Affiliation:
1. Department of Otolaryngology University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
2. Division of Pediatric Otolaryngology UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
3. Office of Risk Management University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pennsylvania Pittsburgh USA
4. UPMC Corporate and Captive Insurance Program University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
5. Department of Otolaryngology University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveTo report key characteristics and patterns of captive insurance claims not publicly reported in otolaryngology across a large tertiary‐level academic health system over the previous 2 decades.Study DesignCase series.SettingThe tertiary care health system.MethodsThe internal captive insurance database at a tertiary level healthcare system was queried to identify otolaryngology‐related malpractice claims regardless of final disposition (settled or dismissed) filed from 2000 to 2020. The date of the incident, date of claim, error type, patient outcome, provider subspecialty, total expenses, disposition, and final reward amount were recorded.ResultsTwenty‐eight claims were identified. There were 11 (39.3%) claims from 2000 to 2010 and 17 (60.7%) claims from 2011 to 2020. Head and neck surgery was the most frequently implicated subspecialty (n = 9, 32.1% of all cases), followed by general otolaryngology (n = 7, 25.0%), pediatrics (n = 5, 17.9%), skull base/rhinology (n = 4, 14.3%), and laryngology (n = 1, 3.6%). Improper surgical performance was cited in 35.7% of cases (n = 10), followed by failure to diagnose (n = 8, 28.6%), to treat (n = 4, 14.3%), and to obtain informed consent (n = 3, 10.7%). While 2 cases are ongoing, a total of 17/26 (65.4%) cases were settled and 20/26 (76.9%) dismissed some or all parties. Dismissed claims had significantly higher expenses (p = .022) and duration from incident to disposition (p = .013) compared to settled claims.ConclusionThis study expands the malpractice landscape in otolaryngology by including data not readily available through public sources and compares it to national trends. These findings encourage otolaryngologists to better gauge current quality and safety measures that best protect patients from harm.
Subject
Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery
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