamet. Seventeen months after the symptoms began, a sigmoidoscopy was performed, and a diagnosis made of "probable irritable bowel syndrome." Two months later a gastroenterologist performed a colonoscopy, and noted a tumor in the transverse colon. Subsequent pathology report revealed adenocarcinoma. The patient died one year later. Risk Management Recommendations: This case is similar to many FTD colon cancer cases. The physician didn t seem to be especially concerned about the patient s symptoms, and delayed in ordering a sigmoidoscopy. The possibility of colon cancer did not appear to cross the doctor s mind he forgot the old adage, "Never forget the diagnosis that can kill." And it was inappropriate to allow the nurse practitioner to manage a patient with undiagnosed GI symptoms. Sigmoidoscopy alone is suitable only as a screening tool. Increasingly, colonoscopy is being viewed as the "gold standard" for the evaluation of lower GI symptoms. 14 Steps You Can Take Follow these 14 steps to reduce your risk of a malpractice lawsuit for failure to diagnose: Problematic Clinical Presentation: 1. Take a careful history. Remember that three out of four diagnoses come from the history. Ask open-ended questions and listen carefully. 2. Become a bulldog diagnostician. This especially applies to lower GI symptoms that may represent early stage colon cancer. 3. Reach a definite diagnosis in a timely manner. For example, new breast symptoms should be definitely diagnosed within 4-6 weeks, in most cases not 4-6 months! Difficult Patient: 4. Be cautious about the unlikable patient. Don t take diagnostic shortcuts with the patient who gets on your nerves. 5. Identify the underlying reason for the difficult behavior. Patients who don t get recommended diagnostic tests may have other things on their agenda. 6. Be wary of patient denial and expectations for perfection. Don t let yourself be set up. 7. Show the patient you care. Distracted Physician: 8. Make sure you get adequate rest, sleep, and time off. A tough diagnosis requires a lot of mental focus. 9. Avoid prematurely "pigeonholing" the patient. 10. Avoid the "I can do it myself" syndrome. Consultants are available use them! Systems Breakdowns: 11. Have a system to assure follow-up. This is especially important for possible cancer diagnoses. 12. If you are a consultant, provide timely advice. We like to see your report dictated and in the mail within 3-5 days. 13. Assure that nurses and other staff are properly trained. Don t let an unreviewed decision by your assistant put you on the witness stand. 14. Organize your recordkeeping. Flowsheets can help organize the information you need. We can reduce the risk of a Failure to Diagnose lawsuit!

Look for our new 2001 programs! MEDICAL MUTUAL/Professionals Advocate will mail announcements of our new Risk Management educational programs in January 2001. Review the information and register promptly to be sure you get the program, date and location of your choice. And don't forget, participants can earn CME credits and a 5% discount on a 2002 medical professional liability renewal policy. New for 2001 Register online! It s easy, quick and secure. MEDICAL MUTUAL Liability Insurance Society of Maryland Home Office: Professionals Advocate Insurance Company 225 International Circle, P.O. Box 8016 Hunt Valley, MD 21030 410-785-0050 800-492-0193 PRST STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO. 5415 BALTIMORE, MD

CME Test Questions Instructions for CME Participation CME Accreditation Statement--MEDICAL MUTUAL Liability Insurance Society, which is affiliated with Professionals Advocate, is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to sponsor continuing medical education for physicians. Medical Mutual designates this educational activity for a maximum of one hour in category 1 credit towards the AMA Physician s Recognition Award. Each physician should claim only those hours of credit that he/she actually spent in the educational activity. Instructions--to receive credit, please follow these instructions: 1. Read the articles contained in the newsletter and then answer the test questions. 2. Mail or fax your completed answers for grading to the address or fax number provided below: Med Lantic Management Services, Inc. P.O. Box 64100 Baltimore, MD 21298-9134 FAX 410-785-2631 3. One of our goals is to assess the continuing educational needs of our readers so we may enhance the educational effectiveness of the Doctors RX. To achieve this goal, we need your help. You must complete the CME evaluation form to receive credit. 4. Completion Deadline: March 2, 2001. 5. Upon completion of the test and evaluation form, a certificate of credit will be mailed to you. Please allow three weeks to receive your certificate. 1. Failure-to-diagnose (FTD) is a condition that affects only a limited number of specialties. 10. Failure to diagnose ectopic pregnancy is a common cause of FTD claims among obstetricians. 2. The specialty with the highest percentage of FTD claims is pathology. 3. Almost one-half of lawsuits against primary care doctors involve FTD. 4. Surgeons need not be concerned about FTD risk. 5. Overall, about 20% of malpractice claims involve FTD. 6. The number of FTD claims has been climbing steadily since 1985. 7. Claim severity refers to whether the disease is among the leading causes of death. 8. Claim severity for FTD has more than doubled since 1985. 11. The Case Study shows that empirical treatment is an effective management strategy for the patient with undiagnosed GI symptoms. 12. Sigmoidoscopy alone is considered an acceptable diagnostic tool for symptomatic patients. 13. Careful history-taking is one of the most effective strategies to avoiding FTD claims. 14. Difficult patients can increase FTD risk because they ask the doctor to perform too many diagnostic tests. 15. Lack of adequate sleep can impede a doctor s mental ability to reach a difficult diagnosis. 16. Good recordkeeping such as using flowsheets can help reduce FTD risk. 9. The average FTD claim now involves a payment of over $200,000.

CME Evaluation Form Statement of Educational Purpose "Doctors RX" is a newsletter sent bi-annually to the insured physicians of MEDICAL MUTUAL/Professionals Advocate. Its mission and educational purpose is to identify current health care related risk management issues and provide physicians with educational information that will enable them to reduce their malpractice liability risk. Readers of the newsletter should be able to obtain the following educational objectives: 1) gain information on topics of particular importance to them as physicians, 2) assess the newsletter's value to them as practicing physicians, and 3) assess how this information may influence their own practices. CME Objectives for Failure To Diagnose Educational Objective: To gain an understanding of how to reduce failure to diagnose claims. Strongly Agree Strongly Disagree Part I. Educational Value: 5 4 3 2 1 I learned something new that was important. I verified some important information. I plan to seek more information on this topic. This information is likely to have an impact on my practice. Part 2. Commitment to Change: What change(s) (if any) do you plan to make in your practice as a result of reading this newsletter? Part 3. Statement of Completion: I attest to having completed the CME activity. Signature: Date: Part 4. Identifying Information: Please PRINTlegibly or type the following: Name: Telephone Number: Address: