Literature DB >> 2809669

The present and future medicolegal importance of record keeping in anesthesia and intensive care: the case for automation.

R F Gibbs1.   

Abstract

The anesthesia record is often crucial to successful defense in a meritless claim, because the adversarial role of the plaintiff's medical expert witness requires an attack on the record. Likewise the record may be pivotal in determining whether a defense should even be mounted as an alternative to an early settlement, because the failure of meaningful, supportive, or exculpatory documentation raises serious questions about the quality of care rendered. Advancing technology has made possible revolutionary changes in real-time monitoring and data recording. Concepts favoring the development and adoption of automated record systems for anesthesia are outlined through historic medicolegal perspectives on record keeping in general and computerization of the monitoring and recording methods in specific as a means of providing the best medicolegal evidence in defense of the anesthesiologist's performance. The analogy is often made between the successful development and acceptance of the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder combination in aviation and ongoing software development for automated recordkeeping and the quest for its use and professional acceptance in both anesthesia and intensive care settings.

Mesh:

Year:  1989        PMID: 2809669     DOI: 10.1007/bf01618257

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Monit        ISSN: 0748-1977


  6 in total

1.  Real-time pulse oximetry artifact annotation on computerized anaesthetic records.

Authors:  Richard Karl Gostt; Graeme Dennis Rathbone; Adam Paul Tucker
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2002 Apr-May       Impact factor: 2.502

2.  Anesthesia recordkeeping: accuracy of recall with computerized and manual entry recordkeeping.

Authors:  Thomas Corey Davis; Jeffrey A Green; Alexander Colquhoun; Brenda L Hage; Chuck Biddle
Journal:  J Clin Monit Comput       Date:  2012-03-17       Impact factor: 2.502

3.  The present and future medicolegal importance of record keeping in anesthesia and intensive care: the case for automation.

Authors:  D M Gaba
Journal:  J Clin Monit       Date:  1990-10

4.  Lack of documentation of severe transient bradycardia by an automated anesthesia record.

Authors:  A Feingold; A Galindo; H E Feingold
Journal:  J Clin Monit       Date:  1994-11

Review 5.  Patient data management systems in anaesthesia: an emerging technology.

Authors:  Y G Weiss; S Cotev; B Drenger; R Katzenelson
Journal:  Can J Anaesth       Date:  1995-10       Impact factor: 5.063

6.  Multimodal system designed to reduce errors in recording and administration of drugs in anaesthesia: prospective randomised clinical evaluation.

Authors:  Alan F Merry; Craig S Webster; Jacqueline Hannam; Simon J Mitchell; Robert Henderson; Papaarangi Reid; Kylie-Ellen Edwards; Anisoara Jardim; Nick Pak; Jeremy Cooper; Lara Hopley; Chris Frampton; Timothy G Short
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2011-09-22
  6 in total

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