Thank you. this exactly what I am saying. One case that I mentioned, the epesiotomy, was with an attorney who was all upset becasue this young girl ended up with a nasty, festering 4th degree perineal wound that required revisions and had a protracted course. The physician who delivered her child was prompt to return her calls and see her in the office. she delayed her visit and waited to return to him. by the time she did, it was a bad scene. the attorney wanted to go gangbusters on this doctor. I told him that it was not the doc's fault. One-infections happen. Two-the patient did not go to the doctor when things started to turn for the worst. Third the physician called her and asked her to come in. He did things correctly. I pointed this out to the attorney and he did not pursue the case. If he wanted to, that is fine with me. He could invest $15k into it and lose his ass. So, who did I help-the doctor, hands down. If he had pursued the case, it would have cost the lawyer, the patient, and the physician a considerable amount of money, time, and HIS REPUTATION most importantly.
Quoted from Sledge-
For example, if something wasn't documented via the usual protocol, or the specimen was put in a different place then usual, of if the doc used 1 ml of 0.5% instead of 2 ml's of 0.25%, etc, etc, etc. All they need is a tiny shred of evidence to bully doctors into settling outside of court for any bad outcome.
That is ridiculous. I thought that as well before I started doing this. They want gross negligence. If you think that an attorney would take a case based on this very weak example, you are wrong. An intelligent attorney wants the missed C-cpine that resulted in quadriplegia, the missed tension PTX that killed the patient, the missed PE becasue no lower extremity US was ordered, not because of 2cc's of 0.25% lidocaine were used... If there is an attorney who decides to pursue this, he will lose alot of money and the defense attorney will have a field day on him.
Another quote from Sledge-
But what lawyers usually pay people to do is to carefully examine charts looking for any little thing that could even insinuate negligence.
What they pay me to do is look for GROSS NEGLIGENCE. No attorney has come to me while wringing his hands and said "hey there, find something so I can hang this doctor. I want to steal all his money." Understand that they do not want to invest money into something that has no merit. Try it for yourself-ask any attorney this question. If I were asked to do this, I simply would not work for this attorney. I do not agree with that and would not play a role in such behavior. If the attorneys had more intelligent people to do this type of work, maybe less of these cases would go forward. Instead they rely on paralegals who might have the same mindset.
I agree-the medmal system sucks. It scares the hell out of me also. By doing this, I am learning about it, so that when I get the call, I will be better prepared. Like Quinn said-I am preventing some of these BS claims from going forward, so I feel as though I am helping the system some. I am not attempting to be an expert witness whose opinion can be bought for $10K I remain objective, all the attorneys I work with insist on it actually. THEY DO NOT WANT A CASE WITH NO MERIT, bottom line.
The most important thing I have learned, from the cases that do go forward and from the attorneys is to communicate and document on the chart. Yeah, they teach us that in school, but when you have the opportunity to see the cases where those two crucial elements aren't in place, you see why it is important. It sticks with you a little more. I will take these lessons with me and it will do three things. 1-lower my chances of getting named in a suit, 2-allow me to take better care of patients, and 3-be a better physician. Three things that are of the utmost importance to me.
Thank you all for replying.