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Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic

Defensive medicine is widespread and practiced the world over, with serious consequences for patients, doctors, and healthcare costs. Even students and residents are exposed to defensive medicine practices and taught to take malpractice liability into consideration when making clinical decisions. De...

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Autores principales: Vento, Sandro, Cainelli, Francesca, Vallone, Alfredo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6163143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30294604
http://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v6.i11.406
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author Vento, Sandro
Cainelli, Francesca
Vallone, Alfredo
author_facet Vento, Sandro
Cainelli, Francesca
Vallone, Alfredo
author_sort Vento, Sandro
collection PubMed
description Defensive medicine is widespread and practiced the world over, with serious consequences for patients, doctors, and healthcare costs. Even students and residents are exposed to defensive medicine practices and taught to take malpractice liability into consideration when making clinical decisions. Defensive medicine is generally thought to stem from physicians’ perception that they can easily be sued by patients or their relatives who seek compensation for presumed medical errors. However, in our view the growth of defensive medicine should be seen in the context of larger changes in the conception of medicine that have taken place in the last few decades, undermining the patient–physician trust, which has traditionally been the main source of professional satisfaction for physicians. These changes include the following: time directly spent with patients has been overtaken by time devoted to electronic health records and desk work; family doctors have played a progressively less central role; clinical reasoning is being replaced by guidelines and algorithms; the public at large and a number of young physicians tend to believe that medicine is a perfect science rather than an imperfect art, as it continues to be; and modern societies do not tolerate the inevitable morbidity and mortality. To finally reduce the increasing defensive behavior of doctors around the world, the decriminalization of medical errors and the assurance that they can be dealt with in civil courts or by medical organizations in all countries could help but it would not suffice. Physicians and surgeons should be allowed to spend the time they need with their patients and should give clinical reasoning the importance it deserves. The institutions should support the doctors who have experienced adverse patient events, and the media should stop reporting with excessive evidence presumed medical errors and subject physicians to “public trials” before they are eventually judged in court.
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spelling pubmed-61631432018-10-06 Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic Vento, Sandro Cainelli, Francesca Vallone, Alfredo World J Clin Cases Editorial Defensive medicine is widespread and practiced the world over, with serious consequences for patients, doctors, and healthcare costs. Even students and residents are exposed to defensive medicine practices and taught to take malpractice liability into consideration when making clinical decisions. Defensive medicine is generally thought to stem from physicians’ perception that they can easily be sued by patients or their relatives who seek compensation for presumed medical errors. However, in our view the growth of defensive medicine should be seen in the context of larger changes in the conception of medicine that have taken place in the last few decades, undermining the patient–physician trust, which has traditionally been the main source of professional satisfaction for physicians. These changes include the following: time directly spent with patients has been overtaken by time devoted to electronic health records and desk work; family doctors have played a progressively less central role; clinical reasoning is being replaced by guidelines and algorithms; the public at large and a number of young physicians tend to believe that medicine is a perfect science rather than an imperfect art, as it continues to be; and modern societies do not tolerate the inevitable morbidity and mortality. To finally reduce the increasing defensive behavior of doctors around the world, the decriminalization of medical errors and the assurance that they can be dealt with in civil courts or by medical organizations in all countries could help but it would not suffice. Physicians and surgeons should be allowed to spend the time they need with their patients and should give clinical reasoning the importance it deserves. The institutions should support the doctors who have experienced adverse patient events, and the media should stop reporting with excessive evidence presumed medical errors and subject physicians to “public trials” before they are eventually judged in court. Baishideng Publishing Group Inc 2018-10-06 2018-10-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6163143/ /pubmed/30294604 http://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v6.i11.406 Text en ©The Author(s) 2018. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial.
spellingShingle Editorial
Vento, Sandro
Cainelli, Francesca
Vallone, Alfredo
Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic
title Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic
title_full Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic
title_fullStr Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic
title_full_unstemmed Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic
title_short Defensive medicine: It is time to finally slow down an epidemic
title_sort defensive medicine: it is time to finally slow down an epidemic
topic Editorial
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6163143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30294604
http://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v6.i11.406
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