Literature DB >> 8723176

Physicians' personal malpractice experiences are not related to defensive clinical practices.

P A Glassman1, J E Rolph, L P Petersen, M A Bradley, R L Kravitz.   

Abstract

Whether personal malpractice experience is part of a tort signal prompting physicians to practice defensively is unclear. To explore this issue further, we assessed how physicians' malpractice experiences affect clinical decision making. We surveyed 1,540 physicians from four specialty groups (cardiologists, surgeons, obstetrician-gynecologists, and internists) using specialty-specific clinical scenarios. Physicians were in active private practice, were covered by a single malpractice insurer for five or more years, and worked in an eastern state. The net response rate was 54 percent (835 of 1,540) but measurable bias, based on practice characteristics, was negligible. Physicians evaluated clinical scenarios that were designed to maximize potential for finding positive defensive practices (extra tests and procedures). Then they rated how various factors influenced their decisions and answered questions on practice attitudes. The study compared management and testing recommendations among physicians with varying levels of malpractice exposure, which we defined in three separate ways. Participants were unaware of the study hypotheses. Physicians with greater malpractice experience showed no systematic differences in initial management choice or subsequent test recommendations. For example, similar percentages of internists in the top and bottom claims rate quartiles admitted a patient with syncope (78 percent versus 73 percent; p = 42), discharged a patient with nonspecific chest pain (80 percent versus 80 percent; p = .88), and delayed surgery in a patient with nonspecific changes on a electrocardiograph (58 percent versus 68 percent; p = .18). Attitudes about malpractice also did not differ with varying malpractice experience. Personal malpractice experience is not a predominant factor in the tort signal that prompts physicians to engage in defensive practices, to the extent that such practices exist.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8723176     DOI: 10.1215/03616878-21-2-219

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law        ISSN: 0361-6878            Impact factor:   2.265


  7 in total

1.  Does litigation influence medical practice? The influence of community radiologists' medical malpractice perceptions and experience on screening mammography.

Authors:  Joann G Elmore; Stephen H Taplin; William E Barlow; Gary R Cutter; Carl J D'Orsi; R Edward Hendrick; Linn A Abraham; Jessica S Fosse; Patricia A Carney
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 11.105

2.  Defensive medicine practices among gastroenterologists in Japan.

Authors:  Toru Hiyama; Masaharu Yoshihara; Shinji Tanaka; Yuji Urabe; Yoshihiko Ikegami; Tatsuma Fukuhara; Kazuaki Chayama
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2006-12-21       Impact factor: 5.742

3.  How physicians approach prostate cancer screening before and after losing a lawsuit.

Authors:  Alex H Krist; Steven H Woolf; Robert E Johnson
Journal:  Ann Fam Med       Date:  2007 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 5.166

4.  Malpractice Claim Fears and the Costs of Treating Medicare Patients: A New Approach to Estimating the Costs of Defensive Medicine.

Authors:  James D Reschovsky; Cynthia B Saiontz-Martinez
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2017-01-26       Impact factor: 3.402

5.  Complications in endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) and endoscopic ultrasound (EUS): analysis of 7-year physician-reported adverse events.

Authors:  Yaron Niv; Yael Gershtansky; Ron S Kenett; Yossi Tal; Shlomo Birkenfeld
Journal:  Drug Healthc Patient Saf       Date:  2011-06-21

6.  Defensive medicine in Israel - a nationwide survey.

Authors:  Elad Asher; Sari Greenberg-Dotan; Jonathan Halevy; Shimon Glick; Haim Reuveni
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-08-16       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  How defensive medicine is defined in European medical literature: a systematic review.

Authors:  Nathalie Baungaard; Pia Ladeby Skovvang; Elisabeth Assing Hvidt; Helle Gerbild; Merethe Kirstine Andersen; Jesper Lykkegaard
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 2.692

  7 in total

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