Error in Medicine: Legal Impediments to U.S. Reform

Error in medicine is common and can lead to significant patient injury. Although successful systematic efforts to reduce human error have been applied in other complex systems, the field of medicine has just begun to make a broad-based effort in this regard. However, both research in and implementation of patient safety measures may not occur without a consideration of important legal issues that may impede these health policy efforts. Tort and contract law may interact with the vagaries of managed care to limit participation in these error reduction efforts by health care providers as well as by managed care organizations. Thus, for patient safety research to be successful, all members of the health care enterprise must participate in a coordinated effort to identify and establish effective practices that may reduce human error in medicine. But it is imperative that legal impediments be recognized and addressed before the goal of a continuously improving, increasingly safe health care system can become a reality.

[1]  L. Morlock,et al.  Practice Changes in Response to the Malpractice Litigation Climate: Results of a Maryland Physician Survey , 1989, Medical care.

[2]  Mahmud Hassan,et al.  Medical malpractice experience of physicians. Predictable or haphazard? , 1989, JAMA.

[3]  L. Leape Error in Medicine , 1994 .

[4]  G. Anderson,et al.  Medical technology assessment and practice guidelines: their day in court. , 1993, American journal of public health.

[5]  Robert L. Helmreich,et al.  Group interaction and flight crew performance , 1988 .

[6]  H A Schwid,et al.  Anesthesiologists' management of simulated critical incidents. , 1992, Anesthesiology.

[7]  Moore Jd JCAHO urges 'Do tell,' in sentinel event fight. Aviation's lesson: learn from experience. , 1998 .

[8]  D. Simpson,et al.  A survey of sued and nonsued physicians and suing patients. , 1989, Archives of internal medicine.

[9]  C. J. Rosenquist,et al.  The use of low-osmolar contrast agents: technological change and defensive medicine. , 1996, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[10]  Telling patients about medical negligence. , 1983, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[11]  P. Weiler Medical malpractice on trial , 1991 .

[12]  B. Liang Assessing medical malpractice jury verdicts: a case study of an anesthesiology department. , 1997, Cornell journal of law and public policy.

[13]  J. Cooper,et al.  An analysis of major errors and equipment failures in anesthesia management: considerations for prevention and detection. , 1984 .

[14]  R. Hastie,et al.  Hindsight: Biased judgments of past events after the outcomes are known. , 1990 .

[15]  T. Brennan Practice guidelines and malpractice litigation: collision or cohesion? , 1991, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[16]  J. Austin,et al.  Analysis of the resource-based relative value scale for Medicare reimbursements to academic and community hospital radiology departments. , 1991 .

[17]  Stephen J. Hoch,et al.  Outcome feedback: hindsight and information , 1989 .

[18]  D. Hedeker,et al.  Role of previous claims and specialty on the effectiveness of risk-management education for office-based physicians. , 1995, Western Journal of Medicine.

[19]  T A Brennan,et al.  Relation between negligent adverse events and the outcomes of medical-malpractice litigation. , 1996, The New England journal of medicine.

[20]  P. Ellsworth Are Twelve Heads Better Than One , 1989 .

[21]  F. Sloan,et al.  Variability in Medical Malpractice Payments: Is the Compensation Fair? , 1990 .

[22]  Kim A. Kamin,et al.  Ex post ≠ ex ante , 1995 .

[23]  T. Brennan,et al.  Physicians' perceptions of the risk of being sued. , 1992, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[24]  J. Hanzal,et al.  A measure of malpractice , 1994 .

[25]  A. Russell Localio,et al.  Measuring defensive medicine using clinical scenario surveys. , 1996, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[26]  Andrew Hale,et al.  Chapter 7 – IDA: AN INTERACTIVE PROGRAM FOR THE COLLECTION AND PROCESSING OF ACCIDENT DATA , 1991 .

[27]  S. Charles,et al.  Sued and nonsued physicians' self-reported reactions to malpractice litigation. , 1985, The American journal of psychiatry.

[28]  A. Hillman,et al.  Managing Physician Incentives in Managed Care: The Role of For-Profit Ownership , 1990, Medical care.

[29]  R L Helmreich,et al.  Cockpit Management Attitudes , 1984, Human factors.

[30]  J. Lauber,et al.  Sleepiness, circadian dysrhythmia, and fatigue in transportation system accidents. , 1988, Sleep.

[31]  N. Vidmar Medical Malpractice and the American Jury: Confronting the Myths about Jury Incompetence, Deep Pockets, and Outrageous Damage Awards , 1995 .

[32]  Veda R. Charrow,et al.  Making Legal Language Understandable: A Psycholinguistic Study of Jury Instructions , 1979 .

[33]  T. Brennan,et al.  INCIDENCE OF ADVERSE EVENTS AND NEGLIGENCE IN HOSPITALIZED PATIENTS , 2008 .

[34]  Standard of care and anesthesia liability. , 1989 .

[35]  P. Ellsworth,et al.  Real jurors' understanding of the law in real cases , 1992 .

[36]  John E. Calfee,et al.  Some Effects of Uncertainty on Compliance with Legal Standards , 1984 .

[37]  J. Rolph,et al.  Physicians' personal malpractice experiences are not related to defensive clinical practices. , 1996, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[38]  D. K. Kagehiro Defining the Standard of Proof in Jury Instructions , 1990 .

[39]  C. Havighurst Practice guidelines as legal standards governing physician liability. , 1991, Law and contemporary problems.

[40]  R L Helmreich,et al.  Preliminary results from the evaluation of cockpit resource management training: performance ratings of flightcrews. , 1990, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine.

[41]  N. Pennington,et al.  Inside the Jury. , 1985 .

[42]  T. Brennan,et al.  Identifying Adverse Events Caused by Medical Care: Degree of Physician Agreement in a Retrospective Chart Review , 1996, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[43]  A. Gittelsohn,et al.  Variations in medical care among small areas. , 1982, Scientific American.

[44]  T. Brennan,et al.  Relationship between malpractice claims and cesarean delivery. , 1993, JAMA.

[45]  F A Sloan,et al.  Juries and justice: are malpractice and other personal injuries created equal? , 1991, Law and contemporary problems.

[46]  Deborah A. Lucas Chapter 11 – ORGANISATIONAL ASPECTS OF NEAR MISS REPORTING , 1991 .

[47]  B. Sales,et al.  In Ignorance of the Law or in Light of It , 1977 .

[48]  L. Andrews The Shadow of the Law: Jury Decisions in Obstetrics and Gynecology Cases , 1989 .

[49]  Susan J. LaBine,et al.  Determinations of negligence and the hindsight bias , 1996 .