| Literature DB >> 33200320 |
Edward T Crosby1, Laura V Duggan1, Patricia J Finestone2, Richard Liu2, Ria De Gorter2, Lisa A Calder3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: We analyzed closed civil legal cases in 2007-2016 from the Canadian Medical Protective Association (CMPA) involving specialist anesthesiologists where airway management was the central concern.Entities:
Keywords: airway; anesthesiology; malpractice
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33200320 PMCID: PMC7668407 DOI: 10.1007/s12630-020-01846-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Anaesth ISSN: 0832-610X Impact factor: 6.713
Patient and case characteristics for CMPA closed cases, 2007–2016 (n = 46 cases)
| Patient demographics ( | |
| Male | 26 (55) |
| ASA physical status I–II* | 23 (67) |
| ASA physical status III–V | 15 (32) |
| Emergency indication | 10 (22) |
| Pediatric | 9 (19) |
| Age, yr (mean, standard deviation) | 42 (22) |
| Age > 65 yr | 5 (11) |
| Obese | 18 (38) |
| Primary anesthetic ( | |
| General | 34 (74) |
| Regional | 2 (4) |
| Monitored anesthesia care | 3 (7) |
| None (non-surgical cases) | 7 (15) |
| Procedures | |
| Head and neck | 8 (17) |
| Cervical spine | 2 (4) |
| Non-surgical intubation or airway management | 5 (11) |
| Obstetric | 3 (7) |
| Chest/abdomen | 20 (43) |
| Orthopedic | 5 (11) |
| Lumbar spine | 3 (7) |
| Location of airway event | |
| Operating room | 21 (46) |
| Post-anesthesia care unit | 6 (13) |
| Intensive care unit | 6 (13) |
| Ward or floor | 2 (4) |
| Emergency department | 2 (4) |
| Other or unspecified | 9 (20) |
*Not all patients had an ASA physical status assigned. ASA = American Society of Anesthesiologists; CMPA = Canadian Medical Protective Association.
Difficult airway predictors identified in CMPA closed cases, 2007–2016 (n = 46 cases)
| Indicators of a difficult airway (whether known/recognized at the time or not) or factors that contributed to difficult airway management | |
| Airway obstruction from any cause (e.g., sleep apnea/acute pathology) | 12 (26) |
| History of difficult intubation | 1 (2) |
| Mallampati grade 3–4 | 2 (4) |
| Limited cervical spine extension | 3 (7) |
| Limited mouth opening | 4 (9) |
| Secretions/blood in airway | 1 (2) |
| Short neck | 3 (7) |
| Swollen tongue | 1 (2) |
| Thick or bull neck | 1 (2) |
| Pre-eclampsia | 1 (2) |
| Number of predictors | |
| 1 | 13 (28) |
| 2–6 | 6 (13) |
CMPA = Canadian Medical Protective Association.
Urgency of airway by location for CMPA closed cases, 2007–2016 (n = 46 cases)
| Location | Elective | Urgent | Emergency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operating or procedure room | 16 (62) | 2 (20) | 3 (30) |
| Postanesthetic care unit | 1 (4) | 3 (30) | 2 (20) |
| Intensive care unit | 2 (8) | 3 (30) | 1 (10) |
| Emergency department | 1 (4) | 1 (10) | 0 (0) |
| Other** | 6 (23) | 1 (10) | 4 (40) |
| Labour and delivery room | 2 (8) | ||
| Diagnostic imaging unit | 1 (4) | ||
| Doctors office* | 2 (8) | ||
| Surgical clinic* | 1 (4) |
*Out-of-hospital locations.
**Not all locations were available for airway management events. CMPA = Canadian Medical Protective Association.
Fig. 1Patient harm flowchart
Peer expert and analyst-identified judgement failures for CMPA closed cases, 2007–2016 (n = 46 cases)
| Inappropriate difficult airway management | |
| Failure to use supraglottic airway as a bridge | 1 (2) |
| Perseveration | 5 (11) |
| Failure to plan for difficult airway management (induction) | 7 (15) |
| Delay in calling for, or failure to call for, a surgical airway | 2 (4) |
| Inadequate preoperative or airway evaluation | 27 (59) |
| Number of judgement failures | |
| None of the above (appropriate management) | 16 (35) |
| 1 | 20 (43) |
| 2–5 | 10 (22) |
CMPA = Canadian Medical Protective Association.
Fig. 2Factors contributing to the 46 medicolegal cases involving airway management
Patient outcomes and payment amounts for CMPA closed cases, 2007–2016 (n = 46 cases)
| Death or permanent brain damage | 30 (65) |
| Airway injury | 3 (7) |
| Paid on behalf of anesthesiologist | 27 (59) |
| Anesthesiologist payment amounts (CAD) | |
| Median | 422,845 |
| Interquartile range | 257,637–935,673 |
CMPA = Canadian Medical Protective Association.
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Civil legal action | In civil legal actions, the plaintiff seeks from the court an order of monetary compensation (damages) for harm or injury suffered as a result of the negligence or wrongful conduct of the defendant. Several different defendants, such as individual health professionals, hospitals/institutions, equipment manufacturers, and pharmaceutical companies may be named in a civil legal action. In civil legal actions, these issues are decided on the balance of probability (defendant in a civil action may be found liable if the essential elements of the claim are established on a balance of probability). The “cause of action” or central focus is usually an allegation of negligence, including substandard care and a lack of informed consent. Other allegations in civil legal actions include assault and battery, breach of contract, and breach of fiduciary duty. In civil legal actions, the plaintiff can be awarded monetary compensation as a result of either a successful legal action against the defendant physician(s) or as a negotiated settlement of the claim. |
| Harm | |
| Inherent risk | Based on peer expert opinion, a harmful incident that is a known risk associated with a particular investigation, medication, or treatment. It is the risk from undergoing a procedure in ideal conditions, performed by qualified staff using current research equipment and techniques. |
| Patient safety Incident | An event or circumstance which could have resulted, or did result, in unnecessary harm to the patient. |
| Peer expert | Physicians retained by parties in the legal actions who interpreted and provided their opinions on clinical, scientific, or technical issues surrounding the healthcare provided and the alleged injuries sustained; typically, of similar training and experience as the physicians whose care they were reviewing. |
| Settlement | An agreement, usually monetary, made between opposing parties in a lawsuit to resolve the legal dispute. A lawsuit can be settled at any stage before the trial is concluded. |
| Description | Section and group |
|---|---|
| Therapeutic interventions | 1.GJ.50.^^- Dilation, trachea 1.GJ.54.^^- Management of internal device, trachea 1.GJ.55.^^- Removal of device, trachea *****(exclude 1.GJ.55.BA-EB,1.GJ.55.CA-EB,1.GJ.55.JA-EB,1.GJ.55.LA-EB) 1.GZ.31.^^- Ventilation, respiratory system NEC 1.GZ.38.JA-ND- Management of positive pressure ventilator 1.GZ.38.JA-NE- Management of positive pressure end expiratory pressure ventilator (PEEP) 1.FA.53.^^- Implantation of internal device, nasopharynx 1.FA.55.CA-NB- Removal of airway [nasopharyngeal] using per orifice approach 1.GJ.77.^^- Bypass with exteriorization, trachea 1.NA.53.CA-NB- implantation of airway [esophageal obturator] using per orifice approach |
| Complication codes | J95.8- Other post procedural respiratory disorders J96.0- Acute respiratory failure J96.9- Respiratory failure, unspecified R09.2- Respiratory arrest Y65.3 Endotracheal tube wrongly placed during anesthetic procedure |
| Contributing factor | Description |
|---|---|
| Clinical evaluation and decision-making | Deficient histories and general evaluation. Issue involving a provider’s decision-making related to the selection and management of patient care. |
| Deficient knowledge, skills, or technique | Issue involving a provider’s clinical knowledge, skill, technique, training, or education. |
| Procedural violations | Issue or violation involving: – Administrative policies and procedures of a physician’s office, clinic, institution, or regional health authority that are designed to prevent or mitigate error. – Clinical practice guidelines specified by a regulatory authority (college or government) or specialty. – Common clinical tasks as per a standard checklist, protocol, care map, clinical pathway, and decision tree; specified by institution, department, or care team. – Wrong application or improper use of healthcare equipment. |
| Misidentification of anatomy | Intervention inadvertently performed on incorrect anatomical structure or organ. Includes mistaking one structure for another. |
| Delayed recognition of injury | Misdiagnosis, missed diagnosis, or delay in diagnosis. |
| Informed consent | Issue involving the discussion or documentation of the risks, limitations, side effects or alternative options of a diagnostic test or therapeutic intervention (e.g., pharmacotherapy, surgery). |
| Documentation | Inadequate documentation or delay or failure to complete documentation (written or electronic). Including ambiguous, deficient, or illegible medical records. |
| Equipment or resource issue | Faulty or malfunctioning healthcare equipment. Insufficient or unavailable healthcare resources; including beds, staff, equipment. |
| System administrative protocols | Issue involving an institutions administrative policies and procedures designed to prevent or mitigate error. |
CMPA = Canadian Medical Protective Association.