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June 2013

Hospital Negligence: Fatigued Resident Physicians

By |2015-12-17T18:09:54+00:00June 5th, 2013|Hospital Negligence|

Hospital negligence refers to medical malpractice claims that arise out of substandard medical care provided by hospital employees, including nurses and residents.  Residents, or physicians-in-training, play a key role on care of hospitalized patients.  However, overworked, fatigued and inexperienced residents can be dangerous to a hospitalized patient's health. Residents are doctors-in-training who have graduated medical school but need [...]

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Squamous Cell Skin Cancer and Delayed Diagnosis

By |2019-04-24T18:00:03+00:00June 4th, 2013|Medical Malpractice|

Squamous cell skin cancer is generally considered to be the lesser evil when compared to malignant melanoma.  However, a recent article published in the Journal of the American Medical Association -Dermatology (JAMA - Derm) points out that a delay in diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma can be fatal for some patients. According to the Skin Cancer [...]

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May 2013

Acuity Ratings in Emergency Medicine

By |2016-03-08T21:11:31+00:00May 15th, 2013|Medical Malpractice|

A key function in emergency medicine is to assign an acuity rating to new patients shortly after their arrival.  This is done by the triage nurse on the basis of a cursory evaluation.  If the nurse underassesses the patient, a long wait may ensue, thereby putting a critically ill patient at risk.  The most common type [...]

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Misdiagnosis in the Primary Care Setting

By |2019-03-18T22:02:35+00:00May 14th, 2013|Misdiagnosis|

When there is a misdiagnosis of many medical conditions, those conditions become more dangerous with a worse prognosis.  For a medical malpractice attorney in Ohio, misdiagnosis cases require a thorough interview of the potential client and a careful review of all available medical records.  Further, the lawyer must avail himself/herself of current medical concepts to know whether an early, accurate diagnosis would have [...]

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Surgical Errors Using Laser Technology

By |2022-02-17T23:14:26+00:00May 13th, 2013|Surgical Error|

Surgical errors using laser technology are on the rise, according to an article appearing in the Journal of the American Medical Association - Dermatology (JAMA-Dermatology).  The article notes that the number of medical malpractice claims arising out of use of lasers for dermatological procedures has skyrocketed in recent years, due to expansive use of this technology, [...]

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New Screening Techniques for Lung Cancer Screening

By |2019-03-18T22:02:36+00:00May 10th, 2013|Medical Malpractice|

Lung cancer is one of the leading causes of death in the U.S.  According to the American Cancer Society (ACS), there will be 228,190 new cases diagnosed and 159,480 deaths from this disease in 2013.  A key preventative strategy has been to screen patients who are at increased risk, such as smokers.  Until recently, screening had been [...]

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Misdiagnosis Is More Common Than Medication Errors

By |2022-06-28T20:27:58+00:00May 9th, 2013|Misdiagnosis|

An interesting article on misdiagnosis appeared in this Monday's Washington Post.  The article, entitled "Misdiagnosis Is More Common Than Drug Errors Or Wrong-Site Surgery," reports that the correct diagnosis is missed, incorrect or delayed in as many as 10 to 20 percent of cases.  In many cases, the correct diagnosis may be made in time to avoid any [...]

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May Is Stroke Month

By |2022-02-17T23:11:53+00:00May 3rd, 2013|FAQS, Stroke|

Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability in the U.S.  Many strokes, also called cerebral vascular accidents or CVAs, are preventable with proper medical advice, such as controlling hypertension or anticoagulating certain patients with atrial fibrillation ("A Fib").  When a CVA occurs, if care providers act quickly, treatments exist to reverse its effects, such as [...]

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Misdiagnosis Arising Out Of Failure To Do Lumbar Puncture

By |2022-02-17T23:31:10+00:00May 2nd, 2013|Misdiagnosis|

Misdiagnosis often occurs when physicians cut corners, jump to conclusions, ignore symptoms, and/or fail to rule out less common causes of a given symptom complex.  Frequently, the mistake is as simple as performing a key test when a patient's presentation is consistent with a life-threatening condition. We see this time and time again with lumbar puncture.  Today, I [...]

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April 2013

Misdiagnosis: “The Doctor Didn’t Listen to Me”

By |2022-02-17T23:33:42+00:00April 30th, 2013|Misdiagnosis|

Medical misdiagnosis is a major contributor to unnecessary treatment, increased medical costs and poor outcomes for patients.  Several recent studies published in Health Affairs show that many doctors do a poor job of "activating" their patients -- engaging their patients, listening to their concerns, discussing treatment options and involving them in treatment decisions.  Low activation rates lead to poor grades on [...]

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