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Malpractice Claims Following Major Liver and Pancreatic Surgeries: What Can we Learn?

Authors :
Zaman, Muizz
Li, Jian Harvard
Dhir, Mashaal
Source :
Journal of Surgical Research. Jun2024, Vol. 298, p291-299. 9p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

General surgery is a highly litigious specialty. Lawsuits can be a source of emotional distress and burnout for surgeons. Major hepatic and pancreatic surgeries are technically challenging general surgical oncology procedures associated with an increased risk of complications and mortality. It is unclear whether these operations are associated with an increased risk of lawsuits. The objective of the present study was to summarize the medical malpractice claims surrounding pancreatic and hepatic surgeries from publicly available court records. The Westlaw legal database was searched and analyzed for relevant malpractice claims from the last two decades. Of 165 search results, 30 (18.2%) cases were eligible for inclusion. Appellant cases comprised 53.3% of them. Half involved a patient death. Including co-defendants, a majority (n = 21, 70%) named surgeons as defendants, whereas several claims (n = 13, 43%) also named non-surgeons. The most common cause of alleged malpractice was a delay in diagnosis (n = 12, 40%). In eight of these, surgery could not be performed. The second most common were claims alleging the follow-up surgery was due to negligence (n = 6). Collectively, 20 claims were found in favor of the defendant. Seven verdicts (23.3%) returned in favor of the plaintiff, two of which resulted in monetary awards (totaling $1,608,325 and $424,933.85). Three cases went to trial or delayed motion for summary judgment. There were no settlements. A defendant verdict was reached in two-thirds of malpractice cases involving major hepatic or pancreatic surgery. A delay in diagnosis was the most cited claim in hepatopancreaticobiliary lawsuits, and defendants may often practice in nonsurgical specialties. While rulings favoring plaintiffs are less frequent, the payouts may be substantial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00224804
Volume :
298
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Surgical Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177565123
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jss.2024.03.026