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Medical Malpractice Insights: Radiology over-reads – Who’s responsible?

EMDocs

Chuck Pilcher, MD, FACEP Editor, Medical Malpractice Insights Editor, Med Mal Insights Radiology over-reads – Who’s responsible? Patient not informed of enlarged heart, dies 3 weeks post ED visit Miscommunicated radiology findings are a hot topic. This patient’s history was either poorly taken or poorly documented.

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Variation Exists! Outcomes Exist!

EM Literature of Note

The authors also tried to evaluate the frequency and outcomes of laboratory and radiology tests ordered by emergency physicians. There are going to be issues with confounding, mis-coded data, and variation across sites. Everything here is almost assuredly imprecise and unable to be generalized outside the VA system involved.

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Microbiology Discussions

Mind The Bleep

Don’t panic: If you are the only available person and dont know the patient, document the information in the notes and let your senior know. Again, document the call clearly, discuss with your senior and implement further investigations/treatment as appropriate. link] Written by Emma Chrisholm ST1 Radiology

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Referrals

Mind The Bleep

Either they should ask the surgical team for clinical management of a patient with suspected septic ileus with a differential including necrotising enterocolitis or the radiology team for interpretation of the x-ray. What to do when referrals are not accepted Ask “Why?”

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Preperitoneal Packing Vs Angioembolization: Part 3

The Trauma Pro

They separated all patients with acetabular and pelvic ring fractures using ICD-10 codes. If there is concern that there could be ongoing bleeding, PPP can be followed by a trip to the interventional radiology suite. This eliminated patients who might have received other additional management that could cloud the data.

Fractures 113
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Let ChatGPT Guide Your Hand

EM Literature of Note

Does this patient require radiologic investigations? The clinician reviewers – one resident physician and one attending physician – did not much agree (73-83% agreement) on admission, radiology, and antibiotic determinations. Specifically, the LLM – here GPT-3.5T and GPT-4T – is asked: Should this patient be admitted to the hospital?

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Medical Malpractice Insights: Dirt left in wound leads to infection

EMDocs

.” The tech cleans the wound and documents it as 2cm long and “ dirty.” The ED physician documents suturing a 3 cm laceration in a single layer, omitting any reference to any wound exploration, cleansing or debridement. I thought they were incidental “ bone islands” so I didn ’ t document them. Negligence was present.