AI Article Synopsis

  • The analysis of malpractice claims offers insights into patient mortality and morbidity, revealing injury patterns and risk factors that can inform risk management.
  • Data from 607 closed anesthesia claims highlighted that the most common injuries included teeth damage, death, and nerve damage, with obesity being a key contributing factor.
  • Smaller hospitals experienced higher injury-to-claim rates despite fewer claims, indicating a need for further research on how patient comorbidities affect anesthesia outcomes.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The analysis of malpractice claims can provide risk managers with a detailed view of patient mortality and morbidity. The data comes from many institutions, encompasses a diverse group of practitioners and practice settings, and contains detailed clinical information. Analysis can help identify patterns of injury, risk factors, and rare and sentinel events.

Methods: We examined most recent anesthesia closed claims data collected by The Doctors Company, a large national malpractice insurer. We analyzed data from claims closed between 2007 and 2012. Each claim underwent a review by physician and nurse experts, and was then coded using the Comprehensive Risk Intelligence Tool. Injury distribution and association between the injury and patient comorbidity were also examined.

Results: A total of 607 claims were analyzed. Most frequent injuries were teeth damage (20.8%), death (18.3%), nerve damage (13.5%), organ damage (12.7%), pain (10.9%), and arrest (10.7%). Obesity was most frequently identified as a contributing factor leading to a claim. Injury-to-claim rates were highest in hospitals with fewer than 100 beds, while ambulatory surgery centers had the lowest death-to-claim rate (12%). Average indemnity for an anesthesia claim was $309 066, compared to $291 000 for all physician specialties.

Conclusions: The most frequent claims were death and nerve damage when teeth damage was excluded. Obesity impacted anesthesia outcomes more frequently than did other comorbidities. Although there were fewer claims from the smaller hospitals, those claims had higher rates of mortality and nerve damage compared to larger-size hospitals. Further analysis is needed to evaluate these trends as well as impact of specific patient comorbidities on anesthesia outcomes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jhrm.21156DOI Listing

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