310 likes | 332 Views
Explore evolving trends in disclosing medical errors post-2008, including physician attitudes, patient expectations, and legal standards in North America. Discover the impact on patient safety, malpractice, and the shift towards a culture of transparency.
E N D
Disclosing Medical Errors: 2008 and Beyond Wendy Levinson, MD Professor of Medicine University of Toronto
Goals • To describe physicians’ attitudes and experience re disclosure. • To describe changing regulatory and legal environment in North America. • To anticipate changes over the next five years.
Patient Attitudes Regarding Disclosure of Errors • Want full information about error: What happened? How? Consequences and management? • Prevention of future errors • Apology • Fear professionals hiding information JAMA 2003
Physician Attitudes in US & Canada • Survey of 4,500 physicians; 63% response • Canada national sample; US Washington and Missouri • Content a) attitudes b) sample scenarios c) Impact of errors on physicians Arch Intern Med 2006
What Would They Disclose? • 42% use the word “error”; 56% “adverse event” • 50% provide specific details (13% only if asked) • 61% express regret; 31% apologize • Few describe future error prevention plans • Less likely to disclose information if error is not apparent
Disclosure Experiences of Physicians • 58% had disclosed a serious error • 85% satisfied with most recent disclosure conversation • 74% reported a positive effect on the relationship
Criteria for Judging Disclosure • Explanation of medical facts • Honesty and truthfulness • Empathy • Apology • Prevention of future errors JAMA 2003
Wrong Side Breast Surgery ● Mrs. Jones is a 48 year old woman on which you performed a left lumpectomy and axillary dissection for a malignant lesion ● The final pathology specimen is benign. You realize that you made a mistake labeling the biopsy specimens and operated on the wrong breast ● You are about to meet with Mrs. Jones two weeks post-operative
Surgeons scores on individual items Surgery 2005
Bottom Line in 2006 • Physicians still uncertain of how open to be • Worried about malpractice • Don’t have specific training • High degree in interest in disclosure
Development of Standards • 2001: Joint Commission standard on disclosure of “unanticipated outcomes” • 2006: Harvard Hospitals publish “When Things Go Wrong” • 2006: NQF Safe Practice NEJM 2007
Key Elements of the Safe PracticeContent to be disclosed to patient • Provide facts about the event • Presence of error or system failure, if known • Results of event analysis to support informed decision making by the patient • Express regret for unanticipated outcome • Give formal apology if unanticipated outcome caused by error or system failure
Key Elements of the Safe PracticeInstitutional requirements • Integrate disclosure, patient-safety, and risk management activities • Establish disclosure support system • Disclosure education • Ensure disclosure coaching is available • Provide emotional support for health care workers, administrators, patients, and families • Use performance-improvement tools to track and enhance disclosure
Why is Safe Practice a Big Step Forward? • Frames disclosure as a safety and improvement issue • Recognizes challenging conversation and provides support • Includes expression of apology • Encourages performance improvement and tracking
Legal Context • Standards for disclosure vs. concern about increase in malpractice • Legal system designed to assign fault
“Apology Laws” • 35 states have “Apology Laws” • 26 protect expression of remorse • 6 remorse plus explanation • 4 disclosure plus apology (includes admission of fault) • 9 states have laws that mandate disclosure of serious unanticipated outcomes Impact on malpractice? T. Gallagher, personal communication
Prominent Disclosure Programs • VA (Lexington) • U of Michigan – reported decrease in claims and costs • COPIC in Colorado
Key Elements for COPIC’s 3R’s Program Key Features: • Disclosure linked to no-fault compensation for patient’s out-of-pocket expenses (up to $30,000) • Disclosure training for physicians • Exclusion criteria: death, clear negligence, attorney involvement, complaint to state board, written demand for payment • Disclosure coaching for physician and case management for patient provided by 3R’s administrators • Payments not reportable to National Practitioner Data Bank
Summary • Evolving legal environment. • Experiments report no impact or a decrease in malpractice claims and costs. • Very little evaluation of these new disclosure programs.
2008 and Beyond • Training programs for physicians and other health professionals • Standardized patients for practice and feedback
2008 and Beyond 2. Institutional supports as outlined in the “Safe Practice”
2008 and Beyond 3. Evidence of Impact • Patient safety improvements • Process of care • Patient satisfaction and trust • Malpractice
2008 and Beyond 4. Change in culture over time from blame and shame to transparency and quality improvement
References • Gallagher TH, Studdert D,Levinson W. Disclosing harmful medical errors to patients: recent developments and future direction. N Engl J Med. 2007 356 (26): 2713-2719. • Gallagher TH, Waterman MD, Garbutt JM, Krygiel JM, Chan DK, Dunagan WC, Fraser VJ,Levinson W. United States and Canadian physician’s attitudes and experiences regarding disclosing errors to patients. Arch Intern Med, August 2006;166:1605-11. • Gallagher TH, Waterman A, Weikal R, Flum D,Levinson W, Fraser V, Waterman B. Choosing your words carefully: How physicians would disclose harmful medical errors to patients. Arch of Intern Med 2006; 166(15):1585-93. • Chan DK, Gallagher TH, Reznick R,Levinson W. How surgeons disclose medical errors to patients: a study using standardized patients. Surgery 2005;138(5):851-58. • Gallagher T, Waterman AD, Ebers AG, Fraser V,Levinson W. Patients’ and Physicians’ Attitudes Regarding the Disclosure of Medical Errors. JAMA 2003;289(8):1001-07.