The Canadian Medical Protective Association (McDougall, Zhang, Yang, Neilson, Nuth, Tsai, Lee, Lefebvre, Calder); Faculty of Education (McDougall), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology (Taylor), Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, Centre for Education Research & Innovation, London, Ont.; Clinical Epidemiology Program (Calder), Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ Open. 2022 Sep 13;10(3):E781-E788. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20220075. Print 2022 Jul-Sep.
Medico-legal data show opportunities to improve safe medical care; little is published on the experience of physicians-in-training with medical malpractice. The purpose of this study was to examine closed civil legal cases involving physicians-in-training over time and provide novel insights on case and physicians characteristics.
We conducted a retrospective descriptive study of closed civil legal cases at the Canadian Medical Protective Association (CMPA), a mutual medico-legal defence organization for more than 105 000 physicians, representing an estimated 95% of physicians in Canada. Eligible cases involved at least 1 physician-in-training and were closed between 1993 and 2017 (for time trends) or 2008 and 2017 (for descriptive analyses). We analyzed case rates over time using Poisson regression and the annualized change rate. Descriptive analyses addressed case duration, medico-legal outcome and patient harm. We explored physician specialties and practice characteristics in a subset of cases.
Over a 25-year period (1993-2017), 4921 physicians-in-training were named in 2951 closed civil legal cases, and case rates decreased significantly (β = -0.04, 95% confidence interval -0.05 to -0.03, where β was the 1-year difference in log case rates). The annualized change rate was -1.1% per year. Between 2008 and 2017, 1901 (4.1%) of 45 967 physicians-in-training were named in 1107 civil legal cases. Cases with physicians-in-training generally involved more severe patient harm than cases without physicians-in-training. In a subgroup with available information ( = 951), surgical specialties were named most often ( = 531, 55.8%).
The rate of civil legal cases involving physicians-in-training has diminished over time, but more recent cases featured severe patient harm and death. Efforts to promote patient safety may enhance medical care and reduce the frequency and severity of malpractice issues for physicians-in-training.
医学法律数据显示有机会改善安全医疗护理;但很少有关于实习医生医疗事故经验的发表。本研究的目的是随着时间的推移检查涉及实习医生的已结案民事法律案件,并提供关于案件和医生特征的新见解。
我们对加拿大医疗保护协会(CMPA)的已结案民事法律案件进行了回顾性描述性研究,该协会是一个为超过 105,000 名医生提供相互医疗法律辩护的组织,代表了加拿大约 95%的医生。符合条件的案件至少涉及 1 名实习医生,并且在 1993 年至 2017 年(用于时间趋势)或 2008 年至 2017 年(用于描述性分析)之间结案。我们使用泊松回归和年化变化率分析随时间变化的案件发生率。描述性分析涉及案件持续时间、法律结果和患者伤害。我们在案件子集中探讨了医生专业和实践特征。
在 25 年期间(1993-2017 年),2951 起已结案的民事法律案件中涉及 4921 名实习医生,案件发生率显着下降(β=-0.04,95%置信区间-0.05 至-0.03,其中β是日志案件发生率的 1 年差异)。年化变化率为每年-1.1%。在 2008 年至 2017 年期间,在 45967 名实习医生中,有 1901 名(4.1%)在 1107 起民事法律案件中被点名。涉及实习医生的案件通常比没有实习医生的案件涉及更严重的患者伤害。在有可用信息的子组中(=951),外科专业被点名的次数最多(=531,55.8%)。
涉及实习医生的民事法律案件的发生率随着时间的推移而减少,但最近的案件涉及严重的患者伤害和死亡。促进患者安全的努力可能会改善医疗护理,并减少实习医生医疗事故的频率和严重程度。