Tuesday, January 22, 2008

An Advice from a Retired Doctor


Malpractice is a sad reality. lt occurs all over the world. The Philippines is not an exception. The local situation is aggravated by the lack of a comprehensive set of malpractice laws.

The local med mafia has so far been quite successful in blocking even the tamest legislative move to correct the situation. This, along with the absence of any in-hospital quality assurance protocol leaves a patient quite literally at the mercy of the attending physician. This is a subject worthy of a week long seminar, so l wont get into it. But....

There are a few items, your friend should clarify. Foremost is the diagnosis of acute appendicitis and then "sending the patient home". NOBODY IS THAT DUMB. Even a 3rd year med STUDENT should know, that acute appendicitis equals surgery. lt is possible, that appendicitis was NOT the initial diagnosis? This could also explain the need for the CT study (appendicitis is one of the easiest disease to diagnose and very (very) rarely need a CT study). Then, the physician should be made to explain WHY, he did NOT think of appendicitis. lf he indeed thought of this then why did he try to send the patient home - lt doesn't really compute - there is misinformation here.

Re: the reaction to the X-ray contrast - a first or second year resident SHOULD be able to handle that. By and large, this is simple allergy. A very small percentage will get an anaphylactoid reaction and may die. lt doesnt constitute malpractice, per se, - the question is what kind of treatment was given, when, and how appropriate was this. (l assume, the patient did not eat a few hours prior to the exam - if he did, then that would make matters worse - regurgitation-aspiration).

Lessons -

A good hospital doesn't mean good doctors. Do not be shy in contradicting, getting a second opinion, even transfering to another facility. Do not ever think of any doctor as a GOD. Remember, God doesn't need to earn!

There are problems inherent to big hospitals. Primary is SCHEDULING and all ramifications connected to scheduling problems. If its an elective procedure, by all means REFUSE any study that can be done in the daytime from Monday to Friday. ALL hospitals are understaffed at night, during weekends and holidays but any self-respecting hospital administration will deny this.

If you need an Xray study that requires contrast injection and if you have money (it is quite expensive) and you have a strong history of allergy then by all means ask for a non-ionic contrast or even a hypo-ionic one. (The problem is l dont know if the Philippines has this).

3 comments:

dlsmcbatch2004 said...

Non-ionic hypoallergenic contrast agent is already here in the Philippines under the brand name of ultravist & iopromide which was already being use in tertiary hospitals here including st. lukes medical center.

Lifting Creme said...

If you were wrongfully harmed by a medical professional, there are laws in place to protect your rights. Filing medical malpractice lawsuits provides victims the opportunity to get some compensation for the damages suffered. The amount of compensation will be determined by the extent of the injury. Some compensation includes:

* Wages lost
* Disability
* Medical costs - past and future
* Mental pain
* Others

Many people believe the courts are flooded with these lawsuits. This is simply not the case. Hundred of thousand injuries occur in the U.S. each year and less than 15 percent actually file a lawsuit. A victim is entitled to compensation if they exercise their legal rights. Do visit Medical Negligence Solicitors to get more information about this.

Unknown said...

This is the reason why healthcare system is govern policies, procedure, and protocol , informed consent such as professional disclosure or patient reasonable consent is important measure that will cover DRs from lawsuit and pt from harm and unjury but again no one is 100% safe effects of medication and treatments, it is time for this nation to pass med malpractice act. Congress, DOH and Phil. med. assn. should create a body like Joint commission in USA, scientific evidence base medical body/assn whose role is corrective rather than punitive where all injury and pt safety issues are reported, Jcaho here in USA formulate and promulgate policies, operating procedure and protocol with a main goal is to promote patient safety and Drs as well,we have so many briliant DRs and lawyer but no one had thought of this. The Philliphine med act, Philippine patients bill of right, Philippine medical code of ethics are just law in paper that serves no purpose to protect filipinos from med malpractice/negligence "batas na walang ipin' what a shame for a country like us.