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Decreasing Malpractice Claims by Reducing Preventable Perinatal Harm
Author(s) -
Riley William,
Meredith Les W.,
Price Rebecca,
Miller Kristi K.,
Begun James W.,
McCullough Mac,
Davis Stanley
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
health services research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.706
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1475-6773
pISSN - 0017-9124
DOI - 10.1111/1475-6773.12551
Subject(s) - malpractice , medicine , indemnity , medical malpractice , audit , medical emergency , payment , family medicine , actuarial science , emergency medicine , business , finance , accounting , political science , law
Objective To evaluate the association of improved patient safety practices with medical malpractice claims and costs in the perinatal units of acute care hospitals. Data Sources Malpractice and harm data from participating hospitals; litigation records and medical malpractice claims data from American Excess Insurance Exchange, RRG , whose data are managed by Premier Insurance Management Services, Inc. (owned by Premier Inc., a health care improvement company). Study Design A quasi‐experimental prospective design to compare baseline and postintervention data. Statistical significance tests for differences were performed using chi‐square, Wilcoxon signed‐rank test, and t ‐test. Data Collection Claims data were collected and evaluated by experienced senior claims managers through on‐site claim audits to evaluate claim frequency, severity, and financial information. Data were provided to the analyzing institution through confidentiality contracts. Principal Findings There is a significant reduction in the number of perinatal malpractice claims paid, losses paid, and indemnity payments (43.9 percent, 77.6 percent, and 84.6 percent, respectively) following interventions to improve perinatal patient safety and reduce perinatal harm. This compares with no significant reductions in the nonperinatal claims in the same hospitals during the same time period. Conclusions The number of perinatal malpractice claims and dollar amount of claims payments decreased significantly in the participating hospitals, while there was no significant decrease in nonperinatal malpractice claims activity in the same hospitals.