Malpractice costs md vs pa vs np

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A Study of Malpractice and Safety Comparing PAs to Physicians and APNs
Jeffrey G. Nicholson, PhD

Nationwide Physician Assistant Malpractice Demonstrates Lower Malpractice Incidence and Average Payment Amounts over a 17 Year Period Compared to MDs and Advance Practice Nurses
The following short article is a summary of a doctoral dissertation comparing the malpractice incidence of PAs to that of physicians and advanced practice nurses. The author examined the first seventeen years of data in the National Practitioner Data Bank(NPDB). The NPDB is reporting system established by Congress in 1991 to track the safety performance of physicians and other health care providers across state lines. Prior to the establishment of the NPDB, there was no national system of vigilance regarding the safety of health care providers. The NPDB requires states, hospitals and federal agencies to report malpractice incidence and amount of payment, professional society actions against its members, medical board licensing actions, Medicare/Medicaid program exclusions and DEA certificate restrictions.

ABSTRACT
As the physician assistant (PA) profession has matured, it has become a significant factor in the nation's health care delivery system. Quality of care stakeholders are increasingly concerned about the medical care being delivered by non-physician providers. Stakeholders include local and national government, health care delivery organizations, health care provider education programs, the health insurance industry, and the general public. Each is affected by the liability of physician assistant medical practice. While PAs are being trained and hired at a rate that assumes adequate competence, quality and safety, current research is absent of a comprehensive analysis of PA malpractice over time.

This study examined 17 years of data related to unsafe medical practice (i.e., practice that
harms patients or the public). The study analyzed and compared a variety of markers (e.g., civil lawsuits and Medicare program exclusions filed with the National Practitioner Data Bank) of safety between physicians, PAs, and advanced practice nurses (APNs). Results of the study indicated that: a) the overall incidence and ratio of malpractice claims per provider was no greater for PAs and APNs than for physicians over a 17 year period; b) the average and median malpractice payments of PAs were less than that of physicians while that of APNs were greater; c) the trend in median payment increases was less for PAs than physicians and APNs, and higher for APNs than physicians; d) PAs did not negate their cost effectiveness through the costs of malpractice; e) the rate of malpractice incidence increased for PAs and APNs over the study period but remained steady for physicians, but was consistent with the change in numbers of active providers; and f) the reasons for disciplinary actions against PAs were similar to that of physicians and APNs. Other study findings included gender differences in both malpractice payment incidence and malpractice payment amount (both greater for female providers) and disparities between states regarding the frequency of disciplinary actions as compared to malpractice incidence.
 
"Other study findings included gender differences in both malpractice payment incidence and malpractice payment amount (both greater for female providers) and disparities between states regarding the frequency of disciplinary actions as compared to malpractice incidence."

That is fascinating to me. I'd love to see more work on this aspect alone.
 
"Other study findings included gender differences in both malpractice payment incidence and malpractice payment amount (both greater for female providers) and disparities between states regarding the frequency of disciplinary actions as compared to malpractice incidence."

That is fascinating to me. I'd love to see more work on this aspect alone.

This is a complete guess- maybe it is due to those specializing in obstetrics and the greater percentage of female providers in that specialty. Emedpa- did they do any demographic comparisons in regards to specialty?
 
This is a complete guess- maybe it is due to those specializing in obstetrics and the greater percentage of female providers in that specialty. Emedpa- did they do any demographic comparisons in regards to specialty?
I don't believe so. the rest of the study is a breakdown of #s sued and $ amt of verdicts.
on another site someone commented that it is likely due to the fact that many more women than men are np's and among pa's entering classes now are > 60% female so an increased representation should be expected among women in lawsuits just because there are more women practicing.
 
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