Malpractice Claims Involving Electronic Health Records on the Rise

NAPA, Calif., Oct. 16, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Malpractice claims in which the use of electronic health records (EHRs) contributed to patient injury have increased continuously over the past decade, according to a study released today by The Doctors Company.

The study by the nation's largest physician-owned medical malpractice insurer reveals that claims in which EHRs are a factor grew from just two from 2007 through 2010 to 161 from 2011 through December 2016. Typically, the EHR is a contributing factor in a claim, rather than the primary cause, according to David B. Troxel, MD, study author and medical director at The Doctors Company.

It's the second study of its kind by The Doctors Company, which recognized early on that despite the potential of EHRs to advance the practice of good medicine and patient safety, there would be unanticipated consequences from this rapidly adopted new technology. The latest research compares 66 claims made from July 2014 through December 2016 with the results of the first study of 97 claims from 2007 through June 2014.

Compared with the earlier research, the new study shows:

    --  System factors that contributed to claims--such as technology and design
        issues, lack of integration of hospital EHR systems, and failure or lack
        of alerts and alarms--increased 8 percent.
    --  User factors--such as copy-and-paste errors, data entry errors, and
        alert fatigue--decreased 6 percent.
    --  More EHR-related claim events are occurring in patient rooms and fewer
        are occurring in hospital clinics/doctors' offices, ambulatory/day
        surgery centers, labor and delivery, and emergency rooms. However,
        hospital clinics/doctors' offices remain the top location for these
        events.
    --  Internal medicine, hospital medicine, and cardiology showed marked
        decreases among specialties involved in claims.
    --  Family medicine and nursing also showed decreases.
    --  Orthopedics, emergency medicine, and obstetrics/gynecology showed
        increases.

"While digitization of medicine has improved patient safety, it also has a dark side--as evidenced by the emergence of new kinds of errors," said Robert M. Wachter, MD, professor and chair, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco. "This study makes an important contribution by chronicling actual errors, such as wrong medications selected from an autopick list, and helps point the way to changes ranging from physician education to EHR software design."

About The Doctors Company
Founded and led by physicians, The Doctors Company (www.thedoctors.com) is relentlessly committed to advancing, protecting, and rewarding the practice of good medicine. The Doctors Company takes the mal out of malpractice insurance by helping practices of all sizes manage the complexities of today's healthcare environment--with expert guidance, resources, and coverage. The Doctors Company is the nation's largest physician-owned medical malpractice insurer, with 80,000 members and over $4 billion in assets, and is rated A by A.M. Best Company and Fitch Ratings. To learn more about data-driven insights and to stay up to date on industry trends, follow and subscribe to The Doctors Company on Twitter (@doctorscompany), YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Google+.

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SOURCE The Doctors Company