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Reason for Complaints . Failure in delay/wrong Diagnosis 30%Attitude or rudeness of doctor 14%Inadequate/inappropriate treatment 11%Other 10
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2. Complaints
3. Reason for Complaints Failure in delay/wrong Diagnosis 30%
Attitude or rudeness of doctor 14%
Inadequate/inappropriate treatment 11%
Other 10%
Failure/delay to visit 8%
Failure to perform or poor examination 5%
Failure/delay/inappropriate 5%
4. Complaints NHS Complaints process
Local resolution
Healthcare Commission
Ombudsman
5. Why do complaints occur? Error
Grief
Poor understanding/poor explanation
Unrealistic expectations
Failure to appreciate needs/wishes of patient
6. How to answer complaints Look at the complaint letter, clinical note and response.
Consider how you would answer it?
What do you think of the response?
How could it be improved?
7. Response Aim
Resolve concerns
Not about who’s right and who’s wrong
Factual content
Chronology
Findings
Actions
Reasoning
Correct
Tone
Non-confrontational
Sympathetic
Non-defensive
Answer questions raised
8. The complainant is usually far worse off than the doctor
9. Communication
10. GMC - Good Medical Practice 2006 Good Medical Practice (2006)
31 Patients who complain about the care or treatment they have received have a right to expect a prompt, open, constructive and honest response including an explanation and, if appropriate, an apology. You must not allow a patient’s complaint to affect adversely the care or treatment you provide or arrange.
11. Healthcare Commission Complaint
Manner in which it was handled
Option to undertake Independent review
12. Ombudsman Statement
Interview
Can compel individuals to attend
Recommendations
Teeth!
14. Clinical Negligence
15. Clinical Negligence Claims
Sued
Litigation
16. Why do people sue:
to understand the facts
for an apology
to stop it happening again
to get an independent explanation
MONEY
17. GP Claims Medical errors 26%
Failure to diagnose - surgical 21%appendicitis, torsion of testis, fracture
Failure to diagnose - medical 13%meningitis, malaria, diabetes
Management of pregnancy & 13%labour
18. Civil Negligence Duty of care
Breach of duty
Causation
19. Breach of duty Bolam test
Guidelines and protocols
20. Bolam vs Friern Hospital Management Committee[1957]
“A doctor is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper by a responsible body of medical men skilled in that particular art
…a doctor is not negligent if he is acting in accordance with such a practice, merely because there is a body of opinion taking a contrary view.”
McNair, J
21. Breach of duty- Bolitho Bolitho vs City and Hackney Health Authority[1997]
“If in a rare case it can be demonstrated that the professional opinion is not capable of withstanding logical analysis, the judge is entitled to hold that the body of opinion is not reasonable or responsible”
22. Causation Barnett v Chelsea and Kensington Hospital (1969)
Chester v Afshar (2004)
23. How to avoid trouble
24. Areas for Good Practice Communication
Prescribing
Medical records
Training
Equipment
Guidelines/Professional responsibilities
25. Communication
26. Communication Skills Most complainants and claimants mention communication as a problem
Most health professionals think they communicate effectively
27. Communication Skills “Before explanation and advice can be given to a patient, three diagnoses must be made - the diagnosis of the disease, the concept or fears of the disease in the mind of the patient, and of the patient’s capacity to understand the explanation.”
C M FletcherCommunication in Medicine
28. Communication More than 50% of 263 patients who sued their doctor claimed that they were so turned off by the doctor that they wanted to sue him/her before the alleged event occurred.
Mangels Med Econ 1991
29. Communication “He was a cocky b… When my “hypochondria’’ turned out to be a pituitary problem, I couldn’t wait to haul him into court”