Misdiagnosis is Main Factor in Primary Care Lawsuits

An analysis of Massachusetts malpractice claims showed that more than 70 percent of lawsuits related to primary care were diagnosis-related, according to a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Advertisement

Researchers analyzed malpractice claims filed in the state of Massachusetts between 2005 and 2009. Of the approximately 7,200 claims, about 8 percent came from primary care practices.

Medication and medical treatment were distant second and third complaints in primary care settings, coming in at 12 and 7 percent of the lawsuits, respectively.

Of the primary practice malpractice claims filed, 35 percent settled and 1.6 of those that went to court resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, compared to non-general claims, 20 percent of which settled and 0.9 percent of which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff.

Researcher concluded that most primary care malpractice lawsuits are related to misdiagnosis, and such lawsuits may be more difficult to defend.

More Articles on Quality: 

Patient Safety Tool: University ICU Decolonization for MRSA Reduction

Antimicrobials Promoted Neonatal VRE Outbreak, Study Finds

AHRQ, CDC, NIH Suspend Health, Quality Services as HHS Closes Due to Government Shutdown

 

 

Advertisement

Next Up in Clinical Leadership & Infection Control

Advertisement

Comments are closed.