Burstin H R, Johnson W G, Lipsitz S R, Brennan T A
Division of General Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA.
JAMA. 1993 Oct 13;270(14):1697-701. doi: 10.1001/jama.270.14.1697.
To evaluate whether socioeconomic status is associated with risk of malpractice claims, particularly among those who have suffered medical injury.
Case-control study.
Fifty-one hospitals in New York State.
The presence and severity of medical injury, defined as disability at the time of discharge or prolongation of the hospitalization caused by medical treatment as opposed to the disease process, were assessed through review of approximately 31,000 hospital records in New York in 1984. These sampled records were then linked to formal malpractice claims. To estimate the risk of malpractice claims by age, gender, race, insurance status, and income, we conducted a case-control study of claimant cases matched with nonclaimant controls. The cases were all those patients who filed malpractice claims referring to alleged malpractice during a sampled hospitalization. Physician reviewers had previously judged the level of disability that resulted from the medical injury. Claimants (n = 51) were each matched with five nonclaimant controls on the basis of injury. Noninjured cases were matched with noninjured controls and injured cases were matched with injured controls.
We found that poor patients (odds ratio [OR], 0.2; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.03 to 0.8) and uninsured patients (OR, 0.1; 95% CI, 0.005 to 0.9) were significantly less likely to file malpractice claims, after controlling for the severity of medical injury. Among patients who suffered medical injury, the elderly (OR, 0.2; 95% CI, 0.03 to 0.9) were also less likely to file claims. Gender and race were not independently associated with risk of malpractice claims.
Poor and uninsured patients are significantly less likely to sue for malpractice, even after controlling for the presence of medical injury. Fear of malpractice risk should not be a significant factor in the decision to serve the poor. Tort reforms that would protect physicians who serve the medically indigent from malpractice suits may not be warranted.
评估社会经济地位是否与医疗事故索赔风险相关,尤其是在那些遭受医疗伤害的人群中。
病例对照研究。
纽约州的51家医院。
通过查阅1984年纽约约31000份医院记录,评估医疗伤害的存在及严重程度,医疗伤害定义为出院时的残疾或因医疗而非疾病进程导致的住院时间延长。这些抽样记录随后与正式的医疗事故索赔相关联。为了按年龄、性别、种族、保险状况和收入估计医疗事故索赔风险,我们对索赔病例与非索赔对照进行了病例对照研究。病例为所有在抽样住院期间因涉嫌医疗事故而提出医疗事故索赔的患者。医生评审员此前已判定医疗伤害导致的残疾程度。索赔者(n = 51)根据伤害情况与五名非索赔对照进行匹配。未受伤病例与未受伤对照匹配,受伤病例与受伤对照匹配。
我们发现,在控制了医疗伤害的严重程度后,贫困患者(优势比[OR],0.2;95%置信区间[CI],0.03至0.8)和未参保患者(OR,0.1;95%CI,0.005至0.9)提出医疗事故索赔的可能性显著降低。在遭受医疗伤害的患者中,老年人(OR,0.2;95%CI,0.03至0.9)提出索赔的可能性也较小。性别和种族与医疗事故索赔风险无独立关联。
即使在控制了医疗伤害的存在后,贫困和未参保患者提起医疗事故诉讼的可能性也显著较低。对医疗事故风险的担忧不应成为为贫困人群提供服务决策中的重要因素。保护为医疗贫困人群服务的医生免受医疗事故诉讼的侵权改革可能没有必要。