| Literature DB >> 35725449 |
Edris Kakemam1, Morteza Arab-Zozani2, Pouran Raeissi3, Ahmed Hassan Albelbeisi4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Defensive Medicine (DM) concept refers to all medical care provided by physicians without increasing the benefits to the patient, the primary purpose of which is to prevent the risk of litigation. Although several studies have been published investigating the occurrence of DM around the world, no review conducted on DM among physicians. Therefore, this study aims to summarize and map the available evidence on occurrence, types of behaviors, and reasons for practicing of DM among physicians and possible solutions and strategies to reduce DM in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: Defensive medicine; Defensive practice; Physicians Scoping review.; Medical malpractice
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35725449 PMCID: PMC9210603 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-08194-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.908
Fig. 1Flow diagram of studies retrieval
Characteristics of the included studies and frequencies of occurrence of defensive medicine
| Authors/Publication year | Country | Study population | Study design | Sampling methods | Sample size (n) | Occurrence (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Passmore et al./2002 [ | England | Psychiatrists | Postal survey | Census | 154 | 75.0 |
| Studdert et al./2005 [ | USA | Emergency medicine, General surgery, Orthopedic surgery, Neurosurgery, Obstetrics/ Gynecology, and Radiology | Mail survey | Randomly | 824 | 93.0 |
| Hiyama et al./2006 [ | Japan | Gastroenterologists | Survey | Randomly | 131 | 98.0 |
| Asher et al./ 2012 [ | Israel | Internal medicine, Pediatrics, General surgery, Family medicine, Obstetrics/ gynecology, Orthopedic surgery, Cardiology, and Neurosurgery | Survey | Randomly | 889 | 60.0 |
| Nahed et al./2012 [ | USA | Neurosurgeons | National online survey | NS | 1028 | 36.0–72.0 |
| Elli et al./ 2013 [ | Italy | Gastroenterologists | Survey | NS | 107 | 94.0 |
| Ortashi et al./2013 [ | UK | Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics /Gynecology, Pediatrics | Survey | Convenience | 204 | 78.0 |
| Sathiyakumar et al. /2013 [ | USA | Orthopedic (trauma and non-trauma) | National Survey | Randomly | 1214 | 84.0–86.0 |
| He et al./ 2014 [ | China | Internal Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics/Gynecology, Pediatrics | Survey | Randomly | 504 | 80.6 |
| Moosazadeh et al./ 2014 [ | Iran | General practitioners | Survey | Census | 423 | 79.2–99.8 |
| Solaroglu et al./2014 [ | Turkey | Neurosurgeons | Survey | NS | 404 | 72.0 |
| Ramella et al./ 2015 [ | Italy | Radiation oncology | Survey | NS | 361 | 75.0 |
| Reisch et al./2015 [ | USA | Breast pathologists | National online survey | NS | 252 | 88.0 |
| Ali et al./2016 [ | Sudan | Obstetrics/Gynecology | National Survey | NS | 117 | 71.8.0 |
| Panella et al./2016 [ | Italy | General Surgeons, Anesthesiologists, Internists, Pediatricians, Psychiatrics, Emergency, Radiologists, Cardiologists, Urologists, Pathologists, Neurologists, Rehabilitation Doctors | National online survey | Randomly | 1313 | 59.7 |
| Silberstein et al./2016 [ | Israel | Plastic and Aesthetic Surgery | Prospective survey | NS | 78 | 51.3 |
| Yan et al./2016 [ | Canada, South Africa, USA | Neurosurgery | Online survey | NS | 1142 | 64.5–89.1 |
| Din et al./2017 [ | USA | Neurosurgery | Online survey | NS | 1026 | 84.6–89.2 |
| Panella et al./2017 [ | Italy | Physicians | National survey | Randomly | 1313 | 59.8 |
| Reuveni et al./2017 [ | Israel | Psychiatrists | Survey | NS | 213 | 62.1 |
| Yan et al./2017 [ | Netherlands | Neurosurgeons | National online survey | NS | 45 | 6.7–64.4 |
| Tebano et al./2018 [ | 74 countries | Infectious diseases and Clinical microbiology doctors | International online survey | NS | 830 | 76.0–85.0 |
| Zhu et al./2018 [ | China | Obstetrics/Gynecology | National online Survey | NS | 1486 | 62.9 |
| Al-Atram et al./2018 [ | 9 Middle Eastern countries | Psychiatrists | Survey | NS | 92 | 30.0 |
| Renkema et al./2019 [ | Netherlands | Anesthesiology, Colon, stomach and liver diseases, Gynecology, Internal medicine, Neurology, and Surgery | Electronic Survey | NS | 214 | 42.0–89.0 |
| Borgan et al./2020 [ | USA | Internal Medicine Residents | Online survey | Convenience | 49 | 40.0–91.3 |
| Calikoglu et al./2020 [ | Turkey | Anesthesia, Obstetrics/Gynecology, Ear Nose Throat Physician, General Surgery, Urology, Eye Diseases, Orthopedics, Cardiovascular, Surgery, Neurosurgery, Plastic surgery, Thoracic, and Pediatric | Survey | All practicing physicians | 190 | 94.2 |
USA United States of America, UK United Kingdom, NS Not Stated, UAE Unite Arab Emirates
Characteristics and types of defensive medicine behaviors reported in the included studies
| Main Themes | Sub-themes | Samples codes |
|---|---|---|
| • Prescribe unnecessary services | • Prescribing unnecessary medication or antibiotics’ • Request unnecessary laboratory tests and investigations • Request unnecessary imaging • Calling unnecessary examinations and consultations • Ordering more consultations on probable complications • Selecting the more extremist diagnosis for borderline cases | |
| • Unnecessary referral cases to other specialties and hospitals | • Refer patients to other specialists unnecessarily • Send patients to emergency room, in unnecessary conditions | |
| • Unnecessary cases admission and hospitalization | • Hospitalized patient who can be treated as an outpatient | |
| • Suggest and perform unnecessary invasive procedures | • Ordering unnecessary biopsies • Ordering unnecessary endoscopies | |
| • Spend more time with patients and their family | • Describe medical procedures to patients in more details • Request additional reviews • Increases follow-up • Initiates communication with family • More patients’ observations than required | |
| • Avoid applying effective high-risk procedures / interventions, and use non-invasive protocols | • Ceasing high-risk procedures • Avoid treatment protocols or guidelines with high complication | |
| • Avoiding to admit and care high-risk patients | • Withdraw from practice entirely and retire • Avoid patients with complex medical problems | |
| • Performed unnecessary intervention surgery | • Perform cardio-pulmonary resuscitations and intubations for poor prognosis patients • Caesarean section without indications • Excising skin lesions that are not suspected of being malignant | |
| • Avoiding switching to oral treatments | • Avoid stop parenteral drugs |
Reasons for practicing defensive medicine and strategies to reduce defensive medicine reported in the included studies
| Reasons for practicing DM | Possible solutions and strategies to reduce DM | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Main themes | Codes | Main themes | Codes |
• Increasing number of lawsuits against physicians • Physicians’ self-perceived threats from patients • Past disputes with patients • Avoid potential conflict with patients • Patient pressure factors | • Improve Physicians training educating and about appropriate care in clinical surroundings • Implementation of awareness programs about the DM phenomenon • Establish and disseminate clinical protocols or guidelines targeting widespread DM actions • Support the regular use of evidence-based medicine and structured care • More training in problem-solving techniques • Health curriculum should specifically address litigation issues | ||
• Increasing malpractice premiums • Decreasing provider reimbursement • Inadequate medical and or organizational procedures • Inadequate malpractice and liability coverage • Inadequate hospital support for liability issues • Inadequate legislation protecting doctors | • Restore trust in physician -patient relationships • Innovate harmony and alliance between physician and patient • More communication with patients and their families • Induct social workers to participate in managing the conflict between physicians and patients • Promoting the ethical values of physicians | ||
• Solo practice • Previous experience of complaints and legal claim for themselves and colleagues • A perceived legal risk • Fear and concerns over medical liability • Physicians Low-income • Concerns about financial and possible legal consequences • Lack of self-confidence • Lack of specialized knowledge • The weekly activity volume • Ineffective physician–patient relationship • Legal protection • Feared compromising their professional reputation and or career | • Redistribution of the health procedures between various healthcare professionals, and enhance multidisciplinary collaborations • A comprehensive examination of main factors and the expenditure on DM, and a better understanding of the current shortages in the healthcare system • Establish clinical records management • Better use of the risk management techniques • Establish clinical auditing system and health debriefing • Physician reward system reform • Forming a committee to study malpractice cases to avoid recurrence • Performing a compensation procedure for a patient who has suffered a medical injury | ||
• Concerns about media attention • Believe in working in a blame-free culture • A general negative context surrounding negligence claims against physicians | • Ways of complaints and inquiry should be upgraded. • Introduce complaints committee in hospitals • Filtration of cases at an early stage to prevent the court as much as possible • Establish alternatives to the existing litigation system • Establishment of health courts and specialized courts with trained judges in the field of health care | ||