* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Your Next Patient Might be a Plaintiff
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Your Next Patient Might be a Plaintiff | Saturday, February 4, 2017| Hartford, CT Eugene A. Cooney Leah Nollinberger Cooney, Scully and Dowling Hartford, Connecticut 06106 © 2014 CMIC. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary. • It is estimated that about 25% of all the doctors in the United States get sued on an annual basis. * • It is also estimated that between 50% and 65% of all doctors in the United States are sued at least once in their career. * • Let’s work to change the odds … * “When Good Doctors Get Sued” Objectives • Documentation: – Impact of bad documentation on medical liability • Electronic documentation – Special problems that may create medical liability issues • Common problem areas – Recurring themes that result in medical liability claims Anatomy of a Medical Malpractice Lawsuit • Duty – (Provider-Patient Relationship) • Breach of Duty – Violation of Standard of Care –what is it? • Proximate Cause – Did the breach of duty affect the outcome? • Harm – Plaintiff must prove the damages caused What is “Standard of Care” The standard of care is the prevailing view in the relevant medical community about what is acceptable and appropriate under the circumstances. • • • • Your Medical Specialty “Acceptable and appropriate” Prevailing, predominant view SOC varies with the circumstances Biggest Issue in Lawsuit? • The biggest issue in any malpractice trial is – ________________? Biggest Issue in Lawsuit? • The biggest issue in any malpractice trial is CREDIBILITY Purposes of Documentation • • • • • Medical Regulatory Compliance QA/Risk Management Billing Connecticut Regulations • 19a-14-40. Medical records, definition, purpose • The purpose of a medical record is to provide a vehicle for: documenting actions taken in patient management; documenting patient progress; providing meaningful medical information to other practitioners should the patient transfer to a new provider or should the provider be unavailable for some reason. • A medical record shall include, but not be limited to, information sufficient to justify any diagnosis and treatment rendered, dates of treatment, actions taken by non-licensed persons when ordered or authorized by the provider; doctors' orders, nurses notes and charts, birth certificate worksheets, and any other diagnostic data or documents specified in the rules and regulations. All entries must be signed by the person responsible for them. Documentation Issues • Does bad documentation violate the standard of care? – Plaintiff’s experts: “yes” – Defendants: Bad documentation may be evidence of bad care, but bad documentation is not, in itself, bad care. COGENT • “Cogent”: convincing or believable by virtue of forcible, clear, or incisive presentation. What are the goals of documentation? A cogent note captures the important elements of the encounter. Deconstruct the medical encounter: • Obtain information – From the patient (Subjective) – From examination and testing (Objective) • Evaluate the information (Assessment) • Develop a plan of care (Plan) Where do most documentation failures occur? Plan Continuity of Care! • What happens next? • Who has the responsibility? • What is the next provider’s role? Where do most documentation failures occur? Plan Continuity of Care! • What is the patient’s role? • What must the patient look out for? • What should the patient do if … Where do most documentation failures occur? Plan Continuity of Care! • No loose threads in management Where do most documentation failures occur? Plan No cogent management plan! • The cogent plan logically connects the plan with each item in the history, examination and assessment • Don’t plan a procedure without documenting the indications • Don’t chart a symptom without documenting your response • Don’t document an assessment with a plan on how to address it Where do most documentation failures occur? No Baseline Documented Document patient functioning, preexisting problems prior to intervention • E.g., If there is a question about nerve function prior to your procedure, obtain neurological tests to document function Where do most documentation failures occur? Informed Consent Four elements to be documented • Nature of the procedure, • Anticipated benefits, • Material risks, • Feasible alternatives Where do most documentation failures occur? Develop a th 6 Sense An instinct for self-preservation • MORE documentation may be a good: • e.g., you do a procedure on a patient with diabetic, developing neuropathies and a history on non-compliance Documentation & Disclosure: Important Opportunities for Risk Management Good documentation: • History – thorough, complete. E.g., history of pain – Quote the patient when appropriate – Avoid “cut-and-paste” documentation. Documentation & Disclosure: Important Opportunities for Risk Management Good documentation: • Communications – Document all communications • With patient • With other clinicians – Include exact time/date, name of clinician, brief summary of the reason for the call and the response Documentation & Disclosure: Important Opportunities for Risk Management Good documentation: • Corrections – Draw a line through, note initials and the date • Late Entries/Addendum – Document the time and date of the late entry – Add the entry in the first available space in the record – Clearly identify it as a late entry – Cross reference it to the original event – Never after legal action taken Documentation & Disclosure: Important Opportunities for Risk Management Bad Documentation • Criticisms of other providers • Do not use the medical record to address conflicts with other providers or criticize another’s care • Remarks, entries or discussion critical of prior care may prompt patients to consider litigation • Emotional or unprofessional entries • Do not express emotion in your documentation. • No entries that would end in an exclamation point! Documentation & Disclosure: Important Opportunities for Risk Management Bad Documentation • Derogatory or discriminatory remarks – Avoid disrespectful or prejudicialcomments – Include socio-economic information only if relevant to care – Many patients request copies of their medical records, particularly if there has been a bad outcome, and inappropriate comments may trigger claims Documentation & Disclosure: Important Opportunities for Risk Management Documentation Do Not’s • Do not inappropriately alter existing records – Can be tempting once patient threatens litigation – Plaintiff’s attorney may have a copy of the record and changes will be obvious – Greatly harms credibility and ability to defend care • Don’t chart ahead of time – Something may happen to prevent you from giving care that was charted. Charting care that wasn’t provided is considered fraud. • Don’t chart what someone else said, heard, felt or smelled unless the information is critical – Use quotations and attribute remarks appropriately Electronic Health Records Electronic Health Record EMR Provider 1 EMR Provider 2 EMR Provider 3 EMR Examples Benefits of EHR • • • • Improved legibility Improved access Reminders of tests and preventive services Reminders of patient allergies and drug dosages • Ease of navigation through medical chart • Source: Hoyt, Robert E., Health Informatics: A Practical Guide (6th Edition) Dangers of EHR • • • • • Incorporating paper records into EHR Cutting and pasting incorrect information Data breach Auto-fill Not reviewing prior notes as closely because of auto-fill and cutting and pasting • Focusing on the computer instead of the patient Malpractice claims- User error Incorrect information in the EHR 16% Hybrid health records/EHR conversion 15% Prepopulating/copy and paste 13% EHR training/education 7% EHR user error (other than data entry) 7% EHR alert issues/fatigue 3% EHR/CPOE workarounds 1% User factors contributed to 64 percent of EHR-related claims Source: Troxel D. “Analysis of EHR contributing factors in medical professional liability claims.” The Doctor’s Advocate. The Doctors Company. First Quarter 2015. Malpractice Claim- Cutting and Pasting • January: Patient is a pleasant 28 year old woman who comes to the office today and reports she has progressed 32 weeks into her current pregnancy and followed by her obstetrician. She is here today…. • February: Patient is a pleasant 28 year old woman who comes to the office today and reports she has progressed 32 weeks into her current pregnancy and followed by her obstetrician. She is here today…. • October: Patient is a pleasant 28 year old woman who comes to the office today and reports she has progressed 32 weeks into her current pregnancy and followed by her obstetrician. She is here today…. Criticisms of cutting and pasting • A June 2009 editorial in the American Journal of Medicine (AJM) called the copy and paste function of EHR “one of the most egregious dangers of electronic charting” Source: Copy and Paste: A Remediable Hazard of Electronic Health Records, Siegler, Eugenia L. et al., The American Journal of Medicine , Volume 122 , Issue 6 , 495 - 496 • 54% of progress note contents are redundant Source: Wrenn Jesse O., et al. Quantifying Clinical Narrative Redundancy in an Electronic Health Record. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association. 2010;17(1):50. • Problem lists don’t change • Staff Copy Each Others' Notes and Errors • Narrative function is lost Claim- Data breach • HITECH • CryptoLocker Infection • Lost hardware EHR in Litigation Potential pitfalls of EHR in litigation • EHR data does not correspond to a paper chart • Excessive pages from cutting and pasting • Use of templates that don’t correspond with the patient’s condition • Metadata Metadata • • • • • • Logon and logoff times What was reviewed when How long records were reviewed Changes made to the record- where and when Late entries Deleted Entries Audit Trail Example Event ID: 2055456 Userld JMD UserName Date/Time Jane Good 12/11/2015 13:26 Action CREATE Location 60F CDS Yes Event ID: 2055457 Userld JMD UserName Date/Time Jane Good 12/12/2015 02:04 Action LOCK Location 60F CDS No Event ID: 2055460 Userld SGL UserName Date/Time Sheila Lack 12/12/2015 5:24 Action READ Location 52L CDS No Event ID: 2055525 Userld JMD UserName Date/Time Jane Good 12/12/2015 12:26 Action MODIFY Location 60F CDS No Event ID: 2056001 Userld SGL UserName Date/Time Sheila Lack 12/13/2015 11:01 Action DELETE Location 52L CDS No Takeaways for EHR use • Don’t let the convenience get the best of you • Avoid cutting and pasting • Pay attention to the information auto-filled by the computer to avoid errors • Focus on the patient in the exam room, and double-check the record after • Have a formula or standard for the incorporation of old paper records into the EHR. • Source: Avoiding Malpractice Dangers With EHRs, Karam, Lawrence, M., Podiatry Today , Volume 29 - Issue 1 - January 2016 Your Next Patient Might be a Plaintiff | Saturday, February 4, 2017| Hartford, CT Eugene A. Cooney Leah Nollinberger Cooney, Scully and Dowling Hartford, Connecticut 06106 © 2014 CMIC. All rights reserved. Confidential and proprietary. Common Liability Themes • • • • • • Follow-up Testing Incidental Findings Medication Reconciliation Bad Handoffs Disclosure Gone Wrong Privacy Breach Follow-Up Testing Example 1: The patient skips an appointment • A follow-up test (labs, imaging, colonoscopy) is recommended within three months. • Clinician gets initial information but instructs patient to return in one month to handle followup. • The patient “no shows” the follow-up appointment. • Patient returns a year later, or never comes back. Follow-Up Testing Remediation: Better Tracking • Functionality in your EMR, which supports tracking outstanding tests/screenings. • An internal tickler system. • “No-show” letters which plainly list outstanding tests. Incidental Findings Example 1: No clear delineation of role to handle incidental finding • An imaging study is ordered to rule out a lung PE following bariatric surgery. • Incidental lung nodule is noted by radiologist in body of a large impression. • Resident, fellow, surgeon and PCP only informed by this reference in the body. • Even if saw reference, each assumed someone else would tell the patient. • No one picks up the phone. Incidental Findings Remediation: Inform Patient and Schedule Tests Promptly • If the finding is serious enough, you can’t assume that someone else took care of it. • If you are not the PCP, it might not be your role to coordinate the test, BUT – Document contact with patient. – Document contact with PCP. – Make sure finding is highlighted. Medication Reconciliation Example 1: Complex patients seeing multiple providers and in-patient admissions. • A patient with host of co-morbidities, seeing PCP and several specialists. • An in-patient admission for a surgical procedure. • Medications are changed during in-patient. • Following surgery, patient has a follow-up visit with PCP and brings in hand several additional prescriptions. Medication Reconciliation Remediation: Heightened Awareness Following Discharge • EMR tools • If your practice involves transitions of care, from sending or receiving end, think about how you can get clearer about medication changes. • Pharmacy? Bad Handoffs Example 1: Covering physician takes a telephone call for his surgical practice relative to an off hours report of fever in post-operative surgical patient. • Covering physician keeps notebook, forgets to enter his note from the encounter into the EHR. • No formal record of the telephone encounter, what the patient reported, what was recommended. • Practice has no idea what happened and how it may impact decision making. • Handoffs happen internally and externally Bad Handoffs Remediation: Structured Hand-off • Best practice is template built into EMR for handoff in variety of situations. • Standardizing the expectations of handoff • Period of Direct Communication • Involve Patient in the Hand-Off if possible. Privacy Breach Examples: • Physician tells patient she needs to be tested for a disease in a crowded waiting room. • Medical Assistant accesses her neighbor’s records (a patient in the practice) and spreads gossip about her STDs on Facebook. • Physician stores unencrypted laptop in the trunk of his car. While out to dinner, laptop stolen. • EMR company demos software using live data, posts to Internet. Privacy Breach Remediation: • HIPAA Policies and Training need to be documented. • Social networking policies. • If it’s not encrypted, you are probably in breach. • Avoid consumer email accounts. • Where’s the BAA? Disclosure Gone Wrong Example 1: How Not to Handle a Disclosure and Apology • During the disclosure and apology, the nature of the missed finding is provided to the plaintiffs attorney. The hospital provides a full set of medical records. • After apologizing, the attending doctor then goes on to point out that other physicians inside and outside the facility also missed the finding. Disclosure Gone Wrong Example 1: How Not to Handle a Disclosure and Apology • The family takes the information and records, and brings it to a medical malpractice plaintiffs attorney who now brings suit against everyone. • Later during depositions the family expressed that they were immediately placed on the defensive by physician’s comments about everybody else who was to blame. • The way it was handled, the disclosure actually provoked suit! Disclosure Gone Wrong Example 2: How Not to Handle a Disclosure and Apology • Surgeon performs a spinal fusion at the wrong level. He had the assistance of a radiology tech who placed the marker on the intraoperative film study. • When meeting with family, he disclosed the procedure was at the wrong level, but adds, “because Radiology screwed up the interpretation of the film and I was misled.” Disclosure Gone Wrong Example 2: How Not to Handle a Disclosure and Apology • The family becomes infuriated, as he never told them he would be relying on a radiology tech to operate at the proper level. • In fact, this was not truthful as the surgeon also viewed the films and agreed to the placement of the marker. • When the family filed suit, it was against the surgeon only, as they felt he breached their trust. Disclosure Do’s Disclosure Do Not’s • Be Prepared: Whenever possible, speak to your risk manager or insurer BEFORE you have your disclosure discussion • Be Prepared: Anticipate the difficult questions and have answers ready in your mind • Limit your statements to what is known, not what you suspect. Time may prove you wrong! • Express empathy & sympathy for what they are going through • Do NOT “wing it”. Patients are hanging on your every word, you’ll make a mistake • Do NOT make an admission of wrong doing unless you are prepared to settle a claim • Do NOT offer compensation • Do NOT disclose to a plaintiff attorney • Do NOT be defensive • Do NOT blame someone else