Latest News

Doctors preyed on homeless for slip-and-fall schemes; more


 

This high-risk specialty found a way to lower its claim rates

Ob.gyns. who undergo training that simulates team interactions during a high-acuity clinical case face fewer malpractice claims afterward, according to a study published in August in Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Researchers examined the claim rates of 292 ob.gyns. who had undergone one or more such training simulations from 2002 to 2019. To gauge the effect of simulation training on the rate of medical malpractice claims, the researchers compared pretraining rates with posttraining rates. Because participants were insured by the same carrier, the team had access to the relevant claims data as well as the doctors’ durations of coverage.

The investigators assessed claim rates for the period 2002 to 2019 (the full study period), as well as rates for 2-year and 1-year participation.

Researchers found a nonsignificant drop in claim rates for doctors in the 1-year group. The drop was greater for those in the 2-year group; it decreased from 9.2 to 5.4 claims per 100 physician coverage years. (A coverage year is defined as 12 months of indemnity protection.)

For doctors who took part for the entire study period — and were therefore more likely to be among the nearly 20% of doctors who attended three or more training sessions — postsimulation claim rates dropped significantly, from 11.2 to 5.7 per 100 physician coverage years. (Attendance in more than one simulation session correlated with a greater reduction in claim rates.)

“We observed a significant reduction in malpractice claim rates after simulation training,” the researchers concluded. “Wider use of simulation training within obstetrics and gynecology should be considered.”

The content contained in this article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reliance on any information provided in this article is solely at your own risk.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

I did peer review: I saw turf wars, ego, and unfairness
Federal Practitioner
Will interchangeable insulin be more affordable in the U.S.?
Federal Practitioner
Feds slap UPMC, lead cardiothoracic surgeon with fraud lawsuit
Federal Practitioner
Fewer inpatient work hours linked with worse patient outcomes
Federal Practitioner
Three ‘bad news’ payment changes coming soon for physicians
Federal Practitioner
When the juggling act becomes impossible
Federal Practitioner
How could this happen? Judge forces doctors to give ivermectin
Federal Practitioner
Finding employees during a pandemic
Federal Practitioner
Will ‘Dr. Disinformation’ ever face the music?
Federal Practitioner
ACOG amicus brief supports case against Mississippi abortion ban
Federal Practitioner