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Sleep surgery and medical malpractice
Author(s) -
Tolisano Anthony M.,
Bager Jennifer M.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the laryngoscope
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1531-4995
pISSN - 0023-852X
DOI - 10.1002/lary.24559
Subject(s) - medicine , plaintiff , allegation , tonsillectomy , jury , medical malpractice , malpractice , settlement (finance) , wrongful death , surgery , general surgery , law , damages , world wide web , political science , computer science , payment
Objectives/Hypothesis To describe and analyze the causes and outcomes of lawsuits pertaining to sleep surgery to mitigate future litigation and improve physician education. Study Design A retrospective review of a publicly available database containing jury verdicts and settlements. Methods The LexisNexis MEGA Jury Verdicts and Settlements database was reviewed for all lawsuits including settlements and trial verdicts related to sleep surgery. Data including type of surgery performed, plaintiff allegation, nature of injury, outcomes, and indemnities were collected and analyzed. Results Fifty‐one cases met the inclusion criteria. Of these, 30 were decided by a jury, nine were settled out of court, and 10 were resolved by other means. Overall, 57% of known outcomes favored the defendant. The most common surgery performed was tonsillectomy (57%), followed by uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (45%), adenoidectomy (31%), and septoplasty (31%). No difference was found between outcomes when comparing the most common injuries cited, including wrongful death ( P = .572), airway compromise ( P = .376), and drug reaction ( P = .443). If failure to recognize a complication ( P = .034) or delay in diagnosis ( P = .026) was a component of the legal allegations, the outcome significantly favored the plaintiff. The median settlement ($545,000) and plaintiff award ($1.45 million) were not significantly different ( P = .13). Conclusions The majority of outcomes favored the defendant. Type of injury did not predict outcome. Failure to recognize complications and delay in diagnosis strongly predicted a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Level of Evidence 2c Laryngoscope , 124:E250–E254, 2014