
Approved claims for compensation from gynecological patients in Norway—What characterizes the cases? A 14‐year nationwide study
Author(s) -
Ravlo Merethe,
Lieng Marit,
Khan Bukholm Ida R.,
Haase Moen Mette,
Vanky Eszter
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acta obstetricia et gynecologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.401
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1600-0412
pISSN - 0001-6349
DOI - 10.1111/aogs.13605
Subject(s) - medicine , norwegian , retrospective cohort study , surgery , philosophy , linguistics
The Norwegian System of Patient Injury Compensation ( NPE ) evaluates all patient‐reported claims in Norway. Our aim was to study the cases from gynecological patients approved by NPE in order to identify the main reasons for the injuries, the consequences of the treatment failure for the women, and the time course when the treatment failure occurred. Material and methods A retrospective, descriptive study of approved gynecological compensation claims during a 14‐year period, based on patient files from NPE . Results In all, 1454 women claimed compensation for injury related to gynecological treatment in Norway from 2000 to 2013. Compensation was approved for 438 (30.1%) women. Eleven women declined participation in the study and 16 cases were excluded, leaving 411 cases for further analyses. Consent to participate was given by 211 (51.3%) women, who gave full access to all their NPE files. Anonymized resumes and expert statements were used for the 138 (33.6%) women who did not respond and the 62 (15.1%) women who were deceased. Guidelines or good clinical practice were not followed in 40.5% of the cases. The most common reasons for injury were surgical complications (67.6%), delayed (22.4%) and incorrect (17.0%) diagnoses, and failure of communication (11.7%). The main consequences of injuries were need for extensive treatment (64.2%), permanent injury (55.2%) and impaired physical ability (41.9%). Worsening of cancer prognosis occurred in 58 women (14.1%) and death due to treatment failure in 29 (7.1%) women. Most failures occurred during the treatment period (75.2%). Conclusions We found that the main reason for injuries in gynecological patients was non‐adherence to guidelines or good clinical practice. Surgery‐related injuries were most common. Increased focus on adherence to guidelines and surgical skills might improve patient safety for gynecological patients in Norway.