February 21st, 2011

Should Residents and Students Be Sued in Medical Malpractice Cases?

Ace medical blogger Kevin Pho, of Kevin M.D.

Dr. Kevin Pho is probably the medical blogosphere’s leading blogger, and he puts up an interesting commentary entitled Medical Students Should Not Be Liable for Malpractice. Why? Because they are, for the most part, being supervised by others who are completely responsible for what they do.

He writes due to a bill in Arizona on the subject that seeks to confer immunity on medical students for errors of negligence. Dr. Pho supports the bill, writing:

Injured patients do not benefit from suing medical students.  If negligence occurs, a supervising physician will answer the charges, and participate in the malpractice process.

Leave medical students alone, and exempt them from medical malpractice lawsuits.

For the purposes of this post, I am expanding beyond this Arizona bill and also broadening the subject to include residents, who are also supposed to be supervised (albeit to a lesser extent). The principle is the same, particularly for the junior residents; there is someone overseeing what they do.

This is the issue for the lawyers: Why sue these doctors-to-be or young residents if there is a medical practitioner or hospital that is supervising, who will be liable for their conduct?

Personally, I would prefer not to sue residents, and I certainly wouldn’t want to sue a medical student, but attorneys representing patients are sometimes forced to if they are going to fulfill their obligation of “zealous advocacy” to their clients.

I’ll explain how this happens in the real world with of one of my own cases, long since settled, no names needed. Some years back a young resident was putting a catheter into an elderly patient’s jugular vein so the doctors would have easy access. He missed and put it in the carotid artery. A nurse discovered this shortly afterward, the patient was rushed into surgery to repair the artery, but the patient died.

I sued the hospital, but not the resident who did the deed since his name was an unintelligible squiggle on the chart.  Since the hospital was responsible for any treatment he gave, it didn’t really matter from a legal standpoint, right?

Well, not quite. You see, when people are a party to a lawsuit they are often treated differently than those who are non-party witnesses. And if there are different rules there will be different consequences.

In this case, the resident was produced for deposition as a person with knowledge of the event — produced as an employee, not as a defendant. I learned during the questioning that he put together a PowerPoint presentation of the event for a hospital’s internal conference that wanted to know what about this “adverse outcome.” I asked for the document, and the defense lawyer refused, telling me it was privileged. And she was technically correct under New York’s Education Law §6527(3) that governs such internal quality reviews that are done by hospitals.

But the law has an exception for those that are actually parties to lawsuits. And that exception reads:

The prohibition relating to discovery of testimony shall not apply to the statements made by any person in attendance at such a meeting who is a party to an action or proceeding the subject matter of which was reviewed at such meeting.

We were entitled, therefore, to copies of any statements a person might have made to an internal committee doing reviews of incidents, but only if that person was a defendant;  Otherwise it is privileged because of the public policy of candor in such committees to improve medical care.

Now this was the interesting part. I still had time to add the young resident to the suit, and I could then get the document. Since he was the one that actually made the error, this shouldn’t be any kind of problem from a legal perspective.  So I made an offer to defense counsel. If I sue  him, I told her, I will be entitled to the document. So why not just turn it over and I’ll agree not to sue him?

Sounds reasonable, right? I figured I was moving the case quickly and getting the document my client needed to help establish liability, and which I knew I could get one day. And at the same time the young doctor would be spared the understandable anxiety of having his name on the suit, and the potential of being included in the secretive National Practitioners Data Bank that tracks significant settlements and verdicts against doctors, the results of which could follow him when he applies for his next job. This was a pretty clear win-win for both sides.

But the answer from defense counsel a few months later was no. And further, I was told, they would cross-move to have me sanctioned if I moved to amend the suit to add the young resident as a defendant, though I was never really clear on what theory they could possibly make such a motion, unless desperation is a theory.  So I  ignored the threat and moved to add the resident as a party, which I was obligated to do if I was going to represent my client well. And defense counsel cross-moved to have me sanctioned for making threats to add him as a defendant. Yes, my motion was granted and yes the cross-motion was laughed out of court. (My expert legal ethicist wrote that I was a mensch for making the offer.)

But, to directly answer the question of Dr. Pho, there are times when having  a person added as a party to a lawsuit is beneficial because it helps in discovery.

Here are two other ways it might help: If the student/resident moves out-of-state, and they move often at this point in their careers, the plaintiff still has access to them because, as a party, they are required to participate in the litigation and it makes getting depositions and documents easier. And it also helps at trial, because if they don’t show up to testify they are going to have some serious explaining to do.

And last, if the young doctor is a party, s/he can be asked their opinions. If they are merely fact witnesses, they don’t have to give their opinions. (This is the law in New York; It may differ elsewhere.)

And so, Dr. Pho is right that the students shouldn’t be added as defendants, but only philosophically. I don’t know what the law is in Arizona with respect to the three issues I just raised, but in the bigger picture it is easier to understand why such people do get sued; Because the law treats a party to a lawsuit differently than someone who is merely an employee of a party.

 

February 15th, 2011

First, Do No Harm

This was first posted in Trial Magazine (February 2011)©, put out by the  American Association for Justice, formerly Association of Trial Lawyers of America (ATLA). At my request, I’ve been given permission to re-post this, given the constant drumbeat of tort “reformers” seeking to protect those that have caused injury to others from being held accountable for their conduct.

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First, do no harm

C. Gibson Vance, President of AAJ

Few things in life are certain, but one thing you can count on is that politicians who want to weaken the civil justice system will try repeatedly to take away the legal rights of patients hurt by medical negligence. That was one of their final actions late last year, and it is on their agenda again in this new Congress.

Once again, our opponents are ignoring a major crisis in preventable medical errors and attacking injured patients while they try to revive the health care debate by raising the usual myths about medical malpractice litigation.

In the last Congress, AAJ successfully fought off dozens of amendments to the health care reform law that would have denied the legal rights of medical negligence victims. Our opponents tried one last time in the waning hours of the fall session by attempting to inject med-mal tort “reform” into the 9/11 bill, and AAJ helped to get the effort defeated by a vote of 185–244.

Their argument always boils down to cost. They claim that medical malpractice litigation is an expensive drain on the American health care system. A favorite tactic is to blame legitimate negligence claims for costly “defensive medicine”—a term used to describe what happens when doctors presumably order unnecessary tests for fear of being sued.

Yet even using our opponents’ statistics, a 2009 Congressional Budget Office report found that proposed changes in the civil justice system would save only one-half of 1 percent of all health care spending. The same report found evidence that tort “reform” measures would increase mortality rates and lead to worse patient care.

A tired and treacherous campaign

Now they’re at it again, at a time when the serious problem of medical errors is growing worse, not better. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) famously reported that preventable medical errors kill as many as 98,000 patients a year. At that time, the IOM suggested a number of steps to improve safety, such as increasing the use of computerized medical records and making sure doctors and nurses don’t work too long in any given shift.

Two recent studies make it clear those policies have not been widely adopted. Last November, both the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) and the inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services published results of studies showing that the level of risk to patients in our nation’s hospitals is at crisis levels, with hundreds of people dying daily from medical errors.

The NEJM study—which examined patient safety in North Carolina hospitals—found that about 18 percent of patients were harmed and that of these injuries, 2.9 percent were permanent, 8.5 percent were life-threatening, and 2.4 percent caused or contributed to a patient’s death. The study also reported that “the penetration of evidence-based safety practices has been quite modest.” Only 1.5 percent of hospitals in America are using a comprehensive computerized medical record system, and doctors-in-training and nurses regularly work excessively long hours, which has been proved to be unsafe.

The inspector general’s report included some sobering statistics from a study of Medicare beneficiaries conducted in October 2008. It found that one in seven Medicare patients experienced a serious adverse event. As a result, the study projected that 15,000 patients died in a single month—that’s the equivalent of an astonishing 180,000 patients a year. The study concluded that 44 percent of the adverse events were preventable, due to medical errors and substandard care, and cost the government $4.4 billion a year.

How will stripping the rights of these patients to seek justice solve this crisis of care? It won’t. Instead it will create a health care system that costs more but produces worse outcomes. Patients injured by medical errors will have no recourse, leaving taxpayers to foot the bill.

Congress should adopt the time-honored pledge of the medical profession, “First, do no harm.” It should focus on the real problem of preventable medical errors, not attack innocent patients harmed by health care providers’ mistakes.

 

February 15th, 2011

Dominic Barbara Retires In Wake of Suspension (High Profile Long Island Attorney)

Fresh on the heals of being hit with an 18-month suspension from practicing law, high profile lawyer Dominic Barbara has decided to retire according to the New York Law Journal.

The suspension came after 20 prior sanctions from 1988 to 2009, with the Appellate Division citing the “avalanche of Grievance Committee sanctions” as a motivating factor. Barbara, who primarily did matrimonial and criminal law, was also involved in a high profile personal injury matter last year regarding the death of eight people on the Taconic Parkway from a drunk and stoned driver going the wrong way.

His notoriety stems from handling high profile clients such as Joey Buttafuco and Jessica Hahn, and frequent call-in appearances to the Howard Stern show.

The Law Journal quotes Barbara as saying,

“The Appellate Division has a very difficult job to do ruling on what the findings of the grievance committee are and I’m sure what they did, they felt was right…I’ve been a lawyer for 40 years, and am 65 years old, and it’s just a sad way to end my career. But, on the other hand, life goes on.”

Previously:  Dominic Barbara, High Profile NY Attorney, Suspended for 18 months

 

February 11th, 2011

Dominic Barbara, High Profile NY Attorney, Suspended for 18 months

Part of this short story is about a lawyer named Dominic Barbara, who previously represented Howard Stern (and is a regular side-kick, call-in guest on his show). He also represented Joey Buttafuco, Jessica Hahn, and Michael Lohan, each of whom had more than their allotted 15 minutes of fame. New York Magazine once called him the “biggest, brassiest lawyer on Long Island.” And last year he was retained for a headline making crash on the Taconic Parkway that killed eight people (video).

But the more important part, to me, is the fact that what you see on a lawyer’s website, or in the newspapers, isn’t always what you get.

First, as to Barbara. He was suspended this week after “an avalanche of Grievance Committee sanctions” (nine Letters of Caution, nine Admonitions, and two Advisements). That’s a lot of baggage, and as a consequence of the latest round he was handed an 18-month suspension.  Among the charges, and these seem to be the straws that broke the camel’s back, are that he failed to issue itemized bills as required, failed to supervise the lawyers in his office, failed to timely refund a portion of a fee that had not been earned after the client fired him, and engaged in conduct that adversely reflects on his fitness as a lawyer by failing to adequately communicate with that client (or her new counsel).

But here’s the thing, despite this “avalanche” of sanctions, he has this to say about his firm on  his website:

For more than 35 years, The Barbara Law Firm has performed at the highest level of quality legal representation in the fields of Family, Matrimonial, Criminal, and Civil Law.

The highest levels? I think not. Not with all those sanctions. There is more puffery, of course, as he tries to parlay  the celebrity clients into more business:

Dominic A. Barbara has been leading this firm for more than 30 years, providing personal, assertive, successful legal representation to clients from all walks of life. The housewife, teacher and business owner receive the same care and consideration as the high-profile celebrities who turn to The Barbara Law Firm. Each one is looking for the same thing – a team of brilliant legal minds focusing on his or her individual case.

So what you see on a website isn’t always what you get when it comes to the law. Anybody can write puffery. And just because someone has high profile clients doesn’t mean that they are actually good lawyers. (I never did like that whole “celebrity lawyer” thing.) ” I once tried a case with a guy that had many high profile clients. In the well of the courtroom he was awful. And when I say awful I mean law students could do a better job. I would see him on the news after our trial and the first in my mind was this: His client is gonna hang.

The best way to find a lawyer isn’t by checking out the puffery on a website. It’s by asking around and making sure they handle the problem that you have, perhaps by starting with friends and neighbors and other lawyers who will hopefully be able to direct you to someone who knows what they are doing. In fact, this was the subject of the fourth post I ever did on this blog, more than 1,000 posts ago, when I only had six readers. They were all Bulgarian spammers.

So if you’re hunting for a lawyer, ignore that guy on the news. And certainly don’t be impressed with his website. For as the old New Yorker cartoon goes, on the internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.

Avvo screenshot at about noon on 2/11/11

Addendum: I think it’s worth noting that this “avalanche” of Grievance Committee sanctions didn’t show up on Avvo‘s lawyer rating service, a service of which I’ve previously been critical. (This suspension hasn’t either, but I cut them slack for that because the opinion was just released yesterday.) But the point is that many disciplinary actions are hidden from public view. In other words, Avvo probably couldn’t have found the problems even if they looked. And that type of incomplete information can be rather misleading to the consumer, notwithstanding all the caveats that Avvo might provide. A copy of Barbara’s listing, showing “No professional misconduct found” is at right.

Elsewhere:

Learning Tricks from an Old Dog (Simple Justice):

Is this your hero?  Is this your savior?  Is this the lawyer who you want standing next to you when your life is on the line?  Or is this the guy who will charge you a whole lotta money because he’s a big time “high profile” lawyer, and when you decide that he’s not the guy you want next to you despite all the puffery on his website, he won’t give you your money back? (more)

Loud Lawyer Dominic Barbara suspended for 18 months (Courtroom Strategy):

I have had clients who have come to me after a foray into his firm’s office that when they complained about the non-stop pouring of money into legal fees, that he would offer to stay on the case if he allowed them to hold a press conference about the case. (more)

Update: Dominic Barbara Retires In Wake of Suspension

(Note: Subsequent to this post, news organizations ran stories on the suspension)

 

February 7th, 2011

Huffington Post Sold (The Future of the Legal Blogosphere and How Much Is Your Blog Worth?)

When I heard this morning that the Huffington Post was sold for $315 million to AOL, it made me wonder once again just how much a blog was “worth” if it was sold on the open market. I speculated on this once before, on April Fool’s Day 2009, when I put my blog up for sale on eBay for $1 million.

So, with a bit of number crunching, we get this: Huffington has 25 million visitors per month as per a NYT article I read this morning. Whether that is unique visitors, or some other way of calculating visitors, I don’t know. But my little corner of cyberspace had these metrics last year: 172K visitors, 207K visits, and 295K page views (using Google Analytics). That makes this a modestly successful law blog, if one is concerned with eyeballs (as per Alexa/Avvo, #46 if counting eyeballs). Roughly speaking, it seems that Huffington gets about 1,500 times as many visitors as I do.

So if Huffington has 1,500 times as many visitors, then this blog would have a value of about $200,000.

Of course, the ability to generate revenue would be a major issue for the blog. I’ve never gone out of my way to do that, with the exception of the ALM ad you see to the right that I discussed some time ago, but it seems that law blogs would have particularly favorable demographics for advertisers. Not just books, and legal support services, but high end products such as cars as well. So one would think that a premium would be paid for such sites (if they were for sale).

Some time ago, I speculated that a group law blog in the fashion of Huffington would work very well for the right entrepreneur, leading me to write The Future of the Legal Blogosphere in 2009. (See also a 2 minute interview I did at Legal Tech in 2009 on this.) And the sale of Huffington today reinforces that feeling.