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9 in 10 docs blame lawsuit fears for overtesting

Mon Jun 28, 2010 4:01 PM EDT
health, us, doctors, med, malpractice, doctors-malpractice
Lindsey Tanner, AP Medical Writer
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CHICAGO — Ninety percent of physicians surveyed said doctors overtest and overtreat to protect themselves from malpractice lawsuits.

That sentiment is more common among male doctors than female doctors, according to the survey published Monday in Archives of Internal Medicine. The findings echo a recent Associated Press story in which many emergency room doctors said lawsuit fears are the main reason for overtreating in the ER.

The Archives survey of 1,231 physicians nationwide included ER doctors and other specialists, surgeons and primary care doctors.

The survey asked two questions: "Do physicians order more tests and procedures than patients need to protect themselves from malpractice suits?" And, "Are protections against unwarranted malpractice lawsuits needed to decrease the unnecessary use of diagnostic tests?"

Overall, 91 percent of doctors surveyed agreed with both statements.

Survey co-author Dr. Tara Bishop, an internist at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, said the results jibe with what she hears from colleagues.

"When you sit around at a dinner party with doctors, malpractice fears and a kind of hatred of the malpractice system really comes up as a common theme," Bishop said.

Paul Perantinides, a medical malpractice attorney in Akron, Ohio said most of his cases involve doctors failing to test — a point that Bishop said emphasizes why doctors sometimes order so many tests.

Bishop said lawsuit fears sometimes play a role in her own decisions to order tests, "particularly if it's a high-risk patient."

Bishop noted that defensive medicine is estimated to cost the U.S. health care system billions of dollars each year, and said many doctors worry they could be sued even when they follow standard-of-care guidelines.

Patient advocate Helen Haskell of the group Mothers against Medical Errors said she isn't surprised so many doctors say they overtest because of malpractice concerns.

"I think they certainly believe that, but at the same time the overtesting is both easy and profitable for them rather than spending time with the patient ... to get to the root of things," said Haskell, of Columbia, S.C. Her 15-year-old son died in 2000 from a medical error after elective surgery. Doctors agreed to a hefty settlement without a lawsuit being filed.

Bishop and colleagues randomly selected doctors for the survey from an American Medical Association list of U.S. doctors. A total of 2,416 were mailed surveys starting in June last year; half sent in responses and data collection ended in October. The survey was funded by a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and was part of a broader study on doctors' views on health care reform.

Overall, almost 93 percent of male physicians said doctors order unnecessary tests because of malpractice concerns, versus 87 percent of female physicians. Equal numbers of men and women said protection from unwarranted lawsuits is needed to decrease overtesting.

The survey didn't ask doctors if they personally ordered needless tests because of malpractice concerns, or if it is the major reason for overtesting. It also didn't ask them to name specific malpractice reforms they favor, although many doctor groups including the AMA have pushed for limits on malpractice awards.

____

Online:

Archives of Internal Medicine: http://www.archinternmed.com

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Regions: Chicago
  • Public Discussion (4)
Hokey1Deleted
tdk022755

As a nurse, I have observed several reasons for over ordering tests. The major reason, as the article states, is fear that if you don't, and you miss and injury or a problem, that you will get sued. Another reason is that often physicians do not have the time to perform a complete head to toe assessment on a patient and take a full and complete history anymore. I once had a prominant cardiologist tell me that there is no substitution for a complete patient history and physical. By listening to the patient, often, in his/ her own way, the patient can tell you what is wrong with them. You only do tests to confirm what you already know. I believe this is true for the most part. Also, some physicians are used to numbers. That is something that they have come to rely on. It is something they understand. They like to see those lab results or those cath lab results with all the pressure readings in the heart. I worked with a physician once who was one of the smartest doctors I had ever worked with. He could quote textbook to you. He was an MD-PhD. I remember we were in the ICU and I had a patient in respiratory distress. It was clear from looking at this patient that he needed immediate intervention to keep him breathing. This doctor wanted to get a set of blood gases which were normal. So he said to me, "He's OK. His blood gases are normal". I took him to the bedside and told him to look and see how hard this patient was breathing, how much he was struggling. I know his numbers look fine now but he can't continue to work that hard to breath much longer. So he did what I told him to do. He was totally unable to take what he learned in a textbook and put it to work at the bedside.

Physicians have a VERY hard job. They are overwhelmed with increasing numbers of patients. And enrollment in medical schools are down in some areas. A lot of physicians don't want to do primary care or internal medicine. To train a cardiac or neurosurgeon takes forever.

We expect modern medicine to cure everything. We expect that our loved ones will never die. And we blame the doctors and the nurses when they have a terminal illness or injury that they will not recover from. I have seen family members keep patients alive in situation that I would consider torture. And they get MAD when you suggest that perhaps it is time for hospice care and to allow their family member to pass peacefully.

The botton line is doctors are tools. And they can only do so much.

    Reply#2 - Tue Jun 29, 2010 4:30 AM EDT
    david rollins

    You nailed the problem with an excellent news piece. The solution is for the federal government to be responsible for any and all medical liability claims, to deal with all lawsuits in federal courts, before only a judge.

      Reply#3 - Tue Jun 29, 2010 11:59 AM EDT
      John BradstreetDeleted
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