A Nameless Faceless Killer

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Birdstrike

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1) A 40-year-old female sees her family physician for burning chest pain after she eats hot peppers. She had it only once while exercising. Her family physician sends her to the emergency department and she gets admitted for chest pain. Rather than going home with treatment for her GERD, she ends up dead. This never should have happened, but the family never learns what really killed her.

2) A 33-year-old father of 3 dies on a hospice ward, bloated with steroids, on tube feeds with a tracheostomy. He was stricken down too young, his family is told, by a rare form of brain cancer. It was an unlucky fluke, they are told, but that is not the only reason.

3) A 7-year-old boy dies in the Pediatric ICU. His family is stunned, shocked and devastated. How could this have happened? The family is told he died from an ingrown toe-nail infection that spread to his blood stream and caused a severe form of sepsis. “It could happen to any of us.” They do not know that the breeding of this superbug was fed by a nameless killer.

4) A 16-year-old girl is on a CT scan table nervously giggling. Fifteen minutes later, she goes into cardiac arrest. A short time later, a solemn nurse informs her family that the patient has died from an allergic reaction. But her cause of death is something more insidious.

Each of these patients had a different doctor, but a similar contaminant. Much like a baseball slugger whose home run swing at a 100 mph fastball is thwarted when a camera flash from his biggest fan causes him to blink; the doctors were thrown off of their game. The culprit: Defensive Medicine.

In each case presented, the doctor had a very rational fear of being sued for either making a mistake or even for doing everything right. During the last moment in the rapid-fire decision-making process, each doctor had a “flash in the eye.” In each case, the result was a swing and a miss. Over and over, and over again in hospital wards, emergency departments, operating rooms, and doctors’ offices in America doctors are being told they must rule out every possibility or be sued. The ones who suffer are the patients, often tragically so. Why? Rather than trusting their instincts, the treating physicians are instead asking themselves, “What could a medical malpractice attorney possibly say I should have done?” While this may seem like a dangerous way to practice medicine, often the doctors have very little choice but to do so. Consider the stories behind the cases presented above:


Case 1 - Susan, the 40-year-old stay-at-home mom, never wanted to go to the hospital. She just wanted something for her heartburn. Neither her family doctor, the emergency physician, nor the cardiologist really thought she was having a heart attack. In fact, they knew that a heart attack was an unlikely possibility. But an unlikely possibility still makes the heart attack possible. So each doctor, in succession, decided just not to take a chance. If Susan just happened to have a heart attack, the medical malpractice attorney could easily have persuaded a jury that Susan’s chest pain was misdiagnosed. To prevent such accusations, Susan went to the hospital, got admitted for “non-specific” EKG changes, had an “equivocal” stress test, and then had a coronary catheterization which perforated one of the arteries in her heart and killed her.

Diagnosis: Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease
Cause of Death: Defensive Medicine

Case 2 – Jack the 33-year-old dentist and father of three, fell and bumped his head when he was 13. He “felt a little funny” but he never lost consciousness. He had a normal neurologic exam. He had no confusion, nausea or vomiting. The ER doctor ordered a CT scan. The radiation damaged the DNA in Jack’s brain and 20 years later the mutated DNA developed into an untreatable glioma. Why did the doctor order the CT scan? He had a very rational fear of being sued. If Jack the 13-year-old was one of the small percentage of children who suffered bleeding inside the brain from his head injury, a medical malpractice attorney would easily be able to persuade a jury that the ER doctor was negligent for not performing a CT scan of Jack’s head. The ER doctor was told he should not practice medicine out of fear, but he had a colleague that was viciously attacked in a medical malpractice case where he did everything he was supposed to do, yet his colleague lost a multimillion dollar judgment. The doctor was afraid.

Diagnosis: Stage IV glioma
Cause of death: Defensive Medicine

Case 3 – Billy the 7-year-old boy had sore throat. His doctor checked him for strep. The screen and culture were negative. Just at that moment, the doctor hesitates. He remembers a colleague and friend who did not give antibiotics to a young girl with a sore throat and a negative strep test. The girl was one of a few patients who develop strep despite a negative screen. The patient’s pharyngitis worsened and she developed post-strep rheumatic fever. She had rare and terrible complications. Her doctor had done everything right, but there was a long and painful lawsuit. The lawyers argued that if he suspected strep he should have started antibiotics. Shockingly, and unjustly, this doctor lost the case. The little girl’s outcome was just so sad and unfortunate that the jury felt they “had to give the family something.” He recalls that his doctor friend was left financially and emotionally devastated. Billy’s doctor decides not to risk the same fate and prescribes Billy an antibiotic. The antibiotic does nothing for Billy’s viral pharyngitis, but it does kill off his healthy bacterial flora and allows overgrowth of antibiotic resistant organisms, which infect his ingrown toe nail, causing cellulitis, bacteremia, sepsis, and death.

Diagnosis: Sepsis due to multiple drug-resistant organisms
Cause of death: Defensive Medicine

Case 4 – Julie the 16-year-old cheerleader died from an anaphylactic reaction to CT contrast, from a CT scan she didn’t need. From his clinical experience treating thousands of patients, the doctor knew in his gut that Julie didn’t have appendicitis. He knew that her elevated WBC count and increase in bands doesn’t always mean there is a serious bacterial infection, because he’s seen hundreds of patients with similar presentations whose pain goes away the following day. Everything else about Julie screamed, “No appendicitis!” The doctor was using his clinical judgment as he was taught to do. But he second guessed himself and thought, “A jury of non-medical people would never understand that.” So the doctor ordered the CT scan so that he would be able to defend himself if he was later sued. The voice in his head tells him, “I know she doesn’t have appendicitis, but with a white count of 14? Right lower quadrant pain? The lawyers would have a field day with that.” Like one of Pavlov’s dogs, he did what he was trained to do, not by his physician teachers, not by his medical textbooks, but by lawsuit verdicts.

Diagnosis: Enteritis and anaphylactic reaction to intravenous dye
Cause of death: Defensive Medicine

None of the death certificates in these cases list “Fear of Being Sued” as the cause of death. Yet in each case, defensive medicine was a contributing cause to the patient’s deaths. The effect of our medical tort system has upon doctors’ thought processes afflicts patients like any other disease. Defensive medicine doesn’t just cost our society a lot of money. It can also cost our patients their lives. However, the adverse clinical effects of defensive medicine often go unnoticed or unreported. They are not tracked by the CDC. They do not generate the heart wrenching sympathy and funding to fight “Breast Cancer” or “AIDS”. If anything, the media encourages doctors to practice defensive medicine by publishing stories about patients with obscure presentations of diseases who die because doctors “just didn’t do enough.”

Attorneys may argue that “defensive medicine” is irrelevant, that it is good for patients, or that it is proof that our legal system pressures doctors to be more “careful”. Apparently, some doctors seem to agree. Dr. Sanjay Gupta wrote an editorial very recently seeming to imply that, that doctors just need to “be reminded that more is not always better,” as if doctors can and should simply swat away thoughts of lawsuit avoidance like an annoying fly on their shoulder. Dr. Gupta’s article appears to imply that doctors are at fault for trying to avoid lawsuits and that doctors are violating their oath to “do no harm” by ordering more tests to avoid lawsuits. His logic is tragically wrong.

Most laypeople just don’t know what it’s like to get sued for simply doing their job (let alone making a mistake) or how much a constant threat of being sued will change one’s behavior. The average grocery bagger doesn’t have to contemplate a year’s long trial and eventual 6 million dollar lawsuit if they bag a customer’s eggs on the bottom of the bag. I am certain that if they did, they would change their grocery-bagging practice patterns in a way that no lecture from their store manager could reverse. A school teacher does not have to obsess about spending years in court, with his name and reputation on the line for a lesson plan that had an unexpectedly poor outcome. If they did, they would certainly alter their teaching practices to avoid being sued again.

Most laypeople also do not appreciate how pervasive, omnipresent and ingrained lawsuit avoidance has become in the mind of the American physician. Doctors are expected to be “more careful” when they are in doubt, because if they do less, and a bad outcome occurs, they may be legally liable. Few family members ask if a doctor did “too much” after a family member has died during medical treatment.

As long as “defensive medicine” and “tort reform” remain a tug-of-war between doctors and lawyers, patients will continue having adverse consequences and no meaningful change will occur. Doctors will always feel there are being persecuted for “just doing their job” and feel forced to protect themselves legally in the only ways they know how … by doing “more”. Attorneys will likely always feel that the cases they are pursuing all represent the negligence of dangerous doctors who didn’t do enough. This tug of war is tired, old and unproductive.

Our medical malpractice system has clouded the judgment of many physicians and it needs to be fixed for the health of our patients. When we encourage doctors to just “snap out of it” and “stop worrying about being sued” how should we instruct them to avoid being sued for multiple millions of dollars? Until the answer to this question involves something other than “defensive medicine,” over-testing, overtreatment, and overmedication will persist and the cause of death on many death certificates will continue to be inaccurate.

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This author does not divulge protected patient information. Any post that appears to resemble a real patient is by coincidence. This author does not post, has not posted and will not post about real patients. Although these posts may be inspired by the author’s experiences, they are not about real patients, because that would violate patient confidentiality. If you would like to have a patient story published on WhiteCoat’s Call Room, please e-mail WhiteCoat.




http://www.epmonthly.com/whitecoat/2012/08/a-nameless-faceless-killer/
 
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That was rather eye opening for me. Certainly something that needs to be corrected. But how? Take away the right for a patient to seek justice and you let doctors who really did screw up walk away unpunished while a patient is handicapped for life.

That's not ok in my eyes.
 
That was rather eye opening for me. Certainly something that needs to be corrected. But how? Take away the right for a patient to seek justice and you let doctors who really did screw up walk away unpunished while a patient is handicapped for life.

That's not ok in my eyes.


Maaaan.
 
true story from residency (i was involved at the tail end during my IM intern year):

60 y/o woman comes to ED for CP. don't recall RF's but nothing earth-shattering. admitted for a thallium b/c she can't do an EST. since it's a public hospital, she waits 5 days for a thallium. it's negative, but she develops thrombophlebitis from the IV site.

returns next week w/ back pain... osteomyelitis i believe at T11. admitted for IV abx then transferred to rehab. she doesn't speak english well at all, which is too bad b/c...

she developed LE weakness while there. due to reasons i can't explain, no one does anything for days and she's a paraplegic. had surgery but never regained her ability to walk.

(much of this sad story is due to the absurdly awful care a lot of pts get in public hospitals, but the end result is still related to defensive medicine and overtesting)

it's the story i tell when people try to insist they want to be in the hospital.
 
That was rather eye opening for me. Certainly something that needs to be corrected. But how? Take away the right for a patient to seek justice and you let doctors who really did screw up walk away unpunished while a patient is handicapped for life.

That's not ok in my eyes.

None of us, not a single one of us, thinks that actual malpractice should be a complete block. But the point he's trying to make is that each of those cases had something done where the absence of an action wouldn't be malpractice, just an unfortunate outcome. However, people like you argue "right to sue" should be protected at all costs, regardless of how much it costs the system in dollars, or people in bad outcomes.

Think of it this way. If you're driving a car, and through your own action cause a collision that ends up taking away someone's leg, you would be on the hook for some number. But if you were a doctor, doing something to help someone and in the process an unfortunate outcome happened that you were not at fault for and could not likely prevent, you would be on the hook for some number plus millions. Same outcome, just a different dollar sign in the jury's eyes. That is what tort reform should be. Making the same number for the same outcomes while preventing frivolity.
 
That was rather eye opening for me. Certainly something that needs to be corrected. But how? Take away the right for a patient to seek justice and you let doctors who really did screw up walk away unpunished while a patient is handicapped for life.

That's not ok in my eyes.

"justice"? "punish"?

clearly you have little understanding of making decisions w/o complete info and that many bad outcomes are not anyone's fault.
 
You are both making assumptions about my intelligence and doing so wrongly.

I never said there was not an issue. In fact, I said, and I quote, "There is certainly a problem that needs to be corrected, but how?" I then proceeded to give a basic fundamental human right that I believe should be protected while the real issue at hand should be corrected.

Justice: it's not just for doctors.

I believe that bad outcomes do not always equate to malpractice. Sometimes there is just nothing a doctor can do. I believe a doctor should not be punished in those circumstances. Then there are gray areas where a doctor uses his best judgment and something goes wrong. The doctor had no ill intent and did what he believed to be right, but something bad happened anyway and a patient pays the price. In those instances, I really have no suggestion for what should be done. It's a lose-lose either way. And then, finally, we have those rare moments where a patient is injured or befallen ill due to the laziness or negligence or even the incompetence of a doctor. In those situations, I believe the victim deserves to see justice done.

Any thoughts on what I just said? Keep your comments civil and realize that I am young and not rocksteady on my views of this issue. My opinions are open to being changed by means of logic and reason.
 
You are both making assumptions about my intelligence and doing so wrongly.

I never said there was not an issue. In fact, I said, and I quote, "There is certainly a problem that needs to be corrected, but how?" I then proceeded to give a basic fundamental human right that I believe should be protected while the real issue at hand should be corrected.

Justice: it's not just for doctors.

I believe that bad outcomes do not always equate to malpractice. Sometimes there is just nothing a doctor can do. I believe a doctor should not be punished in those circumstances. Then there are gray areas where a doctor uses his best judgment and something goes wrong. The doctor had no ill intent and did what he believed to be right, but something bad happened anyway and a patient pays the price. In those instances, I really have no suggestion for what should be done. It's a lose-lose either way. And then, finally, we have those rare moments where a patient is injured or befallen ill due to the laziness or negligence or even the incompetence of a doctor. In those situations, I believe the victim deserves to see justice done.

Any thoughts on what I just said? Keep your comments civil and realize that I am young and not rocksteady on my views of this issue. My opinions are open to being changed by means of logic and reason.

Ok, so, at the risk of coming across as flippant, I'd like to start by stating that this issue has been discussed multiple times in this forum, and searching for "medical malpractice" will likely give you most of them, with all the various points/counterpoints.

That being said, it boils down to this:

The legal definition of medical malpractice is "a dereliction of duty that directly causes damages." In order for malpractice to be real, you need to have a duty (typically construed as a patient-physician relationship) of which you were negligent and that such negligence is the proximate cause of some damage.

Note, there is no part of the definition that encompasses bad outcomes. We all work in a high-risk specialty, and frequently have to make decisions based on limited data that are not always available at the time we see a patient... but can be Monday-morning quarterbacked several days later.

However, the legal profession has hijacked malpractice to include "bad outcomes" as part of malpractice; arguing that a "bad outcome" must be the result of some type of negligence. This is simply not true. For example - one of my friends is a trauma surgeon, and he has been sued for causing "undue hardship" to a patient with a chronic abdominal wound that will not heal, and frequently lands the patient in the hospital for an ever-expanding coctail of antibiotics. Now, this wound came from an Ex Lap that was performed due to penetrating abdominal trauma that injured the IVC and bowel. The patient is alive because of this surgery, but because the outcome wasn't "perfect," he has sued my friend for performing his lifesaving surgery.

<facepalm>

Now, I don't disagree with the gist of your original post; but I agree with above in that you may have worded it somewhat antagonistically (and I'll give you the benefit of the doubt that it was unintentional). True negligence should have some outlet for legal action... however, many suits that are brought are not of this ilk. And, if they do go in front of a jury, it's not a jury of our peers as protected by the Constitution. Medicine is a profession which also has a very specific definition, not just referring to a career or line of work. A profession is a vocation that has a very specialized and specific body of knowledge, and is expected to police itself as a result, as expecting others outside the profession to truly comprehend it has historically (going back hundreds of years to before this country was even founded) been considered inadequate.

So, my peers are physicians, or other professionals in similar fields, with similar high-level education. My jury would not be that... as many have said, "a jury is 12 people not smart enough to get out of jury duty." I'm not avocating a return to the Ecclesiastical Courts, but the idea of having physicians on the jury would be nice. At the very least, requiring all malpractice suits to be cleared by a panel of physicians should be done.

I'd get into the concept of "non-economical damages" as "justice," but I have patients to see & I'll leave it to others.

Cheers!
-d
 
That was an enlightening post that eloquent put together my thoughts and beliefs to a 'T'.

I see where my misuse of the word "justice" caused our divide. I'm glad we patched that up.

Gracias, amigo.
 
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Great post.

The solution is a "no-fault" system that compensates patients who have bad outcomes rather than an adversarial solution.

How would such a system be funded? Who would decide which bad outcomes warranted compensation (e.g., patient presents with back pain and winds up having metastatic cancer that takes their life - a bad outcome to be sure, but not unexpected)?
 
How would such a system be funded? Who would decide which bad outcomes warranted compensation (e.g., patient presents with back pain and winds up having metastatic cancer that takes their life - a bad outcome to be sure, but not unexpected)?

Metastatic cancer is expected?
Metastatic cancer can have a good outcome?

Help me out here, what should happen there?
 
Metastatic cancer is expected?
Metastatic cancer can have a good outcome?

Help me out here, what should happen there?

No I was saying the death was expected from the metastatic cancer and that it is an expected bad outcome-thus no one is at fault and no one should be compensated.
 
Where did the post go?
 
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Thanks to KevinMD.com for re-posting "A Nameless Faceless Killer" (albeit under a new title) which was first posted right here and simultaneously by Whitecoat's Call Room (epmonthly.com/whitecoat) and vetted by you SDNers. It is now being read tens of thousands more times.

Thanks for reading, and please remember on November 6th to vote for the candidate most committed to reforming our unjust and dangerous medical malpractice system.

http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2012/10/death-defensive-medicine.html

Birdstrike, I am unfortunately unable to vote for that person...I don't know your name
 
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