A surgeon's failure to recognize a surgical patient's dangerously low hemocrit and hemoglobin levels prior to surgery and their subsequent further drop during surgery led to his death, according to a malpractice lawsuit filed in Ohio.
According to the decedent's sons who filed the lawsuit, "The father had a left heart catheterization in June and as a consequence of the results, decided to have elective surgery for a coronary artery bypass grafting. The lawsuit stated that as a direct result of the cardiac catheterization procedure, the man sustained an injury to his right femoral artery. This caused a retroperioneal hemorrhage that the doctor did not diagnose and repair.
In fact, nothing was done about the issue even as the surgery was underway. This was in spite of the fact the patient’s hemocrit and hemoglobin levels were dropping; levels that were low even prior to surgery. These low levels were red flags that the doctor did nothing about. As a result of this failure to diagnose the right femoral artery injury, the plaintiff lost a large volume of blood."
Making matters worse, the patient was actually given a blood thinner causing even more significant blood loss. According to the plaintiff's lawyer, the doctor was negligent in not recognizing the blood loss as life threatening and attempting to find its source and stop it before loss of life.
A South Florida teen has been awarded $12.6 million in a jury verdict after the teen lost all four limbs due to a vaccination error 13 years ago. The medical malpractice lawsuit was filed against the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine.
In October 1998, the child's mother, Queen Seriah Azulla Dabrio, took her to the medical school's pediatric unit for a checkup. A medical assistant injected her with a special vaccination designed to protect against infection for people without spleens.
A former Duke University cancer researcher and physician, Dr. Anil Potti has agreed to settle eleven medical malpractice lawsuits filed against him. In each of the settlements, the doctor agreed to pay at least $75,000 to resolve the cases. It's unclear as to the exact nature of the medical malpractice lawsuits. However, Dr. Potti had been on a leave of absence (he later resigned) from Duke University over claims that he falsified his resume and conducted or reported clinical research that was seriously flawed.
According to the News Observer, "Also, in a consent order negotiated with the board, Potti agreed to accept a formal reprimand for unprofessional conduct, and he admitted to having inaccurate information in his résumé and official Duke biographical sketches and to using those flawed credentials in research grant applications."
A recent study conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services found that major medical errors such as leaving surgical instruments in patient after surgery, wrong site surgeries, and operations performed on the wrong patient are going unreported by hospitals. The study was part of an overall research project concerning hospitals that participate in Medicare.
According to the study, some 15,000 medical errors are not reported each month. The study found that 44% of these unreported medical errors were deemed preventable errors.
Besides the harm caused to the individual patient who suffers as a result of the medical error, the hospital or medical institution forfeits an opportunity to learn from these errors when they go unreported. This makes many of these errors prone to being repeated in the future.
We don't normally think of dentistry or its related practices such as orthodontics and oral surgery in relation to medical malpractice. However, such malpractice cases do exist and can result in such serious health consequences as brain damage, paralysis, and blindness.
Typically, dental malpractice cases arise due to the failure of a healthcare professional in terms of not following proper procedure and industry recognized methods of procedure such as: taking a proper medical history, charting a patient's medications, failure to recognize and/or diagnose oral medical issues such as periodontal disease or oral cancer, and issues of general negligence such as implanting a faulty bridge or crown and sedation medication errors.
Any of these issues may lead to a serious dental malpractice claim.
New England Voices for Error Reduction has recently formed in order to provide patients around New England information about their doctor, their hospital, and other healthcare providers in order to improve patient safety and overall quality of care.
“Our mission is to be the watchdog for consumers in holding health care facilities, administrators and others accountable for quality improvements and [medical] error reduction,” said Lori Nerbonne, co-founder of New Hampshire Patient Voices, and a NEVER member.
According to the New Haven Independent, "Nerbonne said that the group hopes to be the ‘’voice of victims of medical harm, as they are an under-represented voice and yet pay dearly physically, emotionally and financially.’’
Jean Rexford, the executive director of Connecticut Center for Patient Safety, is the driving force behind NEVER.
Rexford, a long-time patient advocate, said consumers should to be able to look at health care not only within the state they live in, but by region as well. She said people should be able to match services they seek with those offered at the best quality and lowest cost.
“There needs to be a way to see how hospitals are stacking up to other hospitals,” said Rexford.
This news is most welcome for those of us who've been representing medical malpractice victims in New Hampshire.
As part of the healthcare reform strategy set forth by the present Administration, electronic medical records were supposed to increase efficiency while simultaneously improve safety outcomes. In some fashion, those goals have been accomplished. However, the advent of the EHRs has created a new set of problems with a whole new type of medical errors.
The Department of Health and Human Services requested that the Institute of Medicine look into the issue. Last week, they issued their report which was in part critical of the vendors of the EHRs.
According to the report, these electronic record vendors "discourage the free exchange of safety-related information in their contracts with health care providers. But serious errors involving these technologies–including medication dosing errors, failure to detect fatal illnesses, and treatment delays due to poor human-computer interactions or loss of data–have led to several reported patient deaths and injuries.”
According to Forbes, "The Institute of Medicine report calls for HHS to work with the private sector to evaluate the impact of health IT on patient safety. However, if there’s no progress within a year, the FDA should step in and regulate health IT."
I doubt anyone in the healthcare industry relishes the thought of FDA intervention especially since the federal agency is barely able to manage the duties with which it is already tasked.
The family of a 2-year-old whose feet, left hand and part of her right hand were amputated because of a lengthy treatment delay in an emergency room has settled their medical malpractice case for $10 million.
Malyia Jeffers was taken to Methodist Hospital in Sacramento California by her parents when they became concerned about her fever, skin discoloration, and general weakness. In spite of her parents pleas for a doctor, Malyia waited five hours before being seen. By that time, it was too late and amputation was required.
According to the Associated Press, "Malyia was flown to Stanford University's Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. Doctors there found that Streptococcus A bacteria had invaded her blood and organs, and they performed the amputations.
Court documents show that most of the money will be placed in a trust for Malyia's current needs and an annuity that will provide her with $16,932 a month when she turns 18. The monthly payment grows over time, so that by the time Malyia is 30, the monthly payout will be nearly double."
In what may be the largest birth injury malpractice jury verdict in Michigan, an Oakland County jury returned a $130 million damages verdict in favor of the family of a 15-year-old girl injured at birth. The jury found that Dr. Andrew Halperin and Beaumont Hospital were negligent in not opting for a cesarean section due to the baby's size.
According to the Detroit Free Press, "the award represents the cost of caring for Markell around-the-clock through 2077 and her lost wages. The money will be stored with a court-appointed conservator.
In the original complaint, filed by attorney Douglas Raymond of Lafayette, Colo., Halperin and Beaumont were accused of not realizing that Markell's size warranted a C-section and failing to prevent injury to the baby."
A child's medical crisis or emergency is every parent's worst nightmare. Yet, there are steps parents can take to minimize the risk of medical errors and ensure the quality of care your child receives when he or she needs medical attention. WebMD posted an informative article on the subject yesterday. It's well worth a read. Here are some of the highlights:
1)Act as your child's healthcare advocate. Make sure you listen and understand everything that is being communicated about the health of your child. Don't forget to ask questions.
2)Choose a physician that takes the time to listen to your concerns as well as those of your child. The WebMD article mentions the importance of a happy staff. That may indicate how well the staff communicates with each other-a significant factor in the overall health and well-being of your child.
3)Make sure you communicate accurately all medicines your child is taking. This can't be overemphasized. So often, medication errors occur due to a lack of communication.
Dinora Rodriguez consulted a physician to repair leaking breast implants. She found the doctor from a friend who'd referred her. The procedure was supposed to be routine and fairly simple. However, the outcome was anything but what she expected. The surgeon left the woman with a serious case of symmastia, a condition in which the breast implant pockets are connected together. This caused severe pain as well as disfigurement. It was only after the botched plastic surgery that the woman learned the surgeon wasn't board certified. She filed a medical malpractice lawsuit against him.
Unfortunately the Rodriguez incident is not uncommon. According to MSNBC, "Unfortunately, Rodriguez's case is just one example of the many botched operations plastic surgeons like Youn are seeing these days. That's why the shocking case is being highlighted in a safety campaign launched this week by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.
"It's like the Wild West out there," Dr. Anthony Youn, a board certified plastic surgeon in Troy Michigan says. "There are tons of doctors performing plastic surgery procedures when they have little or no training and little to no skill. There are ob/gyns performing liposuction. An ER doc will take a weekend course on breast implants and perform surgery in [his or her] office. It happens all the time."
While most physicians are conscientious practitioners of their craft and treat their patients ethically and within the scope of what is considered sound medical practice, some have a lengthy history of medical malpractice complaints and judgments against them. My law partner, Kevin Dugan, wrote a blog post a few days ago about the federal government's decision to disallow the public's access to a medical database concerning physician errors. That decision is a huge mistake and will no doubt result in a less informed public regarding the state of their own healthcare and the manner in which they make their healthcare decisions.
The problem is more widespread than the government's recent decision. Some state licensing boards continue to allow physicians to practice medicine even after numerous medical malpractice complaints and judgments. A recent Kansas City Star investigation found that 20 doctors practicing in Kansas and Missouri were doing so in spite of significant histories of medical malpractice. Medical errors by these physicians were serious and included operating on the wrong body part, leaving surgical material inside of patients, as well as failures to diagnose illnesses.
In Minnesota, the Duluth News Tribune found that one neurosurgeon was finally sanctioned by the state licensing board but only after 9 malpractice complaints, two of which resulted in the death of the patient and one involving permanent paralysis. In spite of the sanction, the neurosurgeon was allowed to continue to operate. When the doctor moved to Texas, his record never followed him.
These are just a few examples of instances in which state medical licensing boards have failed in their public duty to protect patients. Patients seeking medical treatment have a right to know about their physicians' history and his track record.
The American Journal of Infection Control has published a study performed by Israeli researchers that found 60% of hospital workers' clothing testing positive for pathogens such as those that can cause pneumonia, MRSA, and blood stream infections.
While the number is high, most experts believe there are more pressing concerns regarding bacterial infections in hospitals. For example, lack of proper hand washing remains one of the leading causes of infection and the spread of germs and bacteria in a hospital setting.
“Uniforms could be a source of contamination, but there is more concern about other surfaces around the patients,” said Russell N. Olmsted, president of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology.
“What we don’t want to do is direct a lot of energy to sterile attire,” he added. “There are surfaces around the person that have a higher bacterial load. There could be 100 colony-forming units to 1,000 units on a bedrail, for instance,” said Olmsted, an epidemiologist in infection prevention and control services at St. Joseph Mercy Health System in Ann Arbor, Mich.
The study, if nothing else, is a good reminder that hospitals can be very dangerous places for those whose immune systems are already compromised. Health industry experts have been calling for a serious effort to reduce MRSA and other hospital-acquired infections. It's so important, your own life may depend on it.
In 2004, NY Court of Appeals changed state law when its ruling allowed mothers to sue for emotional distress when they claimed medical malpractice was to blame for their stillbirth. Prior to the 2004 decision, mothers had to prove that they were physically injured. No consideration was given to the emotional turmoil, pain, and suffering caused by a stillbirth. The 2004 appellate ruling should have changed that.
However, a mother who suffered a stillbirth in 1997 sued for malpractice. In 2005, a jury awarded her $1 million for her emotional suffering. The case was appealed and the verdict was finally upheld this year after six years of appeals by the hospital. While her case languished in the appeals process, the mother, Lucia Ferreira, was left to languish.
Because Lucia's case was the first of its kind since the Court of Appeals ruling to reach trial, the appeal was brutal. Her trial lawyer called the stillbirth malpractice an "epidemic of error" that included a failure to examine Lucia at all on her final visit prior to the tragic stillbirth. Even the general counsel for the hospital seemed to acknowledge the tragedy of the situation when he stated in an interview that Lucia's case, "perhaps should have been handled differently."
Lucia Ferreira should be commended for her bravery and tenacity. She didn't allow the pain of loss or the slow wheels of justice to deter her. She continued to fight. Good for her.
The numbers are downright scary-in 86% of medical transfers ie. patient transfer from one facility to another, medication errors occur. According to an industry source, "A study by Boockvar K., et. al. (Arch Intern Med. 2004;164:545-50) showed that at least one medication order was altered and out of that, 65% were caused by discontinuations, 19% were caused by dose changes, and 10% were caused by formulary substitutions.
That study also showed that half of adverse drug events (ADEs) attributed to medication changes were caused by discontinuations. A study from Wong JD, et. al. (Ann Pharmacother 2008;42:1373-9) showed that 30% of patients discharged from the hospital (to any location) have at least one medication discrepancy."
Obviously, these are unacceptably high error rates, especially given this population's already precarious state of health. This data demonstrates an urgent need to address this issue with iron clad systems and protocols, including communication protocols, that address the root causes of these errors.
In this Sunday's NY Times Magazine, Darshak Sanghavi, chief of pediatric cardiology at UMass Medical School, penned a fascinating piece about the continuing problem of medical errors. In the article, Dr. Sanghavi notes that the mandated reduction in interns' hours in a hospital setting treating patients has not provided the swift cure many had imagined when the mandate was first promulgated. Sanghavi employs other data on medical errors as well as interviews with experts on the subject to conclude that medical errors occur for many reasons that have nothing to do with sleep deprived doctors.
One of the main culprits Dr. Sanghavi points to is the lack of proper communication between doctors and medical staff during shift changes. In one instance, Sanghavi asked permission to observe a shift change at Children's Hospital in Boston. What he witnessed was enlightening. First, the intern leaving his shift suggested that they review patients in alphabetical order and not in order of the severity of their condition. Secondly, Sanghavi witnessed numerous interruptions that didn't allow thorough or complete discussion of a patient's history or condition.
Another problem area concerns the persistence of "pen and paper" medical charting. Prescription drug errors are more likely to occur when electronic charting is not used. Sanghavi illustrates his point in the following account: "I walked to our outpatient clinic to see what might happen if I prescribed both phenelzine and Demerol to a made-up patient using the clinic’s electronic medical-record system. Immediately, a large box appeared with the message, “This combination of drugs is associated with a potentially fatal adverse reaction.” Then I went over to the inpatient wards, where, as in roughly two-thirds of American hospitals, there is no computerized prescribing system. Nothing would prevent me from writing the orders for Demerol on the paper chart. Were Libby Zion admitted to a typical hospital today, no matter how rested her doctor was, the same error that killed her could happen again."
Medical errors remain a vexing problem for the healthcare industry. No one fix will solve this problem. The entire system must be examined and each facet of care including doctor to doctor communication and doctor to patient communication must be improved. Medical charting and notes should be handled electronically, there's no excuse for this delay. A doctor's sleep deprivation is only one issue of many that must be addressed in order to improve patient safety.
Five months after a federal appeals court upheld the award, the US government has paid $7.5 million to the spouse of a retired master sergeant.
According to Stars and Stripes, "In March, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in California upheld a 2008 verdict by the Guam district court awarding Deborah Rutledge $7.5 million, saying the amount was not excessive considering the extent of injuries she suffered when medical staff at an Andersen Air Force Base clinic on Guam failed for several weeks to diagnose a herniated spinal disk in 2004."
The military medical malpractice case concerned a failure to diagnose as well as a failure to properly examine Deborah Rutledge after she complained of numbness in her groin and lower extremities.
The 60-year-old Feres doctrine which prohibits military personnel from suing the federal government did not apply in this case since the doctrine does not prohibit dependents of military personnel from bringing suits in civil court.
According to an article published in Health Day, 59% of doctors fail to order cancer genetic testing in patients who are at average or high risk for ovarian and breast cancer.
"Despite the existence of evidence-based guidelines on referral for genetic counseling and testing for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer, many physicians report practices contrary to these recommendations," Katrina Trivers, of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a journal news release.
The genetic testing guidelines are intended to serve women who are at significant risk of developing these types of cancer through early detection and prevention. Only 41% of those doctors surveyed said they would refer high-risk women for such testing while an appallingly low 29% said they refer women who present an average risk of breast or ovarian cancer.
According to studies published in the American Journal of Medicine, hospital patients who are seriously ill fare better with less experienced doctors in charge of their care. While this flies in the face of ordinary common sense, it's what one study has shown.
According to MSNBC, The results highlight "issues that we have as a medical profession in keeping up to date" with the latest medical knowledge, said Dr. Niteesh Choudhry of Harvard Medical School, who was not involved in the new study. It is "a quality of care problem that has been recognized for five to 10 years," he told Reuters Health.
The study is helpful in the sense that it highlights the necessity of ongoing, intensive continuing medical education. Physicians, like other professionals, must remain current in the latest science and treatment options for their patients. The study highlights an important deficiency in the certification process of physicians. Once a doctor becomes certified in a particular field of medicine, there is no longer a need for re-certification in spite of the fact that medicine is constantly changing and technology expanding. Perhaps the new study will compel the medical profession to re-think the certification process and the need for continuing education.
A new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggests that physicians may be too eager to use a $20,000 cardiac procedure in case where such is not warranted.
According to today's Wall St. Journal front page story, "About 600,000 angioplasty procedures, which almost always involve placement of a tiny metal tube called a stent, are done in the U.S. each year. Roughly 70% of these procedures are performed on patients suffering symptoms of a heart attack and aren't medically controversial. But the remainder are done on stable patients who are suffering mild symptoms or no symptoms at all. Of those, 50% are deemed appropriate, 38% uncertain and 12% inappropriate, the report says."
Researchers believe such overuse is not limited to the practice of cardiology either. This new report comes just a week after another study concerning spinal surgery found that spine surgeons who had collectively received tens of millions of dollars from Medtronic Inc. had failed to report significant issues in research papers they'd submitted in reference to Medtronic's bone growth protein.
While the angioplasty study is new, concern over the misuse or overuse of stents is not. According to the Wall St. Journal, "Last December, the Senate Finance Committee released a report on a Maryland cardiologist, Mark Midei, who allegedly performed unnecessary angioplasties on hundreds of patients. Dr. Midei was suspended by his hospital, St. Joseph Medical Center in Towson, Md., and charged with unprofessional conduct by the Maryland State Board of Physicians.
The Senate report revealed that Abbott Laboratories, one of the biggest makers of stents, hired Dr. Midei as a sales consultant after St. Joseph's barred him from operating on patients. Abbott also feted Dr. Midei in 2008 with a $1,407 pig roast when he implanted 30 stents in a single day, setting what may have been a company record."
The US Supreme Court has refused to hear the latest case challenging an active duty military personnel's ability to file a medical malpractice lawsuit. Critics of the Feres doctrine had hoped the Supreme Court would entertain this most recent case in order to challenge a 61-year old doctrine that severely limits a service person's ability to seek justice for an alleged case of medical malpractice. The instant case involved Staff Sgt. Dean Witt, who was left in a persistent vegetative state after an Air Force hospital botched what should have been a routine appendectomy.
According to Stars and Stripes, "Medical staff at Travis Air Force Base in California made multiple mistakes following Witt’s 2003 surgery, including pushing a breathing tube into his stomach and using resuscitation equipment designed for children, according to California medical records and Air Force briefing documents. His family removed him from life support three months later.
Witt’s family said Air Force officials withheld details of those mistakes for months after his death and refused to tell them how staff were reprimanded for the mistakes. They filed a grievance against the Air Force, and later a lawsuit asking for unspecified damages to compensate them for medical bills, funeral expenses, Witt’s lost salary and his suffering."
However, in order to move forward the Court would have had to overturn the Feres Doctrine which stems from the 1947 death of Lt. Rudolph Feres, an active-duty soldier killed in a barracks fire at Camp Pine, N.Y. — now Fort Drum. His widow sued the Army for negligence, claiming the facility had a defective heating plant and substandard fire safety controls.
A jury in Bangor Maine delivered a $6.7 million verdict to the widow of a man injured in an ATV accident in 2005 and flown by helicopter to Eastern Maine Medical Center.
Thomas Braley, Sr. underwent a CT scan in the emergency room which revealed internal bleeding, among other injuries. However, Braley's treating physicians failed to follow-up on the initial CT scan or order further CT scans in order to monitor the internal bleeding. 36 hours later, one of Braley's lungs collapsed which in turn led to a massive heart attack and his death, according to the allegations in the medical malpractice lawsuit. Eight of nine jurors concurred and found Dr. Nelson and Eastern Maine Medical Center guilty of negligence in Mr. Braley's death.
According to the Bangor Daily News, the jury award "appears to be one of the largest ever awarded by a Maine jury in a medical malpractice case."
Thomas Braley, Sr. died on May 8, 2005, his 44th birthday and Mother's Day.
Congratulations to my partner Kevin Dugan who has been recognized for the second time by the New Hampshire Association for Justice. Kevin will receive the Board of Governor's Award at the annual dinner on June 30th.
It's fitting that the New Hampshire legal community recognize his tireless efforts on behalf of all New Hampshire residents. Kevin is a tribue to the legal profession.
Ellen Shemitz, Executive Director for the New Hampshire Association for Justice, remarked "At our April Board Meeting, Kevin's nomination received unanimous support. Board members cited his tireless advocacy at the legislature (from his willingness to testify on short notice to his work on numerous issues well beyond his specific practice area, to his ability to explain complex issues to legislators). Yes, Kevin has been honored in the past. But he did not thank the audience, hang his award on his office wall and go home; rather, he has continue to fight for civil justice and provide a voice for trial lawyers and litigants across the state. He does so without fanfare, with great skill, and all to the benefit of our mission and goals."
What a great testament to a man who has dedicated his life to helping others seek justice.
A Connecticut jury has awarded a family whose child suffered a severe brain injury a record $58.6 million. The jury found that a doctor waited too long to perform a Caesarean section which ultimately led to irreversible brain injury.
"When my son was born, he was born not breathing, blue, limp," said Cathy D'Attilo, the mother who sued her obstetrician, Dr. Richard Viscarello, and his practice, Stamford-based Maternal-Fetal Care PC. "He had seizures; he was on a ventilator. So, we knew something terrible had happened to Daniel."
According to the Hartford Courant, "The jury awarded the D'Attilos $8.6 million in economic damages for past and future care of their son, which is the amount their attorneys requested and demonstrated in court. The jury also awarded $50 million in non-economic damages, which was at the jury's discretion. Additionally, there's a possibility of interest, which attorneys familiar with insurance law said adds up to millions more."
Matt Stinchcomb, who played professional football for the Oakland Raiders and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, has had his medical malpractice lawsuit dismissed by a trial court due to lack of timeliness. Stinchcomb filed a medical malpractice lawsuit in 2009 after his 2005 lumbar disk surgery.
The trial court's dismissal was upheld by a Court of Appeals judge who wrote, "Because the statute of limitations expired the day after Plaintiff filed his complaint, and Plaintiff failed to issue timely summonses to defendants, Plaintiff failed to commence his action against the Defendants within the statute of limitations."
As a trial attorney who represents only those injured by medical malpractice, it is sad to see cases dismissed because of statute of limitations issues. That's why it's crucial to promptly contact an experienced medical malpractice trial lawyer if you suspect you or a loved one has been injured due to the negligence of a healthcare professional. In these cases, time is not on your side.
Yesterday's Wall St. Journal article concerning hospitals' efforts to curb medical errors in their emergency rooms is an important one. Officials at the nation's hospitals are taking a closer look at what they can due to curb unnecessary medical errors in their ERs. It's a huge problem that costs hospitals and their insurers over $1 billion annually.
The WSJ article describes it in these terms, "Often chaotic and overcrowded, with scant data available about new patients, the emergency room is among the top hospital departments responsible for malpractice suits—and diagnostic errors account for 37% to 55% of cases in studies of closed claims. The average payments and legal expenses for ER cases have more than doubled over the past two decades, according to the Physician Insurers Association of America, a nonprofit trade association whose members cover about 60% of emergency physicians."
It's a recipe for disaster and high time hospital officials take action to stem the tide of medical mistakes that are preventable.
The Journal of the American Medical Association is reporting this week that heart attack mortality rates are declining. However, that decline is not necessarily related to an improved quality of care. JAMA recently looked at medical practices in Sweden over a 12 year period and found that there are certain verifiable factors related to the decline in cardiac mortality rates in hospitals. Some of these factors concern an effective, accurate, and quick diagnosis of a heart attack. Another crucial factor in preventing cardiac deaths involves the prompt treatment of the heart attack victim, especially treatments that re-establish blood flow from blocked arteries.
Failures to diagnose a heart attack or a misdiagnosis can prove fatal to the victim. Texas cardiologist Debabrata Mukherjee noted "There's a lot of variability among hospitals," Mukherjee says. "And none of us is perfect. A lot of heart attack patients come in in the middle of the night, at 2 and 3 a.m., when we may not be at our best."
Our firm's own Holly B. Haines has been awarded the 2011 Robert E. Kirby Award by the NH Bar Association. Since Holly joined our firm, she's always demonstrated an unsurpassed professionalism as well as an admirable dedication to our clients. It's appropriate that her colleagues recognized these qualities in her as well.
Holly represents the best in the legal community. She gracefully combines an intellectual rigor with a sensitivity to the plight of others. Perhaps Attorney Eva Bleich of our office made the most telling comment when she stated, "While working long hours, Holly has never missed a fundraiser for some of the safe shelters for abused women and children in the northern part of the state. . .I cannot imagine a more worthy attorney for this award."
Congratulations Holly, you deserve this recognition. We are very proud of you!
According to a published study in the Archives of Internal Medicine, most doctors who write medical guidelines for cardiology care have financial ties to pharmaceutical companies and medical device manufacturers. The study concludes that such financial ties lead to an inherent conflict of interest.
"Improper bias in the clinical practice guidelines can have a potentially more widespread adverse effect on patient care than individual practitioners' conflicts of interest," the study said.
In one set of guidelines written for the use of pacemakers and defibrillators, only 7 of 34 doctors had no financial ties to a related medical company. Since these medical care guidelines are increasingly seen as the "standard of care" for cardiac patients, it would seem that such conflicts of interest would be contrary to the best interests of the patient.
According to the Wall St. Journal, "The researchers, led by James N. Kirkpatrick of the University of Pennsylvania, found that 56% of the 498 doctors who helped write guidelines for treatment of heart ailments had potential conflicts of interest.
The study listed 11 companies as most often involved in potential conflicts. Medtronic Inc., the Minneapolis device maker, had the most, or was tied for the most financial ties to guideline writers on seven of the 17 heart guideline panels. Drug maker Pfizer Inc. had the most financial ties, or was tied for the most, on four guideline committees."
Scientific research, especially research that cardiologists rely upon to treat their patients, should be free of such financial conflicts. These types of conflicts may lead to medical errors that harm patients and erode consumer confidence in the medical profession.
When a birth injury occurs, the emotional trauma may be as significant as the physical trauma that injures the newborn. In assessing birth injuries in terms of medical malpractice, there are certain issues that frequently come up: 1)failure to initiate a timely Cesarean section, 2)failure to recognize an infant in distress, 3)failure to properly resuscitate a baby, 4)inappropriate use of labor-inducing drugs, and 5)the misuse of vacuums and forceps which may cause cerebral palsy.
As in many other medical malpractice cases, birth injuries ofent occur due to a failure to communicate among the healthcare professionals charged with the care of the mother and the infant. Medical safety checklists can prove invaluable if they are followed. These checklists help save lives and reduce the number of birth injuries.
If you're expecting, speak with your healthcare provider about these issues. A conversation before the birthing process begins may avoid a lifetime of heartache.
The passage of legislation in North Carolina that makes emergency room doctors immune from the civil justice system is not reform. Rather, it restricts patients' rights to pursue justice when they are injured by medical negligence and error. Furthermore, such legislation does nothing to address healthcare reform and patient safety.
Costs related to medical malpractice account for less than 1% of national healthcare costs. University of Pennsylvania Professor Tom Baker, a leading authority on medical malpractice litigation, called the malpractice lawsuit crisis “…urban legend mixed with the occasional true story, supported by selected references to academic studies.” (Baker, Tom, The Medical Malpractice Myth, 2005).
Medical malpractice has become an easy target and scapegoat for those who want to protect insurance companies rather than improve patient safety. So-called "frivolous" medical malpractice cases are virtually non-existent because of the costs associated with bringing a medical malpractice lawsuit. Most states require that any medical malpractice case pass a rigorous medical review conducted by medical experts before a lawsuit is ever filed.
It's time our elected offiicals concentrate on the real crisis in healthcare-patient safety.
Medical malpractice cases involving failures to diagnose, misdiangoses, or surgical errors draw most of the attention but prescription drug errors can be just as deadly for patients. A prescription drug error can take many forms-filling the wrong prescription, dosage errors, and label errors in which the instructions are wrong.
One such recent case highlights these dangers. A pregnant teenager was given the wrong prescription at a Safeway. She was given another woman's prescription by mistake. The two women had the same last name yet the pregnant teen was supposed to receive an antibiotic. Instead, she received methotrexate, a drug that is used for chemotherapy and to terminate early pregnancy. She ingested one of the pills before realizing the name on the prescription bottle was intended for another woman with the same last name. Now, she faces an uncertain pregnancy. She may miscarry. Her child may be born with birth defects. The outcome is uncertain. Yet, this horrific story should serve as a reminder that prescription drug errors are serious and occur more often than one would want to believe.
Emergency rooms of hospitals are hectic places where more medical errors may occur than in any other area of the hospital. Emergency rooms treat a wide variety of maladies ranging from colds, the flu, broken bones, to life-threatening medical conditions such as heart attacks and strokes. The first task in any ER is to properly and accurately triage patients so that those who require immediate medical attention receive care before those with less critical health issues. Many medical errors occur at this stage in the ER. Failures to diagnose, misdiagnoses and delayed diagnoses of severe illnesses are often the most common medical errors in the emergency room. In fact, these medical errors account for more than 50% of emergency room related medical malpractice claims.
If you or a loved one have to go to the emergency room, make sure another person is present that knows and is able to communicate a full and accurate medical history as well as an accurate description and chronology of events leading up to arrival in the emergency room. These simple tips can mean the difference between life and death.
Reuters published an article today concerning the role of surgical checklists in the reduction of medical malpractice claims. My colleagues and I have blogged about this on several occasions in the past. Surgical safety checklists reduce medical malpractice claims because they increase patient safety. Now, of course the checklists are only effective if they are used properly and consistently. There is nothing more useless than a surgical safety checklist that sits on the shelf in a doctor's office and never used.
The first paragraph in the Reuters article should capture the attention of everyone in the healthcare industry. It refers to the findings of Dutch researchers who studied the issue. It states, "Scouring data from the largest medical liability insurer in the Netherlands, they found nearly a third of the claims arose from mistakes that likely would have been caught by a checklist." We know that in this country thousands of Americans die each year from preventable medical errors. Atul Gawande, author of the Checklist Manifesto and a noted surgeon commented, "This kind of evidence indicates that surgeons who do not use one of these checklists are endangering patients." Gawande also said that only a quarter of US hospitals use one of the three checklists that have been proven to work! That's a strong indictment of the system from an expert and an insider.
It's clear from the evidence that surgical safety checklists save lives and reduce healthcare costs. The puzzling question remains why the healthcare industry refuses to embrace such a simple process.
A woman who underwent a hysterectomy at Hurley Medical Center in Flint Michigan awoke with a severe burn on her right forearm. The day after the surgery, a nurse told her that she had suffered a "Bovie burn". In her deposition testimony, Kimberly Rode stated that the nurse informed her that the burn was caused by the surgical staff's failure to place a grounding pad on her leg to protect her from electrosurgical burns. According to a report in www.outpatientsurgery.net, "Ms. Rode's attorney sent a notice of intent to sue the hospital, surgeon and other personnel, alleging that the patient's surgical burn was caused by "ordinary negligence" on the part of hospital staff. Specifically, the notice stated that all the electrical equipment and instruments used during the procedure that could have caused burns or other wounds should have been properly attached and monitored "so as not to cause injuries on parts of the patient's body not associated with the surgical procedures of a hysterectomy," court documents show. The defendants criticized the notice for not specifying which standards of care were applicable to the surgeon and which were applicable to the hospital.”
The defendants moved to dismiss the claim stating that it was a medical malpractice matter and not ordinary negligence as Ms. Rode claimed. The suit was dismissed by the lower court. However, an appeals court partially reversed the lower court’s ruling and will allow Kimberly Rode to "amend her notice of intent" and "file a new complaint with a conforming affidavit of merit within the time remaining in the period of limitation."
Healthcare and patient safety have recently received much media scrutiny. The NY Times published an article concerning a recent New England Journal of Medicine study that found hospitals to be dangerous places for sick patients. The study, "Temporal Trends in Rates of Patient Harm Resulting from Medical Care" noted that hospitals are as dangerous and unsafe as they were a decade ago. The study also found that 63% of the medical errors occurring in hospitals are preventable. In spite of the study "To Err is Human", patient safety is still woefully inadequate. That 1999 study found that nearly 100,000 patients die each year from medical errors. The study also found that medical malpractice and patient errors had reached epidemic proportions. The situation hasn't improved since that time. Today, when a patient is admitted to a hospital he/she stands a 25% chance of getting worse while hospitalized. That's an appalling figure.
A Baltimore surgeon has drawn the scrutiny of the US Senate Finance Committee after he allegedly performed over 500 unnecessary cardiac stent surgeries. Dr. Mark Midei had financial motivation to perform the stent surgeries since he was paid millions of dollars in salary and perks to promote and implant the stents manufactured by Abbott Laboratories.
In one document released by the Senate Finance Committee, an Abbott executive wrote an email boasting that Dr. Midei had implanted 30 stents in one day in 2008. The hospital at which Midei performed the surgeries is also under investigation. The investigation into Midei and St. Joseph Hospital seems to be the tip of the iceberg, according to the NY Times.
"Last month, St. Joseph agreed to pay a $22 million fine to settle charges that it paid illegal kickbacks to Dr. Midei’s medical practice, MidAtlantic Cardiovascular Associates, in exchange for patient referrals; the hospital did not admit wrongdoing. St. Joseph said in a statement Friday that it now conducts monthly random reviews of
stent cases “to assure such a situation cannot occur again. . .The case has had wide repercussions. Over the past year, St. Joseph has told hundreds of Dr. Midei’s patients that they did not need the expensive and potentially dangerous stents that the doctor inserted because their arteries were not as obstructed as he had claimed. Now, state health officials are investigating other local cardiologists who inserted a suspiciously high number of stents, which are tiny wire mesh devices inserted to prop open clogged arteries in the heart."
A new study published on Thanksgiving Day in the New England Journal of Medicine and reported on the front page of the NY Times notes that hospital safety has not improved in the last ten years in spite of an effort to implement safety measures.
The study focused on 10 North Carolina hospitals from 2002 to 2007 and found that harm to patients was common and the number of medical errors did not improve over time. Frequent hospital safety issues included hospital acquired infections, surgical complications and drug errors.
“It is unlikely that other regions of the country have fared better,” said Dr. Christopher P. Landrigan, the lead author of the study and an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School. The study is the first of its kind since a 1999 study by the Institute of Medicine found that 98,000 people die each year from medical errors in the United States.
According to the NY Times article, "Among the preventable problems that Dr. Landrigan’s team identified were severe bleeding during an operation, serious breathing trouble caused by a procedure that was performed incorrectly, a fall that dislocated a patient’s hip and damaged a nerve, and vaginal cuts caused by a vacuum device used to help deliver a baby."
The study found that 18% of patients were harmed by medical care. Of those harmed, 63% of the errors were determined to be preventable.
West Virginia enacted a cap on pain and suffering damages in medical malpractice cases in 1986. Now that cap is being challenged in the West Virginia Supreme Court. Already this year Illinois and Georgia have had similar damage caps declared unconstitutional.
The West Virginia case involves James McDonald who developed rhabdomyolysis after being administered a combination of drugs at a West Virginia hospital. McDonald and his wife sued and took the case to trial where a jury awarded the couple $1.5 million for pain and suffering and $129,000 for medical expenses and lost wages. Because of the 1986 law, the jury award was reduced to $500,000 for both of them.
The McDonalds have decided to fight. They argue that the cap law is unconstitutional because it interferes with their right to a trial by jury and prevents the jury from making the final decision in the case.
It will be interesting to see if the West Virginia Supreme Court follows the lead in similar cases in Georgia and Illinois. If the McDonalds prevail, their victory will be a vindication for all of us who have a right to a trial by jury.
Former White House Budget Director Peter Orszag weighed in on his former boss' healthcare reform initiative this morning in the NY Times. Orszag wrote that the reform legislation didn't go far enough because it didn't provide for "evidence-based" guidelines that would shield doctors from medical malpractice liability. According to Orszag, doctors should be immune from malpractice lawsuits if they followed certain guidelines established by their peers.
The ink wasn't dry on his Times piece when Huffington Post reporter Joanne Doroshow wrote a compelling piece about how Orszag's idea was bad policy. Noting it was a "horrendous idea", she wrote, "Clinical practice guidelines should never be the legal basis for determining whether or not patient harm was the result of negligence. And allowing use of guidelines only by a physician or facility to defend itself against a medical malpractice claim and not by an injured patient to show negligence is without any justification and is fundamentally unfair."
Doroshow has a good point since such evidence-based guidelines is skewed to protect doctors from lawsuits and look after the best interests of the patient. She cites such failed experiments in Maine and Florida as evidence that Orszag's idea is not such a good policy move.
"For example, in the 1990s, Maine established a program that allowed doctors in four specialties--anesthesiology, emergency medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, and radiology--to participate in a program allowing use of guidelines as exculpatory evidence in lawsuits. Other specialties were encouraged to take advantage of this program but did not. The program expired, and the Maine Bureau of Insurance concluded, "the medical demonstration project had no measurable effect on medical professional liability claims, claims settlement costs, or malpractice premiums."
In 1996, Florida also began a demonstration project for cesarean deliveries, but reportedly "garnered relatively little support among physicians--only 20% of physicians eligible to participate chose to do so and the project ended in 1998....Three other states (Kentucky, Maryland, and Minnesota) adopted test projects in the 1990s, though none of the projects is fully operational today (the Maryland and Minnesota projects have fully expired)." In other words, the medical profession itself has not accepted clinical practice guidelines as appropriate legal standards, even for exculpatory purposes."
Read both pieces and decide for yourself. I think you may find that the goal of any healthcare reform should be patient safety not the protection of doctors from lawsuits.
According to one physician writing in the British Medical Journal, diagnostic errors pose the greatest threat to patient safety in hospitals. Dr. Gordon Caldwell, a British physician, believes that doctors need to re-consider the manner in which they reach a particular diagnosis. Dr. Caldwell explains that when a patient is admitted to the hospital, healthcare workers formulate a "working diagnosis" and treat the patient as if the "working diagnosis" is the correct one. If the patient improves, the "working diagnosis" is considered accurate and becomes the official diagnosis. However, if the "working diagnosis" is incorrect and the patient doesn't improve, the patient may suffer permanent harm.
According to Dr. Caldwell, "The time taken to reach the correct diagnosis may critically impact on the patient's chances of survival. Over my career, I have seen many errors in the working diagnosis causing harm and even death to patients."
Caldwell believes the way physicians make a diagnosis need to be changed in order to protect the safety and well being of patients. An incorrect diagnosis may lead to further medical problems.
It's a problem that doesn't receive the attention it deserves. An accurate diagnosis of a patient's condition is perhaps the most critical factor in recovery and survivability.
“What the Doctor Missed” is a must read for those interested in improving patient safety. The article, which appears on the first page (above the fold) of the Personal Journal section of the Wall St. Journal, recounts researchers' work in studying medical malpractice claims in order to determine how medical errors and diagnostic mistakes can be minimized.
According to the article, the researchers have found that certain factors can be directly linked to medical errors. The factors include judgment errors, follow-up failures, a lack of knowledge, patient behavior, and delegating tasks to other staff members.
Diagnostic errors remain the leading cause of malpractice claims, comprising 40% of all claims. Such diagnostic errors often involve cancer with breast cancer the most common missed or delayed diagnosis.
The Journal article points out what other research has shown for quite some time-many medical errors are preventable. The researchers found that in cases involving medical error 55% of those errors are due to a failure to order the right test, 45% of errors involve a failure to create a follow-up plan, 42% are due to an inadequate patient history or physical examination, and 37% involve a failure to interpret a diagnostic test. All of these errors are preventable and correctable. Yet, such errors have led Peter Pronovost, a patient safety researcher at Johns Hopkins University to estimate that these diagnostic errors kill 40,000 to 80,000 patients each year.
Some industry professionals believe malpractice cases are symptomatic of a industry-wide problem. According to the WSJ article, "They are reflective of deeply rooted problems that are much more widespread in health care," says Robert Hanscom, vice president of loss prevention and patient safety for Crico/RMF, a malpractice insurer that covers Harvard University-affiliated hospitals and doctors. Mr. Hanscom says cases linked to diagnostic errors appear to be on the rise as primary care doctors, struggling with heavy case loads, take shortcuts or don't act on their patient's symptoms."
A California study by the Rand Corporation shows that a concerted effort to improve patient safety leads to a decline in medical malpractice claims. "These findings suggest that putting a greater focus on improving safety performance in health care settings could benefit medical providers as well as patients," said Michael Greenberg, the study's lead author and a behavioral scientist with Rand Corporation.
The Rand study is an important one in the on-going debate over healthcare reform. Patient safety advocates have argued for years that an aggressive effort to improve the quality and safety of healthcare would lead to fewer medical malpractice claims.
According to a Rand Corporation press release announcing the study's findings, "The link between safety performance among health care providers and malpractice suits has been of central interest to policymakers in the ongoing debate over health care reform. The RAND study is the first to demonstrate a link between improving performance on 20 well-established indicators of medical safety outcomes and lower medical malpractice claims.
Researchers analyzed information for approximately 365,000 adverse safety events, such as post-surgical problems and hospital-acquired infections, and for approximately 27,000 malpractice claims, all of which occurred during 2001-2005. The researchers found considerable variation among California's counties, in both the frequency of adverse events and of malpractice claims.
More important, the study found a significant connection between the annual frequency of adverse events in each county, and the number of malpractice claims made. For example, under the model created by researchers, a county that experienced 10 fewer safety events in a given year would also expect to see a reduction of 3.7 malpractice claims during the same year, said study co-author Amelia Haviland, a RAND statistician."
Dr. Rapin Osathanondh, an obstetrician and formerly a research associate at the Harvard School of Public Health, will stand trial for manslaughter in the death of 22 year old Laura Hope Smith, who died after a botched abortion performed by Dr. Osathanondh.
Prosecutors in the case allege that Dr. Osathanondh failed to monitor the patient while she was under anesthesia, delayed calling 911 when Ms. Smith was in cardiopulmonary arrest, and lied to officials when interrogated about the death.
As a result of the botched abortion, Dr. Osathanondh resigned his medical license the same day the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine stated the doctor "engaged in conduct that calls into question his competence to practice medicine." The Board's investigation of the tragic death concluded that Osathanondh did not have the medical equipment to monitor the patient, including no oxygen or a working blood pressure cuff. The Board also found that he"failed to adhere to basic cardiac life support protocol and did not call 911 in a timely manner."
Osathanondh, a native of Thailand, has been practicing medicine in Massachusetts since 1974. He is now permanently barred from practicing medicine in the state.
Integra LifeSciences Corporation has issued an urgent, worldwide recall of its NeuroBalloon Catheter. The FDA is expected to classify the recall as a Class I recall, the most serious since use of the recalled device may lead to death or serious injury. The New Jersey company received eight complaints, none involving injury. However, the malfunction is serious enough to warrant an immediate recall. Upon inspection of the catheter, a defect in the catheter was found. The NeuroBalloon Catheter is designed for use during intracranial procedures.
In July, the company had issued a voluntary recall. Nearly 2,000 catheters have been distributed.
According to the Society of Actuaries, medical errors cost the United States $19.5 billion in 2008. The number may be higher now. If one considers that these errors are avoidable medical errors and those that are actually reported, the number is staggering. The costs include lost productivity, costs associated with an increased mortality rate, and medical costs associated with fixing the errors.
According to the study as reported by the Wall St. Journal, "Bed sores — which are almost always considered to be the result of an error — produced the largest annual error cost, at almost $3.9 billion, followed by post-op infections ($3.7 billion), device complications ($1.1 billion), complications from failed spinal surgery ($1.1 billion) and hemorrhages ($960 million). To come up with those figures, researchers found the total cost of a given type of injury and estimated how often it was caused by an error."
This data should give pause to those who still think tort reform is the answer to curtailing skyrocketing healthcare costs.
The August Issue of Pediatrics reports that more than 70,000 children are injured by medical devices each year. Almost 25% of the injuries are associated with ophthalmic devices such as contact lenses. However, many of the injuries come from invasive medical devices such as catheters, tubes, and shunts. One expert noted that the majority of medical device injuries are linked to tubed placed in the stomach such as shunts or IV tubes.
"We see a few of those a week," said Dr. Valerie T. Thompson, an assistant professor of clinical pediatrics and division director of pediatric emergency medicine and medical director of the pediatric emergency department at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
Researchers from the FDA's Centers for Devices and Radiological Health examined data gathered from pediatric emergency room visits. The study is the first of its kind to focus on medical devices and pediatric injuries. The study may result in device warnings for certain medical devices used in pediatric patients.
GlaxoSmithKline's diabetes drug Avandia will be the subject of a two-day FDA advisory panel debate beginning today. Since 2007, the federal government and the public have known that scientific research has suggested that the diabetes drug poses an increased risk of heart attacks for those taking Avandia. Additionally, studies have shown that Avandia is not effective in treating diabetes.
Those facts are just the tip of the iceberg concerning GlaxoSmithKline's problems with Avandia. Today's NY Times reports that Glaxo officials have known about Avandia's safety issues since the drug's arrival on the marketplace in 1999. According to the Times' article, Glaxo ordered a secret study of the drug's safety and efficacy in comparison with its chief rival Actos in 1999. Avandia failed miserably. The internal study showed Avandia did indeed pose greater risks of heart attacks than Actos and was ineffective in treating diabetes. The NY Times front-page article notes that the pharmaceutical company spent the last 11 years hiding the results of that study.
This week, the FDA advisory panel may call for the drug's removal from the marketplace. Thus far, it has been slow to react to studies showing Avandia's safety concerns. This week may be the week in which the FDA acts in favor of public safety.
In spite of more than 1,000 lawsuits filed against Bayer, the company's newest birth control pills Yaz and Yasmin continue to be best selling products. Bayer launched an aggressive and effective marketing blitz targeting young women that was later flagged by the FDA for claims Bayer made concerning its use and effectiveness.
More importantly, Yaz and Yasmin have been associated with an increased risk of heart attacks and strokes in otherwise healthy, young females. While the data is controversial, the FDA has approved an updated warning label for the birth control pills that notes the drugs' increased risk of blood clots. The updated warning was influenced in part by a British medical study that associated the active ingredient in Yaz and Yasmin, drospirenone as the culprit.
Drospirenone is a new progestin only found in Yaz, Yasmin, and Ocella birth control pills. Drospirenone affects the body's ability to regulate levels of salt and water, which may result in elevated potassium levels. This condition is known as hyperkalemia, which can lead to life threatening cardiac problems.
Presently, federal Yaz and Yasmin lawsuits are consolidated in multi district litigation (MDL) in the Southern District of Illinois. There are also consolidated state lawsuits in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
Recent medical statistics put wrong site surgery events at 13% of medical errors. This is a high percentage given the protocols and procedures the Joint Commission has enacted in order to prevent these wrong site surgeries. The Joint Commission, a patient advocacy group, introduced the Universal Protocol in 2003 in order to prevent such medical errors. The Joint Commission's Universal Protocol has been widely acclaimed by the American Medical Association and other health industry groups. The Protocol consists of three important steps to avoid such errors: 1)pre-op identification and confirmation that the procedure matches the patient, 2)marking the operation site with a permanent marker, and 3)taking a "time out" immediately prior to the procedure to check once again that the patient is correct and the procedure and site match.
However, nothing has stemmed the tide of wrong site surgical errors. Of course, the human factor is a component of this problem. Some wrong site surgeries occur in emergency situations where a patient has to be rushed to surgery in order to save a life. On other occasions, multiple doctors add to the operating room confusion.
None of these circumstances excuses the fact that all wrong site surgeries are preventable.
Silvia DeSilva is planning to file a medical malpractice lawsuit against King Edward VII Memorial Hospital and Brighan and Women’s Hospital in Boston after she was given a gadolinium-based contrast agent in preparation for an MRI. DeSilva is a kidney dialysis patient who contracted the painful and potentially fatal condition known as nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF) as a result of the contrast agent.
In 2006 and 2007, the FDA issued warning to healthcare professionals that gadolinium-based contrast agents used in MRI procedures significantly increase the risk of NSF, especially in patients with known kidney problems. The FDA warnings resulted in a black box warning for all gadolinium-based contrast agents. The black box warning is the most severe warning issued by the FDA.
In spite of the warning and Mrs. DeSilva's known kidney problems, the hospital administered the contrast agent resulting in her NSF condition. NSF is associated with a hardening and thickening of the skin tissue as well as internal organs. There is no known cure for the progressive disorder.
Actor Dennis Quaid has filed a lawsuit against the drug company that manufactures heparin after his newborn twins nearly died from a heparin overdose two years ago. The suit was filed against Baxter Healthcare Corporation and alleges that the drug packaging caused the drug error in the overdose.
Both heparin and a lower dose version Hep-Lock are packaged in similar blue vials. The drug labeling on the packages has very small print which can lead to confusion over the two drugs.
A bill that would reverse a 60 year old Supreme Court ruling banning military service members from suing the federal government for medical errors or medical malpractice has gained the influential support of the Military Officers Association of America. Presently, those in our armed forces can not sue for medical negligence.
“Your legislation would remove an inequity,” retired Vice Adm. Norb Ryan, president of the 370,000-member Military Officers Association of America, wrote in a Friday letter to Rep. Maurice Hinchey, D-N.Y., the lead sponsor of the bill.
Rep. Hinchey's bill, the Carmelo Rodriguez Military Medical Accountability Act, would allow service members to bring lawsuits against the federal government for damages arising from medical errors or medical negligence. According to Vice Admiral Ryan, the bill would be particularly appropriate since members of the military often have little choice in selecting their medical providers.
The bill is named after a Marine Corps platoon leader Carmelo Rodriguez, an Iraq war veteran who died at age 29 from a melanoma that was not properly treated. Initially, the melanoma was correctly diagnosed but not treated. It was later misdiagnosed as a birthmark.
The bill was approved by the House Judiciary Committee and is pending a full House floor vote.
A deep vein thrombosis is a serious, potentially fatal condition where a blood clot forms in the deep veins of the lower extremities or the pelvis. The real danger occurs if the clot breaks away and travels to the lungs. The clot may block the main artery of the lung putting pressure on the right ventricle of the heart. This can be fatal if not diagnosed in a timely fashion.
A patient suffering from deep vein thrombosis may be misdiagnosed with a less serious ailment such as a leg cramp. If the DVT is not diagnosed and treated promptly, it may lead to death. Symptoms of a DVT include: pain and/or swelling of the leg, redness surrounding the swollen area, and dilation of the surface veins. Diagnostic tests can and should be performed to rule out a DVT. Failure to perform such diagnostic tests may constitute medical negligence depending on certain circumstances.
DVTs may arise from invasive surgical procedures such as knee and hip replacements. Since deep vein thrombosis is such a serious condition, doctors have a duty to diagnose and treat such conditions promptly.
McNeil Consumer Healthcare, a division of Johnson & Johnson, has issued a voluntary recall of popular children's over-the-counter drugs including Children's Tylenol, Motrin, Zyrtec, and Benedryl due to manufacturing issues. The manufacturing issues may affect the quality, potency, and/or purity of the drugs.
While it's not yet clear how many children, if any, may be affected by the product recall, it's a public relations blow to a company that prides itself on safety and effectiveness. The recalled products include:
http://www.mcneilproductrecall.com/images/mcneil_recall/Final_list.jpg



The largest health insurance provider in the country, WellPoint, has developed a strategy for dropping insurance coverage for breast cancer patients and others who have to use their insurance to pay for health care. In fact, WellPoint has a software program that flags insurance customers who've been diagnosed with illnesses such as breast cancer. According to government regulators, the health insurance company uses the software to find a pretext under which policy holders can be dropped from their coverage, even if they've paid their premiums faithfully and on time. WellPoint may not be the only health insurance company to employ the practice of "rescission" but a congressional committee deemed WellPoint the worst offender.
In one particularly egregious 2008 case highlighted by Reuters, Robin Beaton had to delay her breast cancer surgery for five months because her insurance was canceled after she received a diagnosis of breast cancer. During that time, the tumor in her breast grew from 2 centimeters to 7 centimeters. The Friday prior to her Monday surgery, her insurance company said it wouldn't pay for her surgery. The insurance company told her that they were launching a fraud investigation and would sue her if they found she had made a fraudulent breast cancer claim. Her doctors told her the slightest delay could threaten her life. Because of the delay, she had to undergo a radical double mastectomy and her survival rate is only a fraction of what it would have been if the original surgery had not been delayed.
This is a woman who had paid for health insurance and yet her insurance company refuses to pay for a procedure her doctors say is necessary for her very survival. Perhaps it's time we start talking about insurance reform.
Prompted by recent articles concerning radiation errors by the NY Times, the FDA has announced that it will no longer allow new radiation equipment to enter the marketplace through a quick, streamlined process involving third party reviewers. The prior approval process was instituted in the 1990's to quicken approval time but led to radiation errors and patient suffering.
The FDA found that 74% of the radiation errors involved linear accelerators, computer controlled machines that generate high powered beams of radiation intended to destroy cancer cells. Computer software problems were most frequently cited as the cause of radiation errors.
The more rigorous approval process for new radiotherapy equipment presupposes continuous FDA follow-up and enforcement of the guidelines.
Radiation errors have caused debilitating injuries and even death in some instances.
In what is believed to be the largest medical malpractice settlement in the state's history, the family of Diane Rizk McCabe settled their lawsuit against Albany Medical Center Hospital and two obstetricians, Dr. Sean Yong-Il Lee and Dr. Cheryl Burack.
The young mother bled to death after a botched Caesarean section on September 3, 2007. In addition to the financial settlement, the hospital agreed to fund for the next 20 years a Diane McCabe Memorial Quality Lecture series focusing on topics related to enhancing patient safety.
Joseph McCabe, the widowed husband, released a statement after the settlement was reached.
"The settlement provides non-monetary benefits which will serve as a living memorial of Diane for our children and family. We hope that it will improve the quality of medical care in this area and reduce the likelihood that another family will have to endure the suffering and loss that our family has undergone."
A month after the Illinois Supreme Court repealed a law capping damages in medical malpractice cases in that state, the Georgia Supreme Court followed a similar path. In ruling that the state legislature may not put restrictions on medical malpractice awards determined by juries, the Court overturned a 2005 state law that capped malpractice awards at $350,000 for pain and suffering.
“The very existence of the caps, in any amount, is violative of the right to trial by jury,” Chief Justice Carol W. Hunstein wrote in the decision.
Since the 1980's several states have also rejected damage caps in malpractice cases including New Hampshire, Oregon, Washington, and Wisconsin. These are important rulings for consumers that restore the rightful role of the judicial system as well as the crucial role of juries in our system.
The Georgia case involved a 71 year old woman, Betty Nestlehutt, who was permanently disfigured after a botched surgery.
Fosamax, a popular osteoporosis drug that belongs to the bisphosphonates family of drugs, has been linked to jaw necrosis and increased risk of femur fractures. Merck's patent for the drug expired in 2008.
Bisphosphonates are designed to increase bone mass but research has shown that this class of drugs may make them more brittle thus increasing the risk of bone fractures.
According to a recent Wall St. Journal report, "Two studies presented Wednesday at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons' annual meeting suggest the drugs might adversely affect bone quality and increase risk of atypical fractures of the femur, or the main bone in the thigh, when used for four or more years."
The federal agency didn't provide a timeline for its review of Fosamax. However, the number of Fosamax complaints and Fosamax injuries may compel the FDA to move in a timely fashion as to the safety of the osteoporosis drug.
In response to concern that some CT scans have provided patients with excessive radiation, The Medical Imaging & Technology Alliance has announced that it will install safety controls on its CT scans.
Recent news reports, including an article in the NY Times, has focused attention on dangerous dosages of radiation emitted by CT scans. Last October, the FDA launched an investigation concerning the issue at Cedars Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles confirmed that 206 patients had received 8 times the normal radiation for brain scans.
Last week, James Parks told a US House panel about his son's death of a radiation overdose. The Parks' tragic case was the subject of a lengthy NY Times article last month and my partner Kevin Dugan's blog post.
News that an industry trade group such as The Medical Imaging & Technology Alliance has decided to step forward and address the issue is a good first step. Such radiation overdoses and radiation errors have led to too much tragedy and suffering already.
The Joint Commission has released its report card on the nation's hospitals in what industry officials view as an important step in improving the quality of healthcare in the United States. The report card issued by the Joint Commission focuses on the healthcare quality measurements that hospitals consider the gold standard of care. The hospital report cards should serve consumers with the level of transparency and knowledge concerning their hospitals' standards of care.
The Joint Commission is a nonprofit organization that accredits most U.S. hospitals, publishes a consumer-friendly report called
Quality Check. It grades hospitals on how well they follow care practices that are considered industry standards, ranging from infection control standards to educating patients.
The health grades also serve as an important educational tool for hospitals seeking to improve their level of care or resolve deficiencies in care. For instance, a hospital may receive a failing grade in one area of care such as heart failure. The report gives hospital officials the tools with which the problem can be discovered, a solution offered, and an action plan implemented that reduces the deficiency.
Several news outlets are asking whether Congressman John Murtha's recent death after gallbladder surgery was caused by a medical error. This morning Politico.com's reporter Dr. Davis Liu wrote, "Perhaps Murtha, 77, was one of the unlucky 2 out of 100 to have died from this elective surgery. It is also equally likely that he died of a medical error or omission."
It's noteworthy that Liu, a doctor himself, focuses his attention on the problem of preventable medical errors and hospital deaths. Liu opens his article by stating, "With the ongoing debate in Washington about the nature of health care reform, Murtha's passing shines light on one area that hasn't had enough scrutiny, how to make our health care system safer. As the American health care system has been labeled by some as the most advanced in the world, others are critical of the fact that so many people die in hospitals annually due to preventable medical errors."
The Checklist Manifesto is an important new book authored by surgeon Atul Gawande. In the book, the author discusses the importance of preparation (using a checklist) to ensure that such things as medical errors are avoided. Gawande makes the point that it takes a system of redundancy to avoid common medical errors. While the book is not solely intended for the healthcare profession, doctors and hospitals should read this book and incorporate his ideas on how to improve healthcare and avoid errors in the future.
Some of his suggestions may appear obvious. For instance, he notes that in a surgical setting those in the room should know each others' names. That may be obvious, but what procedures are in place in operating rooms across the country to ensure this happens? Checklists help us recognize what's important and what needs to take place in each and every situation. Completing such checklists helps busy professionals avoid common errors that may be taken for granted in the absence of such a checklist.
The checklist idea is the brainchild of Dr. Peter Pronovost, a critical care specialist at the Johns Hopkins medical center in Baltimore. According to a December 2009 NY Times book review,
"In 2001 Dr. Pronovost borrowed a concept from the aviation industry: a checklist, the kind that pilots use to clear their planes for takeoff. In an experiment Dr. Pronovost used the checklist strategy to attack just one common problem in the I.C.U., infections in patients with central intravenous lines (catheters that deliver medications or fluids directly into a major vein). Central lines can be breeding grounds for pathogens; in the Hopkins I.C.U. at the time, about one line in nine became infected, increasing the likelihood of prolonged illness, further surgery or death.
Dr. Pronovost wrote down the five things that doctors needed to do when inserting central lines to avoid subsequent infection: wash hands with soap; clean the patient’s skin with chlorhexidine antiseptic; cover the patient’s entire body with sterile drapes; wear a mask, hat, sterile gown and gloves; and put a sterile dressing over the insertion site after the line was in."
While these seemed obvious to everyone, they involved the leading causes of infections in the ICU because they weren't being followed. The Times continued,
"But Dr. Pronovost knew that about one-third of the time doctors were skipping at least one of these critical steps. What would happen if they never skipped any? He gave the five-point checklist to the nurses in the I.C.U. and, with the encouragement of hospital administrators, told them to check off each item when a doctor inserted a central line — and to call out any doctor who was cutting corners. As Dr. Gawande relates it, “The new rule made it clear: if doctors didn’t follow every step, the nurses would have backup from the administration to intervene.”
The final medical malpractice myth has political overtones. It's the myth that tort reform will lower insurance rates in this country. Tort reform, as it is understood in the political realm, is really all about limiting citizens' access to the courts by capping the damages awarded to victims of malpractice cases. The argument is spun by insurance company lobbyists who spend millions trying to convince the public that medical malpractice cases are all about greedy lawyers.
The facts tell a different story. States that cap damage awards are very similar to states that don't cap damages in terms of insurance premium rates.
In fact, in 2009, the average liability premium in states without caps damages were lower than the average premium in states with caps on damages, with premiums of $43,709 and $44,799 respectively.
While lobbyists continue to point to tort reform as the way to lower insurance premiums, the insurance industry has admitted there's no correlation between the two. Dennis Kelly of the American Insurance Association (AIA) has said, “We have not promised price reductions with tort reform.” In addition, an AIA press release stated: “Insurers never promised that tort reform would achieve specific premium savings...”
According to Bob White, President of First Professional Insurance Company, the largest medical malpractice insurer in Florida, “no responsible insurer can cut its rates after a [medical malpractice tort ‘reform’] bill passes.”
If the insurance industry admits there's no relationship between tort reform and lower insurance premiums, why does the myth continue? Perhaps, because it makes for good political theater. However, good political theater does little to protect the consumer. Access to the courts is a basic fundamental right that shouldn't be attacked to score political points.
The American Association for Justice published "5 Myths About Medical Negligence" last November. In the next few blog posts, we're going to discuss these myths. The first one is "There are too many frivolous lawsuits". This myth is easily dispelled by looking at the facts and not the rhetoric from the insurance industry. According to the Institute of Medicine, 98,000 patients die each year from preventable medical errors. However, the number of medical malpractice lawsuits remains very low. Many states require that any medical malpractice claim be submitted to a review board prior to the filing of a lawsuit. Furthermore, medical malpractice lawsuits are extremely expensive and labor intensive. Experts have to be hired and countless hours of staff labor go into each case. Any law firm that pursued frivolous lawsuits would soon find itself out of business.
According to the Harvard study, researchers found that 97% of closed medical malpractice claims are meritorious and that 80% involved death or serious injury.
Medication errors are a serious and growing problem in the United States. Such errors kill one person a day and injure another 1.3 million people each year. Those statistics prompted the formation of a new network to prevent medication errors. The two medical organizations, the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) and the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP), have joined forces to reduce medication errors. The new coalition will be called the National Alert Network for Serious Medication Errors and will be triggered when a harmful medication error has occurred.
"This rapid system of sharing information with physicians, nurses, pharmacists and others in health care sets this alert system apart from previous efforts,” Henri R. Manasse, Jr., ASHP Executive Vice President and CEO, said in the press release. “It is heartbreaking and frustrating to see the same mistakes happen again and again. This alert system is a significant and imperative step – creating more transparency and breaking the chronic cycle of medication errors.”
As a New Hampshire medical malpractice lawyer, I've been helping victims of medical errors and malpractice for the past 35 years. I've handled all types of cases involving failures to diagnose cancers, heart attack, and strokes. My cases have also included birth injuries caused by healthcare professionals. In each of these cases, I've had to establish and prove duty, breach, causation and damages. If any of these elements isn't proven, I lose. Medical malpractice cases are difficult because the entire burden of proof rests on the victim. This means that my law firm only takes meritorious cases. The notion that medical malpractice lawyers accept and win so-called "frivolous" lawsuits is simply not true. Medical malpractice cases are expensive and time consuming. My firm has a good reputation because we are selective in the cases we accept and the diligence with which we treat each and every case we handle.
It's a debate that's intensifying as victims of medical malpractice and wrong-site surgeries are demanding to know what happened in the operating room that caused the medical errors. The topic has been broached on Kevinmd.com blog. Interestingly, the author of the blog post is a surgeon himself. In the post, Dr. Martin Young notes that airline pilots have cockpit flight recorders that record their work. So, why shouldn't surgeons have their procedures recorded and/or videotaped to ensure transparency and review for errors? It would seem a logical question to ask if the medical community is interested in reducing instances of medical malpractice and medical errors.
Dale Ann Micalizzi is the mother of an 11-year old boy who died during a routine surgical procedure in a hospital in Albany. She left a comment on the blog post that is well worth quoting:
"I believe in real time recorded surgical procedures for educational and ethical reasons and I think they will fix some of the wrong site surgeries that are continuing to occur. Staff will think...or check... twice and hopefully an open dialogue will result. The patient and family deserves to see the recording-all recordings and become actively involved in the root cause analysis when things go wrong. No, the recordings should not be edited just as medical records are not supposed to be edited. There are still bugs to work out to make this system idea work efficiently. This is not big brother watching you. It is a safety monitor. In the future world of IT, the recording and records would belong to the patient."
Her argument makes sense and would afford her and countless others a sense of what went wrong during the surgical procedure.
Now that it appears likely that some form of healthcare reform legislation will be enacted this year, it's important to remember that true healthcare reform begins with an increased emphasis on patient safety. This is not accomplished by tort reform measures that only serve to penalize the injured. Medical malpractice cases will be reduced when medical errors are reduced.
The American Association for Justice is highlighting this fact with a new patient safety website. The new site notes that 98,000 people die each year from preventable medical errors. According to the website, that's equivalent to two 737 jetliners crashing every single day. Would we blame the passengers for such an airline crash? Of course, we wouldn't so why would we penalize patients when they are the victims of medical errors?
The NY Times published an article today about the current status of patient safety. The article, written by a doctor, notes that there are still issues that are unresolved some ten years after the publication of the groundbreaking study "To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System”. That study concluded 98,000 patients die each year from preventable medical errors.
In her NY Times article, Pauline W. Chen, M.D. notes that the "To Err is Human" study prompted a review and focus on system errors in hospital settings that lead to medical malpractice. Ten years after the study, some doctors are calling on their own colleagues to be accountable for their own human errors that lead to medical errors.
One of those doctors,Dr. Robert M. Wachter, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco and a leading health safety expert, has been critical of the safety movement for its failure to recognize the human element in medical errors.
“A blame-free culture carries its own safety risks, he writes, “As we enter the second decade of the safety movement, while the science regarding improving systems must continue to mature, the urgency of the task also demands that we stop averting our eyes from the need to balance ‘no blame’ and accountability.”
In his interview with the NY Times, Dr. Wachter is clear on the role fellow doctors play in patient safety. Here's an excerpt from the interview:
"If I were a patient or a loved one, I would do what everyone recommends — have a loved one by your side, look for signals that a hospital is safe, check that a physician is board certified. But I am also intensely ambivalent about how responsible patients should be for safety and the prevention of error. Medical mistakes are our bad. Why should patients bear the responsibility to receive the right medication or to have the correct leg amputated? When I get on a plane, I don’t worry about safety and errors.
As for doctors, patient safety can’t happen if physicians aren’t smack in the middle of it. We can either facilitate safety or we can stand its way. We will stand in its way if we embrace our historical approach to these problems, if we instinctively engage in finger-pointing, if we aren’t willing to listen to others.
We have a huge role in creating the kind of environment where people will feel comfortable questioning anything that seems strange or out-of-place and where doctors are open to different opinions from others.
As doctors, we have to admit first that we don’t deliver care that is of the quality and safety our patients deserve. Then we have to get past our professional arrogance. We don’t have the answers to all of these issues, and we have to be open to others who may have the answers or who can approach it from different angles."
If you've ever been hospitalized, did you know what medicines you received? A new survey published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine found that an appalling 96% of hospital patients were unable to name medications they received during their hospital stay. This has an obvious and dangerous impact on the rate of medication errors in hospitals.
"I don't think that's surprising at all. I think that that's the natural consequence of the way in which hospital culture is designed. Patients are given their medicines and they take their medicines," said study author Dr. Ethan Cumbler, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Colorado Denver and director of the University of Colorado Hospital Acute Care for Elderly Service.
Dr. Cumbler notes that this hospital culture is the opposite of the one which exists in the outpatient setting where patients are expected to know what pills they're taking, when they're taking them, and the purpose for the pill.
How can hospital patients act as their own best advocate and help eliminate medication errors if they don't even know what pills they're taking and for what purpose? This is a problem that exacerbates medication errors and makes patients victims rather than advocates in their own health.
However, there are methods to combat this hospital culture. First, ask the person dispensing the medication the name of the medication and its purpose. Second, ask if there are any side effects. Third, consult with your treating physician about medication treatment options.
This medical malpractice lawsuit in Rhode Island didn't make headlines because of the financial settlement. Most likely, it didn't even make the news because the victim was Michael Woods, the brother of famed Hollywood actor James Woods. The medical malpractice case was newsworthy because the hospital administrator admitted its emergency room staff had made fatal mistakes in the 2006 Woods' case and committed to correcting those errors by establishing the Michael J. Woods Institute at Kent Hospital. The five year project will cost $1.25 approximately and its stated goal is the reduction of medical errors such as those that led to Michael Woods death.
According to the
Providence Journal,
"Michael Woods, a two-time Warwick mayoral candidate, was 49 years old when he went to the emergency room at 4:25 p.m. July 26, 2006, complaining of a sore throat and vomiting that came on suddenly. An electrocardiogram showed he had an abnormal heartbeat. He suffered a heart attack at about 7:10 p.m. and was declared dead at 7:30 p.m.
The doctor who treated him, Kelli A. Naylor, testified she’d ordered that he be put on a heart monitor, but that the nursing staff never followed through. Woods was sent to the x-ray department, and when he was brought back to the emergency room, instead of being put in a room, his gurney was parked by a wall near a nurses’ station. It was there he suffered his fatal heart attack."
The impetus for the unexpected settlement came after weeks of heated trial testimony. The Kent Hospital administrator Sandra Coletta called the Woods' family and apologized for their loss. As a result, the hospital will now make a real effort to reduce such medical errors and preventable tragedies.
I've blogged before on the relationship between physician fatigue and medical errors. Now, a new report commissioned by the American College of Surgeons and conducted by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Mayo Clinic notes the significant correlation between physician burnout and depression and the self-reporting of medical errors. The new findings suggest that physicians suffering burnout or depression may have a higher rate of making and reporting medical errors. The report notes that mental health factors may lead to more medical errors than physician fatigue.
This new survey underscores the real need for standardized, universal medical error reporting. This is a huge patient safety issue that has been thus far ignored in the healthcare debates in Washington. However, accurate medical error reporting could save lives and increase patient safety.
The biopsy results revealed breast cancer. So, last June, Janelle Trenchfield underwent surgery to remove lymph nodes and a lump in her breast. A few days after the surgery, Trenchfield was told that she didn't have cancer after all. Her biopsy had been confused with another patient's at Winthrop-University Hospital in Mineola, NY. It appears that a label with her name on it had been inadvertently placed on another woman's biopsy.
Now, Janelle Trenchfield is left with physical and emotional scars. Her breast is severely scarred from the surgery and she is more susceptible to disease after having lymph nodes removed. In addition, she has had to deal with the anguish and trauma of thinking she had cancer. As a result of her suffering, Trenchfield has filed a medical malpractice lawsuit in state Supreme Court.
Wrong-site surgeries have highlighted the news recently, and we've discussed them, especially the
wrong-site surgeries at Rhode Island Hospital, in previous blog posts. However, there are many more instances in which surgeries may constitute harmful medical malpractice and negligence on behalf of doctors and healthcare workers. Surgical errors include operations performed on the wrong person, surgical instruments such as sponges, needles, and instruments left inside the patient, and patients catching fire during cauterization procedures. In other cases, there have been reports of patient deaths caused by the use of contaminated surgical instruments, contaminated drugs administered to the patient, and blood transfusions of the wrong blood type.
These are all serious, potentially fatal medical errors that constitute negligence and medical malpractice. As a patient or patient advocate, it's important to take proper precautions prior to any surgery. Make sure to discuss the procedure and any concerns with the surgeon and theanesthesiologist.
The Joint Commission, the group that is responsible for accrediting hospitals, has established a "
Universal Protocol" for surgeons and surgical procedures. The protocols include: the use of check lists and "time outs" to ensure the right patient and correct body part. These protocols were specifically developed to protect patients and reduce medical errors.
After its
5th wrong-site surgery since 2007, Rhode Island Hospital has been fined $150,000 and ordered to install video cameras in all operating rooms. In addition, the hospital will be required to have a clinical employee monitor all surgeries for a year and have a surgeon involved in the marketing of the hospital's surgical site.
The last wrong-site surgery involved surgery on a patient's two fingers. Rather than mark the fingers prior to surgery, surgical employees marked the patient's wrist. The state health department also noted that the surgical team failed to take a "time out" in order to verify the patient's identity as well as the type and site of the surgery. This failure occurred once again prior to the second surgery.
Rhode Island Hospital had previously been fined $50,000 in 2007 after surgeons operated on the wrong areas of three patients' brains.
A Rhode Island hospital has been cited for its fifth wrong-site surgery since 2007. A surgeon at the Rhode Island hospital operated on the wrong part of a patient's hand. In 2007, surgeons at the same hospital operated on the wrong sides of patient's heads in three separate brain surgeries. At that time, the hospital was fined $50,000 for the errors. The surgical errors occurred at Rhode Island Hospital, the state's largest hospital and the main teaching hospital for Brown University.
According to Dr. Mark R. Chassin, president of the Joint Commission, a private entity that inspects and accredits health-care organizations, wrong-site surgeries happen frequently and medical protocols have done little to prevent them.
These are events that should never happen. The unfortunate truth is that no hospital today in the U.S. or around the world ... can guarantee that they will never happen. We do not know how to perfect our processes to ensure these [errors] never happen.”
According to Chassin's organization, approximately 40 wrong-site surgeries occur across the country every week.
While the debate about healthcare reform continues in Congress, there is little discussion among legislators about including patient safety measures in either House or Senate versions of healthcare legislation. An analysis by Hearst newspapers has shown relatively little interest in preventative measures in hospitals that could potentially save thousands of lives.
Medical errors including hospital infections, misdiagnoses, failures to diagnose, and wrong site surgeries contribute to thousands of lives lost each year. These are avoidable medical malpractice errors that could be addressed by patient safety measures.
However, there is some good news to report concerning patient safety. Last week, New Jersey became the sixth state in the country to provide consumers with hospital-specific error reports. The other states that provide such a service to consumers are Colorado, Indiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, and Washington. I am pleased to say that our own state of New Hampshire will soon be added to this list of reporting states.
The FDA is investigating Cedars-Sinai Hospital for radiation errors concerning a CT scan that transmitted higher than normal levels of radiation. The problem appears to have been occurring since February 2008 when a CT scan's radiation levels were set too high.
The FDA noted, “The magnitude of these overdoses and their impact on the affected patients were significant,” the federal agency said, warning that undetected overdoses put “patients at increased risk for long-term radiation effects.”
The patients who received the CT scans received 8 times the regular dosage of radiation for a normal CT scan.
It is noteworthy and perhaps significant that the FDA issued a nationwide alert and did not specifically name Cedars-Sinai Hospital in their alert. It is quite possible this overdosage in radiation is not an isolated incident.
In this week's
New England Journal of Medicine, two physicians discuss the status of medical errors in healthcare in the context of the 10th anniversary of To Err is Human, the Institute of Medicine's report concerning patient safety. The authors, Robert M. Wachter, M.D. and Peter J. Pronovost, M.D., Ph.D. both extol the progress made in patient safety, both physicians acknowledge that medical errors remain a significant concern.
Interestingly, both physicians make a strong case for increased physician accountability in resolving and avoiding medical errors that cause an estimated 100,000 preventable deaths in the US each year. Pronovost argues,“But despite making systems safer and counseling staff on best practices, mistakes continue to happen, so it’s time to add some accountability and enforcement policies to address and stop unsafe practices,” he says.
The authors cite such examples of unsafe practices as healthcare workers' failure to properly wash their hands before entering a patient's room as well as failure to avoid wrong site surgeries, which are estimated at 4,000 each year.
Accountability and transparency are important factors in avoiding medical errors and malpractice as well as ensuring patient safety. The article's recognition that the "no blame" approach in dealing with medical errors and patient safety is not a panacea for good medical practice or patient safety.
La Compañia Farmacéutica Bayer Healthcare se enfrenta a pleitos o casos civiles federales con relación a sus populares píldoras anticonceptivas Yaz y Yasmin. Los pleitos siguen una carta de advertencia de FDA emitida a Bayer afirmando que la empresa farmacéutica no cumple con advertir a pacientes sobre los riesgos de las píldoras y a la misma vez sobre-estima los beneficios de las drogas. El año pasado, Bayer ejecutó una campaña de mercadeo correctivo por 20 millones de dólares como parte de su acuerdo con la FDA para corregir sus anuncios agresivos y engañosos. Las píldoras Yaz y Yasmin han sido asociadas con un mayor riesgo de coágulos de sangre, embolia pulmonar, ataques cardíacos y derrame cerebral. Actualmente, se ha presentado una moción con el Grupo Judicial de expertos de Estados Unidos sobre litigios de Multidistritos para consolidar y centralizar los 132 casos pendientes contra Bayer, el fabricante de las drogas. Todos los casos en su mayoria contienen denuncias similares sobre la incapacidad de Bayer en advertir a los consumidores sobre la posible amenaza de muerte y efectos secundarios asociados con Yaz y Yasmin, asi como el riesgo de hipertensión arterial, derrame cerebral, coágulos, enfermedad de la vesícula biliar, trombosis venosa profunda, embolia pulmonar y muerte repentina. La moción pide que estos casos se consoliden ante el Juez James G. Carr del Distrito Tribunal de Estados Unidos y el Distrito Norte de Ohio, en Toledo. Tanto Yaz y Yasmin son anticonceptivos orales que contienen etinilestradiol y drospirenone de progestin las mismas que no se encuentran en cualquier otro anticonceptivo con excepción del producto genérico Oscella. Si se concede la moción y se forma un MDL (litigios multidistritales), los casos legales en contra de Yaz y Yasmin seguirían siendo casos individuales y no parte del "class action suit" de Yaz y Yasmin. Se espera que una audiencia sobre la moción MDL sea ventilada en septiembre del 2009.
Because New Hampshire has no mandatory medical error reporting system, there is no way to determine the extent of medical errors in the state. We do know that many victims of medical errors come to us for legal advice. The issues may range from failures to diagnose heart attacks, failures to diagnose cancer, surgical errors, medical errors that cause birth defects such as Erb's palsy, and emergency room mistakes.
The lack of any reporting system in NH means that there's no accurate way to measure the damage caused by these medical errors. Perhaps more importantly, there's no way to correct these errors or hold people accountable for such medical mistakes. Until such a system is in place, those who need medical attention are at risk for preventable errors. This should be part of the current healthcare debate. It's an issue that affects us all and leads to an inevitable rise in healthcare costs.
Anesthesia errors are a risk in any surgical procedure. When a patient undergoes an operation, anesthesia is administered in order to sedate the patient. The anesthesiologists are supposed to monitor vital signs such as heart rate, respiration, and blood pressure.
The most common anesthesia problems we've encountered involved inexperienced anesthesia personnel such as CRNA's or anesthesia technicians who fail in their duty to recognize problems such as a sudden drop in blood pressure, respiration or heart rate. These errors may be caused by inattention or a failure to properly monitor a surgical patient's vital signs. Such errors can result in catastrophic injuries to the patient including permanent brain damage or coma.
Other anesthesia errors include mistakes concerning the dosage of anesthesia, intubation errors, and turning off the alarm on the pulse oximeter. The last error is perhaps more a mistake in procedure than an error. The pulse oximeter is designed to measure a patient's blood oxygen level. Turning off the alarm deprives healthcare workers of a necessary and critical medical warning device that's designed to alert doctors and nurses of patient distress.
We've been successful in handling anesthesia malpractice cases because we have the expertise to properly evaluate the claims.
Alli, a popular over-the-counter diet drug and its prescription counterpart Xenical have drawn FDA scrutiny after more than 2 dozen adverse event reports linked the drugs to liver injury.
According to the FDA press release, "Between 1999 and 2008, the FDA received 32 reports of serious liver injury in patients taking orlistat. Of those cases, 27 reported hospitalization and six resulted in liver failure. Thirty of the adverse events occurred outside the United States. The most commonly reported adverse events included yellowing of the skin or whites of the eyes (jaundice), weakness, and stomach pain."
Alli contains half the dose of orlistat of Xenical. Both diet drugs are designed to block the absorption of fat in the intestines.
While the FDA's release noted that the investigation is ongoing and in its early stages, anyone who has taken either drug and experience symptoms associated with liver injury such as weakness, fatigue, jaundice, or discolored urine should contact their doctor as soon as possible.
On May 1, 2009 another dietary drug supplement, Hydroxycut, was pulled from the market after adverse event reports linked the supplement to liver injury.
Patient safety and healthcare industry accountability have been pushed to the side in the midst of the clamor over the public option debate in the latest battle concerning healthcare reform. This is a mistake that has grave public safety ramifications. It's estimated that 200,000 Americans die from common medical errors that lead to failures to diagnose, misdiagnoses, brain injuries, botched births, and wrong side surgeries. These statistics are alarming and could be addressed with mandatory reporting of medical errors and a system that responds in a corrective way to these medical errors.
The Dead by Mistake (http://www.chron.com/deadbymistake) website notes that certain procedures could be mandated to avoid such errors. "For example, there could be regulations for marking a surgical site or a checklist for inserting a catheter. Both are known practices for avoiding medical errors -- wrong site surgery and hospital-acquired infections -- but their use is not widespread."
In spite of the errors, mandatory medical error reporting has been blocked by doctors and medical associations who fear medical malpractice lawsuits and have a general distaste for oversight.
The journalists at Dead by Mistake recommend that the public engage in this important issue. On their website, they've listed some things the general public can do to raise awareness of this important issue:
- Ask AHRQ to publish hospital-specific information on safety, (301) 427-1364, hcup@ahrq.gov.
- Ask your state health officials to release hospital-specific information on errors and infections.
- Find out if your hospital is accredited: Joint Commission, www.QualityCheck.org; and Health Facilities Accreditation Program, www.hfap.org
- Ask your local hospital if it participates in Leapfrog Group's hospital survey and if not, ask why, www.LeapfrogGroup.org
- Ask your hospital to voluntarily release its error and infection rates.
- Ask your hospital if it has adopted the National Quality Forum's policy on full and immediate disclosure of errors to patients and their families.
- Demand that medical professional societies take responsibility for errors that occur in their profession and address them systematically.
- Join Consumer Union's "Safe Patient" campaign, www.SafePatientProject.org.
- Report medical errors that affect your family to your state health department and the Joint Commission, (800) 994-6610, complaint@jointcommission.org.
New Hampshire is in the process of establishing an adverse event reporting system. The system is supposed to ensure that New Hampshire hospitals report at least 28 measures set by a national healthcare quality organization.
If you walk into any hospital in New Hampshire and visit a floor where patients are being treated, you’re bound to see one of two things: 1) a doctor furiously scribbling a prescription; and 2) a nurse dispensing medication to a patient. They’re routine until something goes wrong- a pharmacist misreads the doctor’s handwritten prescription order or a nurse gives the wrong drugs to a patient.
The sad fact is that both errors are avoidable. Specific technology has been designed, developed and implemented for doctors to enter prescription orders electronically and for nurses to cross reference the drugs to be dispensed with the patient’s wrist band. When the doctor enters an order or a prescription electronically, the risk of error is significantly reduced. The same holds true for a nurse dispensing drugs. Under this system, the drugs have a specific bar code which matches the bar code on the patient’s wristband. Once both are scanned, the risk of error is negligible. The technology is called computerized provider order entry, or CPOE. Unfortunately, few hospitals take advantage of the technology. A recent survey of hospitals nationwide found that fewer than 17% use the electronic prescription pad and even fewer hospitals use the bar coding system. This failure to adapt is astounding considering that using these simple programs saves lives. Hospital administrators who oppose such measures cite the cost of implementing the new technology as well as reluctance among some healthcare professionals to adapt to new routines and procedures. The recent federal stimulus package has addressed some of the cost concerns by approving federal dollars to assist hospitals with the purchase of new equipment including the purchase of electronic health information systems. If an electronic information system helps save lives and reduces medical errors, isn’t that worth the additional cost?
Former New England Patriots defensive back Tebucky Jones has filed a lawsuit against Patriots team physicians Dr. Thomas J. Gill IV and Dr. Dr. Bertram Zarins . Dr. Jeffrey Brody, the Rhode Island Hospital physician who interpreted the results of Jones’ third MRI, and Shields MRI of Rhode Island are also named in the lawsuit.
Jones suffered the career ending knee injury in a 2006 pre-season game against the Washington Redskins. The lawsuit filed in Suffolk County Superior Court alleges that the “failure to diagnose his injuries led to his wrongful release by the New England Patriots and consequential loss of income.”
After Jones was assisted off the field during the 2006 pre-season game, he was taken the following day to Shields MRI in Rhode Island. The results of that MRI showed a chronic ACL tear as well as a hamstring injury. According to Jones, Drs. Gill and Zarins told the football player that he suffered a hamstring injury. They instructed him to ice the hamstring and recommended strengthening exercises. Jones insists neither doctor mentioned the torn ACL in spite of the MRI results. The pain persisted so Jones went back to Gill and Zarins who ordered another MRI at Shields in Rhode Island. Once again, the MRI showed a chronic ACL tear coupled with a hamstring injury. Yet, the star defensive back was not informed of the torn ACL. In December 2006, Jones underwent a third MRI. This MRI noted no ACL tear. Jones’ lawyer has stated that the third MRI was performed with a machine called an open MRI. According to Jones’ lawyer, open MRIs can produce low resolution results that are not as accurate as closed MRI machines.
In October 2007, Jones finally learned the severity of his knee injury. During a tryout with the Oakland Raiders, Jones underwent another medical exam which revealed the torn ACL. The injury was so severe the Raiders refused to sign him to a contract.
According to the Boston Herald, Dr. Gill has been sued before. “Gill has been sued at least one other time in the last 10 years. In 2005, the medical malpractice insurance company representing Gill made a payment to a woman who sued him claiming he failed to diagnose a tumor, according to Suffolk Superior Court records and the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine. Prior to the case’s dismissal, a medical tribunal ruled in favor of the patient.”
Nosotros sabemos que a veces es muy difícil vivir y trabajar en un país que no es necesariamente el nuestro. Nosotros comprendemos que a veces es difícil también comunicarnos en nuestro propio lenguaje. En la oficina de abogados de Abramson, Brown y Dugan estamos dispuestos a ayudarlo. Si usted o un familiar tiene un caso de mala práctica médica con fundamentos básicos para probarlo, nosotros podemos ayudarlos a obtener una compensación legal. Usted tiene derecho a obtener compensación si un doctor o proveedor de cuidados de salud no provee los cuidados adecuados a los que Ud. tiene derecho.
Si usted o un familiar es víctima de negligencia médica es necesario contratar un abogado que lo ayude a reclamar la compensación adecuada por el daňo o muerte. En algunos casos médicos y proveedores de cuidados de salud cometen errors que pueden causar daῆos irreparables o muerte en algunos casos.
No dude en llamarnos para una consulta legal.
Nearly 14 million Americans have experienced a heart attack. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, coronary disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States. Yet, one in 50 heart attack victims are misdiagnosed by emergency room physicians and sent home. Failure to diagnose a heart attack may occur even though the patient describes the known warning signs of a heart attack: shortness of breath, chest pain, tightness in the chest, blurred vision, or an irregular heart beat. Failure to diagnose and promptly treat often results in death or severe disability. Once it is determined a patient is suffering a heart attack, prompt medical action is required to prevent further damage or death. Such medical actions may include giving oxygen to the patient, administering clot busting drugs such as tPA, emergency angioplasty or coronary artery bypass surgery. Failure to diagnose a heart attack or failure to intervene medically may lead to irreversible heart damage, stroke, or death. In my years as a medical malpractice attorney, I've represented clients whose treating physicians failed to properly diagnose a heart attack as well as those who were not treated promptly.
Deborah Jean Howard, 42 was killed when her 2009 Honda was rear-ended on Interstate 93 and struck a tree. She was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash. While law enforcement officials don't believe alcohol played a factor in the fatal car accident, inclement weather and speed appear to have played a part in the crash. The accident occurred in New Hampton between Exits 23 and 22.
Howard was crowned Miss New Hampshire in 1991 and had remained active in the program by participating in and judging events.
The Wall St. Journal published an interesting article today on the controversial but growing trend of doctors performing outpatient surgeries in their offices. These offices are often unregulated and the rising number of adverse incidents has led some states to examine the practice and legislate regulation for the facilities.
It is estimated that between 35,000 to 40,000 doctors perform surgical procedures in their own offices. Only a small fraction of these offices is accredited and regulated by independent health review agencies.
The Journal article estimates that 45% of outpatient surgical procedures are performed in hospital outpatient departments, which are highly regulated and normally in close proximity to a hospital if something goes awry during the procedure. Another 38% of these outpatient services takes place in ambulatory surgery centers, which are also regulated and accredited.
That leaves 17% of outpatient procedures that are performed in unregulated and unaccredited facilities. In these situations, the surgeries are performed under the medical license of the practitioner.
As one might imagine, this had led to problems including surgical errors, anesthesia errors, catastrophic injuries and death. It's also led to some lawsuits against the doctors who've performed such procedures in questionable settings.
If you're scheduled to have an outpatient procedure, please make sure the facility is regulated and accredited by an independent health agency or the state. Your life may depend on it.
I am pleased to welcome you to our firm's blog. In this forum, we will discuss all aspects of medical malpractice including New Hampshire law concerning medical malpractice, client stories, our trial work, the various types of medical malpractice as well as a variety of related subjects such as defective medical devices and harmful drugs.
The lawyers at Abramson, Brown, and Dugan are experienced trial lawyers who are recognized experts in the field of medical malpractice and plaintiff personal injury. We are an award winning firm whose partners are "AV" rated by their peers in the profession. We take pride in the fact that many of our cases come from attorney referrals. Our work on behalf of our clients has earned us the reputation of being New Hampshire's premier medical malpractice law firm.