Archive for the ‘Medical Malpractice’ Category

DEATH RATES 70% LOWER AT TOP HOSPITALS

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

 If you are going to have an operation, even a routine surgery, you should check out the ranking of the hospital where you plan to have your operation.

On October 14, 2008, HealthDay News reported that the “death rate at top-ranked U.S. hospitals is 70 percent lower than at the lowest-ranked hospitals, according to a study that examined 41 million patient records at the nation’s approximately 5,000 hospitals over three years.”

This conclusion was based on the 11th Annual HealthGrades Hospital Quality in America Study, which ranked hospitals from 1 star to a maximum of 5 stars.

The study also concluded that 237,420 Medicare patient deaths could have potentially been prevent from 2005 to 2007 if all hospitals in the USA performed at the top-rated 5 Star level. More than half of these deaths were caused by only 4 conditions: sepsis (system wide infection); pneumonia; heart failure and respiratory failure.

Geography played a significant factor in the risk of death according to the study. Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin had the lowest overall death rates; whereas Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee had the highest.

An author of the study commented that “Geography should not be a major factor in patients’ outcomes. If our nation’s hospitals are to close the quality gap and guarantee an equally high level of medical care for every patient, no matter where he or she lives, it will require a commitment by our nation and its communities to demand more from quality improvement” commented Dr. Samantha Collier, HealthGrades’ chief medical officer.

“Until then, it is imperative that anyone seeking medical care at a hospital do their homework and know the hospital’s quality rating before they check in,” Collier said in a news release issued by HealthGrades, a Colorado-based independent healthcare ratings organization found at www.healthgrades.com

You can find Heathgrades’ 2009 quality ratings for all private hospitals in the USA, including those in the State of Colorado, at their above web site.

Please contact us with any questions you may have at 719.471.3848. You can also email us HERE with your inquiry or questions. Our website can be found at www.GaddisKinHerd.com.

Some Medical Malpractice Defense Lawyer Tactics Try To Kept Truth From Being Known

Friday, July 18th, 2008

For those of us that do medical malpractice litigation it is quite disappointing to see the extraordinary lengths to which defendant doctors and hospitals will go to avoid responsibility. A recent deposition I went to provides a good example of a obvious attempt to intimidate plaintiff’s expert doctor from testifying about malpractice.

The plaintiff bled to death after routine gall bladder procedure. The negligence in the case was, in my opinion, obvious. You shouldn’t end up bleeding to death over gall bladder surgery – unless there has been negligence.

This opinion of mine was confirmed by a respected General Surgeon, who is also a professor of medicine and surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. The defense lawyer recently took his deposition. During the deposition the defense lawyer used only one Exhibit – a magazine article. The Article, published by a physician who is strongly against malpractice litigation, and his wife, an attorney who defends doctors charged with malpractice, was nothing less than an attempt to intimidate the our expert witness from testifying at trial.

The article said that the economic realities for most physician’s income are such that they must supplement their income from practice by testifying as an expert witnesses. The article then discussed at length an unusual decision in which a neurosurgeon was suspended from membership in the American Association of Neurological Surgeons because he served as an expert and gave testimony in favor of a plaintiff in a medical malpractice lawsuit. The article went on to cite chilling examples of other lawsuits and disciplinary proceedings against physicians who testify in medical malpractice cases.

The article plainly stated the view to which it aspired: recent decisions of courts, medical boards, and physician organizations, are penalizing doctors for testifying in medical malpractice cases, which will hopefully result in expert witnesses who testified for plaintiffs becoming an endangered species. The article called for medical licensing boards and physician’s specialty organizations to impose rigid scrutiny, and more professional discipline, on doctors who are willing to testify against other doctors; it proposed state laws that impose difficult limitations for expert medical witnesses to be allowed to testify; and, finally, it cited a medical board decision from another state where a doctor’s license was suspended for giving expert testimony in the courtroom regarding the medicine in a malpractice case – medicine which all physicians agree is an “art” and not always a science.

This article had nothing to do with any of the issues in my client’s malpractice case. The defense lawyer brought it to my expert’s attention, and went over it with him in depth, for just one purpose: to make him think twice about serving as an expert witness for the plaintiff in a medical malpractice claim against another doctor. In less socially acceptable terms, some would call such conduct an attempt to intimidate a witness.

This time it didn’t work. You have to wonder how long that will be the result of such tactics.

By Gary Craw, Gaddis, Kin & Herd, P.C.

If you want more information about this issue or other issues relating to medical malpractice cases please contact me at 800-471-3848. Or, visit our Website: www.GaddisKinHerd.com.