Rachel and Choo Hospital
Choo Choo's Liability
The fact that Rachel was initially discharged from the emergency department following examination by a physician with nothing more than a prescription for pain medication when she was in fact suffering form a very serious blood infection could definitely leave Choo Hospital exposed to litigation. There are several key elements of this case, as briefly as it has been described, that lead to this potential exposure to liability and tortuous action. First, the emergency room physician is expected to provide a certain level of care in his diagnosis, and if it was reasonable to foresee a more serious underlying problem of the general pain the patient presented with, the physician (and by extension the hospital) could be liable for failing to make proper recommendations and determinations. Second, then, a determination must be made as to whether or not the blood infection that was the underlying cause of pain could have been reasonably foreseen by the physician, and if this would have led to a different course of care and potentially a different outcome.
Because the physician took a full and detailed medical history of the patient when she was admitted to the emergency department, including specifically noting the boil and the botched lancing job that was later identified as the cause of the blood infection, this diagnosis was definitely foreseeable. The risk presented to the patient by having this go undiagnosed and untreated was likely substantial. All of this exposes Choo Hospital to a definite legal liability.
Additional Information Needed
A full determination of the potential liability fro Choo Hospital in this scenario cannot be made without knowledge of certain additional factors. While it is likely that a certain level of liability exists, there are certain facts that could possibly mitigate the potential damages of this liability, and that could even limit the scope of the exposure or eliminate it altogether. If there were other aspects of the patient's medical history that obscured the possibility of the blood infection or provided other more likely causes for the pain the patient was presented with, and/or if the blood infection was very rare and not easily or cheaply diagnosed, it could be that it would be considered acceptable by medical experts to have provided the pain medication prescription and discharged the patient just as the attending physician in the emergency department did. This would likely not eliminate the potential for a tortuous action, but would certainly shift the scenario towards a more favorable outcome.
Other factors that could affect Choo Hospital's liability in this case include the hospital's status as a non-profit, government operated, or private entity, as some blanket protections are provided in the first two cases. Knowledge of the ultimate outcome of the case, any actual medical damages inflicted on the patient as a result of the prolonged time before diagnosis and treatment, and knowledge of the specifics of the contract and relationship between the hospital and the physician would also be necessary in order to make a full determination of the hospital's exposure. It is highly likely that the hospital has some liability however.
Administrative Steps to Minimize Risk
While there is no way for a medical organization to provide services to patients without taking on some measure of liability for the care provided, there are many things that administrators at Choo Hospital could do to limit the exposure to liability and risk of the organization in this case. First and foremost, of course, establishing appropriate procedures for medical staff and programs that help to ensure compliance with these procedures will ensure that mistakes and actions that create greater risks and liabilities simply do not happen, and that the standard of care legally required is met or exceeded in the majority of cases. In order to truly limit liability, however, administrators need to take steps to ensure that when such mistakes and actions do occur, the hospital is not unduly exposed.
One way to accomplish this is through establishing an arbitration clause in all patient-hospital contracts, which generally requires that malpractice cases are heard by fair and objective arbitrators, often with medical expertise, rather than in standard civil courts where cases are heard and determined by judges and/or juries. This can limit the overall risk by tending towards more balanced and informed decisions, limiting damages awarded to those more directly attributable to the case and with a sometimes more appropriate concept of reasonableness and how foreseeable a given diagnosis/event/outcome was. Administrators can also ensure that ongoing care for this patient is provided for, so as to limit any potential further...
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