Crico Medical Malpractice High Risk Case Studies

Informações:

Sinopsis

For more than 20 years, CRICO has analyzed claims and suits from the Harvard medical community to understand causes of error. We have learned that 67% of claims fall into four high risk areas: Diagnosis, Obstetrics, Surgery and Medication.

Episodios

  • Incidental Lung Nodule Overlooked, No Follow-up, Fatal Cancer Advances

    30/12/2023 Duración: 12min

    A patient was imaged for abdominal pain, but the radiologist saw and reported an incidental finding of a nodule on the lower lung that was not pursued or revealed to the patient for 2 years. The cancer had metastasized, and the patient died from lung cancer 18 months later.

  • Overdose or Poor Documentation?

    17/10/2023 Duración: 09min

    The patient’s family alleged that improper management of the patient under anesthesia resulted in cardiorespiratory arrest, permanent brain damage, and a persistent vegetative state. While the cause of the patient’s cardiac arrest is uncertain, the CRNA failed to note which medications and doses were administered during the procedure, and the case was settled for more than $1 million.

  • Response to Charges of Discrimination can Help or Hurt a Hospital, Any Employer

    11/07/2023 Duración: 13min

    When hospitals and medical practices face charges of discrimination from employees, the consequences can include litigation, large payments, morale problems, and less quality care for the patients they serve. How an employer responds can make all the difference in outcomes. Based on closed claims in the Harvard medical system, two cases illustrate that point. We interview Megan Kures, of Hamel, Marcin, Dunn, Reardon and Shea, who offers some principles to follow.

  • Slow to Diagnose Endocarditis After Repeat Visits

    04/04/2023 Duración: 11min

    One thing that seemed to be missing in this particular evaluation was a formal differential diagnosis that may have been present in the physician’s brain, but wasn’t documented, and there’s no evidence that it was really thought about.

  • Signs of Bias in Rejected Request for Accommodation

    12/12/2022 Duración: 11h35min

    Boston Attorney Megan Kures explains how a hospital should respond to a request for accommodation. Tip: it shouldn't be a knee-jerk no, and be sure to involve HR from the start.

  • Health Payment Reform Act: Rules to Protect Providers

    27/09/2022 Duración: 07min

    After a state medical error disclosure and apology law went into effect in November 2012, health providers in Massachusetts have protections and rules to follow.

  • Cardiac Event Mismanaged in ED

    13/04/2022 Duración: 11min

    An otherwise healthy 50-year-old woman presented to the Emergency Department with atypical chest pain. Discharge and death the next morning followed.

  • Woman’s Stroke Progressed in ED without Intervention

    16/11/2021 Duración: 09min

    The patient needed to be evaluated by a stroke team and a neurologist promptly to decide whether any treatment was indicated or possible. Triage should be the same whether the ER was empty or overcapacity.

  • Surgery Change Needed Better Consent

    06/08/2021 Duración: 10min

    The goal was to treat uncontrolled pain from tumors but the patient was left with unexpected hearing loss. The patient sued when she claimed the surgeon changed the side of the operation without consulting her. For ideas that might help prevent these negative outcomes, we talk with Douglas Smink, MD, MPH, an associate medical director for CRICO and the Chief of Surgery at Brigham and Women's Faulkner Hospital.

  • Lack of Preparation, Safety Culture, Contributed to Loss of Baby

    02/06/2021 Duración: 09min

    This OB patient's risk factors were not adequately considered, and the team's failure to follow protocols and secure back-up contributed to a lawsuit and a settlement of over $1 million.

  • Unclear Discharge Instructions, Patient Loses Foot

    28/02/2021 Duración: 10min

    In a lawsuit naming the Emergency Medicine physician and a nurse, the patient alleged that a dressing was applied too tightly, compromising the circulation and resulting in a gangrenous foot, requiring amputation. Despite an eventual defense verdict, some lessons show how to prevent this bad clinical result and a five-year legal ordeal.

  • Woman Dies from Post-op Stroke When Anticoagulant Not Restarted

    17/12/2020 Duración: 10min

    Restarting heparin was not in the post-op instructions. In a lawsuit naming four physicians, the patient's estate alleged negligent failure to restart anticoagulation, resulting in a stroke and ultimately, her death. The case was settled for more than a million.

  • Young Patient, Flawed Test, Fatal Delay in Colon CA Diagnosis

    08/10/2020 Duración: 07min

    Despite multiple visits to her PCP with similar complaints over years, this young patient did not get a timely diagnosis of colon cancer and died. Dr. Carla Ford looks at the testing, communication among providers, and some diagnostic insights for the next patient.

  • “What Else Might This Be?” Might Have Saved PE Patient

    20/07/2020 Duración: 14min

    A fatal PE misdiagnosis may have gone wrong from the very beginning. With analysis based on closed claims in the Harvard medical system, urgent care specialist Jonathan Einbinder explores ways an ordinary case with a tragic outcome might be prevented in the future.

  • A Forgotten Stent and Unclear Responsibility for Follow Up

    02/04/2020 Duración: 09min

    The patient sued his oncologist and the hospital, claiming they mismanaged his post-op recovery when a stent was left behind for a year, leading to complications that required additional surgery.

  • Nothing is “Routine” for an Anxious Patient or Family

    27/02/2020 Duración: 08min

    In this case, a pediatric practice struggled to satisfy the family of a boy after two years of appropriate primary care. What did they learn about communicating with patients and their families over routine medical matters?

  • Status Change Missed, Consultation Flawed, and the Patient Loses Baby

    23/12/2019 Duración: 11min

    In this case, communication between the primary provider and a phone consultant needed more clarity. And changes in the patient's status needed a stronger response, if a tragic outcome had any chance of being averted.

  • Radiology Didn’t Know Risk Status Before Patient Fall, Head Injury

    16/05/2019 Duración: 10min

    In this closed Harvard malpractice case, a patient fell during a radiology study because her risk status wasn't communicated from the unit effectively. It was not a typical fall—on the way to the bathroom alone. Hospitalist Adam Schaffer, MD, MPH, analyzes what went wrong and suggests some effective practices to prevent severe injury in places you don't expect, with eyes on the patient.

  • Fatal Misplaced Tube Casts Light on Supervision, Competence Assessment

    08/04/2019 Duración: 09min

    In this case, a 75-year-old female was admitted to the ICU with respiratory failure. A misplaced feeding tube led to her death. ICU intensivist Dr. Laura Myers discusses lessons from this case about supervision and assessing a provider's competence with a new procedure.

  • Doctors Lose Their Own Malpractice Case

    14/08/2018 Duración: 05min

    The defendant's role in a successful defense against a claim of malpractice is critical, but it isn't easy. Clinician have to be able to follow advice from lawyers, cope with their own emotions, which often include anger or fear, and project competence and likability to potential jurors. These things—none of which are taught in medical school—can be a challenge to a medical professional. Sometimes malpractice cases have to be settled because the defendant clinician cannot adapt to the legal system.

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