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To: Brumar89 who wrote (508800)8/29/2009 4:53:21 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1576663
 
Malpractice - Medical Malpractice Statistics

By Michael Russell

In this article we're going to go over some very alarming statistics regarding the ever increasing problem of medical malpractice.

There is a very good reason that they call lawyers ambulance chasers. The majority of them specialize in what is known as medical malpractice suits. The rate at which these suits are increasing each year is staggering. To get a good understanding of just how serious this problem actually is, we need to look at some numbers.

Of all the malpractice trials in the United States last year, nearly 50% of them were against surgeons and other doctors representing only 75 of the largest counties in the United States. This is according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, which is a very good source. This shows that the main problem of these suits is in the most densely populated areas of the country which is where the most income is generated. This can't be a coincidence that the more money there is to be made from these suits the more lawsuits there will be.

Another 33% of the malpractice trials in the United States last year was against non surgical physicians in the 75 largest counties in the country. Adding these two numbers together you get 83% of all medical malpractice suits in the United States last year was against only 75 counties. There are literally thousands of counties in the United States.

Of all the cases that went to trial only 27% of them were won by the plaintiffs in these 75 counties. This is a large indication that most of these malpractice suits are not legit, otherwise there would be more of these cases won.

Close to 19,000 medical malpractice payment reports were made in the US last year according to the Annual Report, National Practitioner Data Bank, US DHHS. This is an absolutely staggering number.

It is estimated that about 25% of all the doctors in the United States get sued on an annual basis. This means that if you are a doctor, especially if you are a surgeon, you have a one in four chance of being hit with a lawsuit each year you are in practice. Makes you wonder why anyone would want to be a doctor in this country.

It is also estimated that between 50 and 65% of all doctors in the United States are sued at least once in their career. That gives you less than a 50% chance of getting through your career without an incident.

What is even more staggering is that of all the malpractice payment reports made world wide, over 80% of those payments were made by United States doctors with the whole rest of the world accounting for just 20% of all payments made for malpractice.

Even interns are not immune from this problem as over 1500 malpractice suits were filed against interns last year alone.

There is no question that these statistics point to an alarming and growing problem in the United States. Unless measures are taken to prevent fraudulent lawsuits, which many of these are, the problem is only going to get worse.

ezinearticles.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (508800)8/29/2009 4:58:26 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1576663
 
Wellpoint targets botched surgeries

The [American] health insurance company Wellpoint has announced a new strategy for discouraging medical errors. It says it will no longer reimburse hospitals for botched operations. Ashley Milne-Tyte reports.

marketplace.publicradio.org



To: Brumar89 who wrote (508800)8/29/2009 5:03:00 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1576663
 
New documentary exposes horrors of botched plastic surgery

BY ELOISE PARKER

Thursday, July 31st 2008, 4:00 AM


The new documentary 'America the Beautiful' looks at the pitfalls of plastic surgery.

TV reporter Mary Nissenson before her operation ...

... and after.
The average cost of cosmetic surgery is from $2,000 to $8,000. But the cost of having something go wrong during that procedure is immeasurable.

While the number of people opting to go under the knife annually is on the rise, so are the potentially disastrous results.

Both issues are major themes in the new documentary, "America the Beautiful," which opens in theaters Friday and exposes tales of doctors who call themselves plastic surgeons after taking short courses in which their only experience may be practicing procedures on tomatoes.

Former "Today" show guest host Mary Nissenson had a brow-lift at 42 and, 12 years later, is still in agony.

"This man took my entire face off," explains Nissenson in the film, who says she opted for a surgeon with a "tremendous reputation."

"From the second I opened my eyes, the agony was so extreme, so excruciating. I wanted to kill myself that second," she says flatly.

Nissenson's still-constant pain was caused by a rare condition called reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD), which can occur when nerves are damaged.

It spelled the end of her TV career and the end of her marriage, left her homebound and financially burdened with pain-medication costs for life.

"I'm completely uninsurable," explains Nissenson.

In New York state, thousands of complaints are filed every year with medical malpractice lawyers, and a shocking proportion relate to cosmetic procedures.

"In 2007, we received nearly 2,000 inquiries for medical malpractice cases and half of them were cosmetic-surgery related," says medical malpractice attorney Theodore Oshman, of the New York-based Oshman & Mirisola, LLP.

"Cosmetic surgery is the only area where I have seen an increase in the number of cases," he adds. "The single most common one is breast implant cases. Typically, the implant was not placed properly. The implants may be lopsided, infection may have developed. The next two areas deal with tummy tucks and rhinoplasty. With the tummy tucks, the most common complaint is infection and colloidal scarring."

When Marion, 30, whose name has been changed, opted to get breast implants last year, she chose a surgeon recommended to her by three people she knew. "He'd even been interviewed on television. ... He said 'It's simple, there'll be no scarring, you're healthy, I do this a million times a day,'" says the New Jersey native.

"During the recovery process, my areolas started detaching," explains Marion. "I've basically lost feeling in my breasts around the areola."

Read more: nydailynews.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (508800)8/29/2009 5:07:45 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1576663
 
Wall of Silence: The Untold Story of the Medical Mistakes That Kill and Injure Millions of Americans

Rosemary Gibson, Janardan Prasad Singh

The book is an eye-opening read both for the general public and for health care professionals.

"A call to arms for families who have had loved ones disabled or dying in the pursuit of medical treatment... Well written and researched... highlights this timely topic in a unique way that will evoke the reader's own experience." --Former First Lady Rosalyn Carter

Medical mistakes occur with alarming frequency in this country. Nightly newscasts and daily newspapers tell of botched surgeries, mistaken patient identities, careless overdoses, and neglected diagnoses. You may have dismissed these stories as unfortunate mistakes, misunderstandings, or just isolated incidents with the occasional bad doctor." Wall of Silence reveals that these medical mistakes are not rare incidents.

In fact, the real-life stories in this book show that medical mistakes are increasing in frequency - and worse, that the system is designed more to cover up these errors than prevent them.

"Health consultant Gibson and economist Singh describe how medical mistakes, lax procedures, and other incompetencies endanger and harm patients in the U.S. health care system. Throughout, they attempt to personalize the topic by describing the stories of individuals who have been caused harm through medical mistakes. They demand that these problems be seen as both organizational and policy problems." - Book News

This book written for a general audience of health care consumers provides a popular treatment of the disturbing reality that medical errors occur with alarming frequency, often with lethal results. One study estimated that 100,000 Americans die each year of preventable medical mistakes -- equivalent to a 747 plane crash daily.

Media reports of botched surgeries, medication mixups, and tragic misdiagnoses are increasingly in the public eye.<b/> Wall of Silence argues that these errors are becoming increasingly common as medical care becomes more complex, with miscommunication and systemic problems at the root of many failures.

Gibson and Singh argues that the health care system has an inherent bias to cover up errors -- in effect allowing and even encouraging doctors to bury their mistakes.

The authors put a human face on the statistics by sharing disturbing stories that will make you think twice next time you need a "routine procedure" or short hospital stay. They give tips on things you can do to avoid becoming a statistic. But throughout the book it is clear that the authors place the blame where it should rest most -- with the administrators and system designers who have failed to design the health care system for safety in the same way we have demanded safety in the aviation industry.

If you are interested in policy or books about health care reform, please see our up-to-date collection here: Politics, Policy & Reform.

pohly.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (508800)8/29/2009 5:17:32 PM
From: tejek1 Recommendation  Respond to of 1576663
 
National Medical Malpractice Facts & Statistics

Interesting Medical Malpractice Facts & Statistics

1. Fewer than one-half of 1% of the nation’s doctors face any serious state sanctions each year. 2,696 total serious disciplinary actions a year, the number state medical boards took in 1999, is a pittance compared to the volume of injury and death of patients caused by negligence of doctors. A recent study by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences estimated that as many as 98,000 patients may be killed each year in hospitals alone as a result of medical errors. Earlier studies also found that this was a serious national problem.

2. Harvard researchers found that 1% of a representative sample of patients treated in New York state hospitals in 1984 were injured, and one-quarter of those died, because of medical negligence.Nationwide, that would have translated into 234,000 injuries and 80,000 deaths in 1988 from negligence in American hospitals. Most of this involves physicians. There is no clear evidence that there has been significant improvement since then.

3. A similar study conducted in California in 1974 found that 0.8% of hospital patients had either been injured by negligence in the hospital or had been hospitalized because of negligent care. Extrapolation of those findings would have yielded an estimate of 249,000 injuries and deaths from negligent medical practice in 1988.

4. In 1976 the HEW Malpractice Commission estimated similarly that one-half of 1% of all patients entering hospitals are injured there due to negligence. That estimate would have indicated 156,000 injuries and deaths resulting from doctor negligence in 1988.

5. Expanding these estimates to include general medical practice outside of a hospital, the potential abuse by physicians is even greater. An in-depth interview with 53 family physicians revealed that 47% of the doctors recalled a case in which the patient died due to physician error. Only four of the total reported errors led to malpractice suits, and none of these errors resulted in an action by a peer review organization.

6. Medical students at SUNY-Buffalo were asked to recall incidents during their clinical training that raised ethical concerns. More than 200 students responded (40% of total sample); the majority of instances they reported (60%) did not in the researchers’ opinions threaten the patient’s life, health or welfare. This, however, implies that potentially 40% did.

7. It is not unreasonable to estimate that at least 1 percent of doctors in this country deserve some serious disciplinary action each year. This would amount to 7,703 physicians being disciplined each year, a number that, unfortunately far exceeds the actual number of physicians disciplined.

8. Sexual abuse of or sexual misconduct with a patient is also a serious issue. six to ten percent of psychiatrists surveyed confessed to having engaged in sexual contact with a patient and in a longitudinal study.

9. Two studies surveyed residents to determine the incidence of substance use. Recent alcohol use was extremely high in both groups (87% within the last year for emergency medicine residents; 74% within the past 30 days for surgery residents).Additional findings proved extremely disturbing; although the emergency medicine program directors accurately determined the incidence of alcohol use amongst residents, they dramatically underestimated the percent who were actually impaired by the substance as indicated by diagnostic tests (1% estimate impaired vs. 13% diagnosed.)

10. This does not bode well for creating a medical system that prevents mishaps before they occur. And although the surgery residents reported negligible recent cocaine use, when employed, the drug was typically obtained from the hospital supply, indicating a greater ease of access than for the general population.

11. Residents excessive work hours Their longest period without sleep during their first year of residency was an average of 37.6 hours (standard deviation (SD) 9.9). <b/>
· During a typical work week, they worked an average of 56.9 total hours (SD 30.19) in on-call shifts (as distinguished from the total average number of hours they worked per week). An on-call shift is a continuous shift at the hospital allowing for little to no sleep; two on-call shifts are typically scheduled per week.
· 25% reported being on-call in the hospital a total of over 80 hours per week. Surgeons reported the highest average hours of on-call time per week (72.5).
· On a scale of 0 (never) to 4 (almost daily), residents most frequently gave a response of 3 for the amount of sleep deprivation experienced during the first year. Over 10% of residents indicated sleep deprivation was an “almost daily” occurrence.

12. Just 5.1 percent of doctors account for 54.2 percent of the malpractice payouts, according to data from the National Practitioner Data Bank. Of the 35,000 doctors who have had two or more malpractice payouts since 1990, only 7.6 percent of them have been disciplined. And only 13 percent of doctors with five medical malpractice payouts have been disciplined.

13. Between 44,000 and 98,000 people die in hospitals annually each year due to preventable medical errors, the Institute of Medicine found. A survey of doctors and other adults released in December in the New England Journal of Medicine found that more than a third of the doctors said they or their family members had experienced medical errors, most leading to serious health consequences. The cost to society in terms of disability and health care costs, lost income, lost household production and the personal costs of care are estimated to be between $17 billion and $29 billion. In contrast, the medical liability system costs $6.7 billion annually, about what is spent on dog food each year.

14. There is no growth in the number of new medical malpractice claims. According to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the number of new medical malpractice claims declined by about four percent between 1995 and 2000. There were 90,212 claims filed in 1995; 84,741 in 1996; 85,613 in 1997; 86,211 in 1998; 89,311 in 1999; and 86,480 in 2000. While medical costs have increased by 113 percent since 1987, the amount spent on medical malpractice insurance has increased by just 52 percent over that time. Insurance companies are raising rates because of poor returns on their investments, not because of increased litigation or jury awards, according to J. Robert Hunter, director of insurance for the Consumer Federation of America. Recent premiums were artificially low. Malpractice insurance costs amount to only 3.2 percent of the average physician’s revenues. Few medical errors ever result in legal claims. Only one malpractice claim is made for every 7.6 hospital injuries, according to a Harvard study. Further, plaintiffs drop 10 times more claims than they pursue, according to Physician Insurer Association of America data.

minnesotamedicalmalpractice.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (508800)8/29/2009 5:23:22 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1576663
 

Wheelchair bound Jen Halbert attends a rally supporting the passage of health care bills championed by the late Senator Ted Kennedy, Saturday, Aug. 29, 2009 in Times Square in New York. The event near Times Square began shortly after the funeral for U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, and took on the feel of a tribute to the liberal leader.


People attend a rally supporting the passage of health care bills championed by the late Senator Ted Kennedy, Sat. Aug. 29, 2009 in Times Square in New York. The event near Times Square began shortly after the funeral for U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, and took on the feel of a tribute to the liberal leader.

journals.democraticunderground.com