Data takes scalpel to malpractice lawsuits [Boston Herald]
| By Paul Restuccia, Boston Herald | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
"Analytics is becoming increasingly important in medicine and it's crucial that we use physician experts to communicate what we learn from crunching data," said Dr.
CRICO Strategies, the firm's consulting arm, uses its malpractice data expertise to cut risks at 520 hospitals and medical practices around the country and it plows profits back into research initiatives and efforts to promote best practices for all the hospitals it serves.
The 140-person
CRICO Strategies employs front-line doctors as medical directors, such as Dr.
"Physicians have misconceptions about malpractice," said Tibbles, an emergency room physician. "They think it's rare, a product of angry patients, and caused by a perfect storm of bad luck. But by tracking malpractice case trends, we help doctors understand why things go wrong. But you have to present it to them in the right way."
Tibbles led a recent CRICO study of emergency rooms in more that 90 hospitals that found that missed or delayed diagnoses accounted for more than 47 percent of the 1,304 malpractice cases it analyzed. Tibbles said there were communication breakdowns between doctors and nurses in one of every three encounters that led to lawsuits. Almost half the malpractice cases resulted in permanent injury or death, with an average lawsuit judgment of
"CRICO's malpractice data-crunching is the gold standard in the world," said
CRICO Strategies works in five areas: emergency room services, surgery, ambulatory care, electronic medical records and obstetrics.
"We partner together with physicians to change behavior," Sato said.
Tibbles has developed a "Triggers" protocol at
CRICO's data mining is paying off. Where U.S. hospitals average 12 malpractice claims per 100 physicians covered every year, doctors represented by CRICO average just 2.3 claims.
Malpractice premiums are also much cheaper for CRICO-insured doctors.
Obstetrics doctors in the
"The number of malpractice claims are going down," Sato said.
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