News

Can More Be Done With Less?


 

Dr. Saini agrees that testing that is done in part to ward off malpractice suits often leads to more resource use, not more clarity. "Your job and your role and professional obligation is to do what is right for the patient," he said. "If you find yourself ordering a test or procedure because you think it could be a malpractice issue, then you’re thinking about yourself, not the patient."

Physicians are safe if they stick to the evidence, Dr. Schroeder said. "If you are doing less and it’s evidence based, your risk of malpractice goes down dramatically," he said.

Another key is to be skeptical of doing things just because it is an existing practice, said Dr. Schroeder. "Physicians need to keep challenging existing practices," he said.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Percentage of Psychiatrists Doing Psychotherapy Dwindles
MDedge Internal Medicine
AMA Tries to Rally Members With New Vision
MDedge Internal Medicine
The EHR Report Podcast: The Employed Physician
MDedge Internal Medicine
Insurers Paying Faster, But Prior Authorization on Rise
MDedge Internal Medicine
Docs Crush Feds' EHR Goal
MDedge Internal Medicine
Docs Wary of Retail Clinic Take-Over
MDedge Internal Medicine
AMA Steps Back From Premium Support Plan
MDedge Internal Medicine
AMA House Takes on Obesity
MDedge Internal Medicine
HHS: A Billion in Premium Rebates Coming Aug. 1
MDedge Internal Medicine
EPs Seeking Liability Reform on the State Level
MDedge Internal Medicine