From GIN11153 at aol.com Sat May 20 23:14:56 2006 From: GIN11153 at aol.com (GIN11153 at aol.com) Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 02:14:56 EDT Subject: [PrvPracNP] Physician acceptance of solo-practice nurse practitioners grows March 24, 2006 Message-ID: <44a.129add9.31a15f60@aol.com> _http://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/stories/2006/03/27/focus4.html_ (http://www.bizjournals.com/memphis/stories/2006/03/27/focus4.html) The delivery of heath care services in many places across the country is at a critical level. Rural communities often struggle to attract doctors. Even hospitals in major metropolitan areas may face the challenge of having the doctors, nurses and other specialists they need to meet demand. Nurse practitioners have been integral to the medical community for many years. While it is true that some doctors have been reluctant to embrace their role, others readily see the value nurse practitioners provide. Gail Neuman RNC CPHW SNP LNC student nurse practitioner and student midwife listowner of LegalNurseConsulting at yahoogroups.com certified high risk OB/legal nurse consultant Perinatal Nurse Associates Notary Public/Certified Loan Signing Agent PrePaid Legal Sales Associate Santa Ana, CA -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From GIN11153 at aol.com Tue May 30 00:43:59 2006 From: GIN11153 at aol.com (GIN11153 at aol.com) Date: Tue, 30 May 2006 03:43:59 EDT Subject: [PrvPracNP] important topic-Documenting when you're on call Message-ID: <497.141d756.31ad51bf@aol.com> Malpractice Consult By: _Lee J. Johnson, JD_ (http://www.memag.com/memag/author/authorInfo.jsp?id=6592) Medical Economics Q. On a weekend when I was home on call, I spoke with a patient who reported swelling in his leg. Since his condition didn't sound serious, I advised him to come to my office early Monday morning, but I never documented the phone call. Unfortunately, he never showed up at the office that Monday, and I was too busy to notice. A few days later, he was rushed to the ED where they found a pulmonary embolism. Now he's suing me for malpractice, based on delayed diagnosis. Can I be held liable based on that phone call? Am I really required to document such calls even when I'm at home on my day off, and even if I don't actually see the patient? A. You're not required to document it, but you certainly should, since taking patient calls at home is the same as practicing medicine in the office. In both settings, good documentation is the best defense against liability; its absence can often ruin the defense. The outcome of this case will depend in part on a credibility battle between you and the patient. He'll claim that he told you his condition was very bad, while you'll claim that he reported only minor complaints that didn't call for immediate treatment. What you need is some crucial evidence that you don't have: a record of the phone call, including the nature of the complaint and the advice you gave, or your progress note with that information in the patient's chart. Without that evidence, you have nothing to counter the patient's claim. With nothing to support your memory, a jury may not believe your account. They may reasonably feel that your recall of past events is likely to be biased in your own favor. A contemporaneous note, however, written when the events were still fresh in your mind, would be less subject to bias, and therefore stronger evidence for your defense. Another common scenario in cases alleging failure to diagnose involves a patient who claims that she called several times to report symptoms, while the doctor denies receiving those calls. If the doctor has an established pattern of recording such calls on a message pad and then copying them into the chart, his defense will be much stronger. They can also be filed in the chart with a reference in the progress record: "See phone message 2/3/06." If you're on call for a colleague and one of his patients calls, make sure the doctor gets a timely report of the conversation, particularly if you ordered medication or recommended a follow-up visit or treatment. Keep a record of the call, and the fact that you notified him. Have some telephone message pads printed up, preferably with duplicate copies, and keep them in your home. The message slips should contain spaces for the following information: date, time, caller's name (or patient's name if other than the caller), complaint, action taken, advice given, medication advised or prescribed, and your signature. If a call involves a patient's treatment, copy or put the message slip into her chart as soon as possible afterward. If it concerns the care of a hospital patient, enter it in the hospital record. Train your office staff to use those message slips as well, and to give them to you so that you can enter the information in your progress notes -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: