It’s what’s missing that’s problematic. | |
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Power To Predict Documentation gaps increase the risk of a malpractice defendant being held responsible |
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September 2020 | by Jock Hoffman and Jillian Skillings |
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The odds of an MPL case closing with an indemnity payment increase 76% when there was inadequate documentation. According to analysis of 5,410 documentation-impacted cases from CRICO’s national comparative benchmarking system, 56% closed with payment (compared with 30% for all MPL cases). The average payment was $432,000; five percent of cases closed for a million dollars or more. Surgical specialties (29%) were most frequently exposed; 45% involved a high-severity injury or patient death. Cases in which insufficient documentation was a key contributor are more likely to derive from outpatient care (52%) than from care delivered in an Emergency Department or hospital. Across the study set, 58% of cases were complicated by a failure to properly document clinical findings or the rationale for clinical decisions that impacted the patient’s adverse event. The most egregious cases stem from a lack of documentation that misleads subsequent providers. In particular, the absence of critical information regarding assessment, test results, or evidence of a patient visit or phone call, complicates follow-up care. Additionally, 34% of the cases analyzed reflect a failure to adequately document appropriate care, i.e., documentation is primarily a defensibility issue—frequently related to the consent process. MPL cases with a breakdown in documentation standards (i.e., defensibility hindrances) have 90% higher odds to close with an indemnity payment than an MPL case without this factor. However, when controlled for severity, clinical care cases drive the closed-with-pay rate up more than the defense issues. Key considerations for reducing documentation risks include:
To better understand your organization’s specific documentation vulnerabilities, consider:
Also included in the full report, The Power to Predict, are strategies for defending MPL cases with inadequate documentation. Additional Material
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