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- Apr 13, 2020
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This will sound strange but this is one of the most valuable experiences to happen to me. No dentist wants to get sued. I hope to bring awareness since I was so complacent prior to this event.
I saw meth mouth patient denying taking any drugs. It was my fault for not spending more time and caution with her since I was seeing way too many patients at my previous DMO. She was an intense dental phobic, nightmare patient and I wanted to punt her to someone else. She would always be in tooth pain and I had a hard time juggling her case with other patients...which was a recipe for disaster. There's always hind-site. Could I have treatment planned her case differently? I should have told her I couldn't restore her teeth the way she wants...end of nightmare.
Fortunately, my opposing attorney had no dental experience. After the law suit notification, I looked up everything I could find on this lady and exposed 2 Meth related arrests. We brought down the original damages of $995k pain & suffering to start negotiating settlement at $30k. Why not just dismiss the case? The main question was did I follow "reasonable standard of care?" Her teeth started out marginally restorable. Caries were so rampant, I didn't know where to begin. Every visit the patient was in so much pain. I did mostly temp fillings and later root canals on her. I keep kicking myself for trying to restore her teeth because she didn't want any extractions. About 18 months later she switched dentists and began the legal process. Those temps fillings look pathetic. My chart write ups were also pathetic....lesson learned. Another detail I learned is that the defense attorney has no incentive to go heroics. He specializes in defending mostly dentists and some medical doctors. He has 4 other more pressing dental cases than the measly pain and suffering from a Meth abuser. There is no incentive for him to go to court. I believe he is on contracts with numerous malpractice carriers because he is on the phone with them to authorize specific settlements. He must have trusted me to mentioned that there is no money involved with defending malpractice cases. We finalized the settlement at $35k...under my prev company's name only.
How does this affect me? According to my attorney, really not much. This case will be on my national provider data base record and the state board will investigate it. About a year after the final settlement I haven't seen anything pop up on my state board disciplinary alerts. I applied to the new DMO company during that law suit, disclosed it fully, and received no concerns from them. My malpractice ins rates will go up...I don't know how much because my new DMO is covering it. Credentialing with various dental insurance benefits companies were not a problem although I needed to write a few narratives to explain the situation. I have a lot more awareness...once bitten twice shy. At the advice of my attorney, I took various risk mgt and record keeping courses. I've encounter a handful of similar phobic, noncompliant druggie cases and they ended up finding someone else because I'm not as accommodating to their unrealistic expectations. My advice is to follow "reasonable standard of care," never be complacent, take some risk mgt courses with serious intent, improve your chart notes and establish (communicate) clear expectations (when the patients are not in pain).
I saw meth mouth patient denying taking any drugs. It was my fault for not spending more time and caution with her since I was seeing way too many patients at my previous DMO. She was an intense dental phobic, nightmare patient and I wanted to punt her to someone else. She would always be in tooth pain and I had a hard time juggling her case with other patients...which was a recipe for disaster. There's always hind-site. Could I have treatment planned her case differently? I should have told her I couldn't restore her teeth the way she wants...end of nightmare.
Fortunately, my opposing attorney had no dental experience. After the law suit notification, I looked up everything I could find on this lady and exposed 2 Meth related arrests. We brought down the original damages of $995k pain & suffering to start negotiating settlement at $30k. Why not just dismiss the case? The main question was did I follow "reasonable standard of care?" Her teeth started out marginally restorable. Caries were so rampant, I didn't know where to begin. Every visit the patient was in so much pain. I did mostly temp fillings and later root canals on her. I keep kicking myself for trying to restore her teeth because she didn't want any extractions. About 18 months later she switched dentists and began the legal process. Those temps fillings look pathetic. My chart write ups were also pathetic....lesson learned. Another detail I learned is that the defense attorney has no incentive to go heroics. He specializes in defending mostly dentists and some medical doctors. He has 4 other more pressing dental cases than the measly pain and suffering from a Meth abuser. There is no incentive for him to go to court. I believe he is on contracts with numerous malpractice carriers because he is on the phone with them to authorize specific settlements. He must have trusted me to mentioned that there is no money involved with defending malpractice cases. We finalized the settlement at $35k...under my prev company's name only.
How does this affect me? According to my attorney, really not much. This case will be on my national provider data base record and the state board will investigate it. About a year after the final settlement I haven't seen anything pop up on my state board disciplinary alerts. I applied to the new DMO company during that law suit, disclosed it fully, and received no concerns from them. My malpractice ins rates will go up...I don't know how much because my new DMO is covering it. Credentialing with various dental insurance benefits companies were not a problem although I needed to write a few narratives to explain the situation. I have a lot more awareness...once bitten twice shy. At the advice of my attorney, I took various risk mgt and record keeping courses. I've encounter a handful of similar phobic, noncompliant druggie cases and they ended up finding someone else because I'm not as accommodating to their unrealistic expectations. My advice is to follow "reasonable standard of care," never be complacent, take some risk mgt courses with serious intent, improve your chart notes and establish (communicate) clear expectations (when the patients are not in pain).
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