
Sexual dysfunction damages: A legal database review
Author(s) -
Erin Jesse,
Wade Muncey,
Daniel Harris,
Kimberly Tay,
Tyler Kim,
Danly Omil-Lima,
Ilaha Isali,
Aram Loeb,
Nannan Thirumavalavan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
canadian urological association journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1920-1214
pISSN - 1911-6470
DOI - 10.5489/cuaj.7393
Subject(s) - medicine , malpractice , sexual dysfunction , erectile dysfunction , allegation , damages , psychological intervention , medical malpractice , surgery , urinary retention , general surgery , psychiatry , law , political science
Procedural specialties are at higher risk for malpractice claims than non-procedural specialties. Previous studies have examined common damages and malpractice lawsuits resulting from specific procedures. Our goal was to analyze urological interventions that led to sexual dysfunction claims.Methods: The Casetext legal research platform was queried using search terms for medical malpractice and common men’s health procedures between 1993 and 2020. In total, 236 cases were found and 21 cases met the inclusion criteria: malpractice cases against a urologist or urology group, clearly stated legal outcome, and allegation of sexual dysfunction from an intervention that directly caused damages.Results: A total of 42 damages were cited in 21 lawsuits. The top three damages claimed were erectile dysfunction (14/42, 33.3%), genital pain syndrome (7/42, 16.7%), and urinary incontinence (5/42, 11.9%). The most commonly cited treatments were urinary catheter placement or removal (3/21, 14.3%), robotic-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy (RALP) (3/21, 14.3%), circumcision (3/21, 14.3%), and penile implant (3/21, 14.3%). In 19 of 21 suits (90.4%), the outcome favored the defendant. Two cases favored the plaintiff: penile implant (failure to prove the patient was permanently, organically impotent prior to the procedure; $300 000) and vasectomy (damage to vasculature resulting in loss of testicle, $300 000).Conclusions: Most suspected malpractice cases resulting in sexual dysfunction favored the defendant urologist. Interestingly, urinary catheter placement is as likely to result in litigation as other operative interventions, such as RALP, inflatable penile prosthesis, and circumcision. It is possible that thorough preoperative counselling and increased responsiveness to patients’ postoperative concerns may have avoided litigation in several cases.