Posts Tagged ‘Personal Injury Lawyer’

“Fast Hug” Mnemonic Aims to Avoid Medical Malpractice in Intensive Care

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

While medical malpractice is always shocking, failing to meet a patient’s basic needs, such as feeding, sedation, and pain relief, is incomprehensible.  Medical malpractice is also particularly troubling when in occurs in the intensive care unit (or ICU), where patients are at their most vulnerable and are often unable to assert themselves.  In a continuing medical education article released by the journal Critical Care Medicine, Dr. Jean-Louis Vincent proposes that all treating professionals – both doctors, nurses, and other supporting staff – apply a simple mnemonic designed to avoid some of the most fundamental of these medical errors.

The “Fast Hug” mnemonic encompasses seven basic components of care that should be considered for every intensive care patient at least once a day:  Feeding, Analgesia (pain management),  Sedation, Thromboembolic prophylaxis, Head-of-bed elevation, stress Ulcer prevention, and Glucose control.  Although all of these elements may not require action as to particular patients at particular times, Dr. Vincent suggests that considering each of these elements as to all treated patients will minimize mistakes, reduce complications, and improve positive outcomes and quality of life for ICU patients.

The medical malpractice attorneys of Passen Law Group commend these efforts to improve basic patient care in ICUs.  What we find disturbing, however, is that such an effort, through the means of continuing medical education, is required.  While some elements of the Fast Hug mnemonic, such as thromboembolic prophylaxis and glucose control, are more involved, medically complex, and variable based on the specifics of a patient’s condition, others are extremely basic.  It is hard to believe that physicians and other medical professionals working in the ICU must be reminded that patients must be fed, and given pain killers and sedatives.

The author, however, finds nothing at all shocking in his suggestion that physicians are not attending to these basic needs.  Indeed, the author matter-of-factly asks:  “How often do we realize that a patient has not been fed for 2 or 3 days . . .” referring to this as an “oversight.”  The failure to feed an ICU patient, who often cannot tell his caregivers that he is hungry, for multiple days is not an “oversight,” it is unpardonable.  And, as the authors themselves note, ICU patients desperately need nutrition to deal with the conditions that placed them there.  This is why ICUs who ensure that the Fast Hug mnemonic is implemented see better outcomes for their patients.

It is easy to understand how this situation came about.  When a medical error is catastrophic or obvious – when a foreign object is left in a hospital patient or the wrong limb is amputated – it is clear to all that medical malpractice has occurred and that the patient’s suffering is a direct result of the malpractice.  When an ICU patient dies, however, it may not be immediately obvious to her family that her death was related to the hospital’s failure to adequately feed her, or provide her with adequate painkillers, sedation, or glucose control.

Unless doctors and hospitals are held accountable for these errors, all the education in the world will not create meaningful change.  Although the medical error may not be as obvious, an experienced medical malpractice attorney can help the families of victims of this type of malpractice to recover, and to force hospitals and physicians to take the basic needs of their patients seriously.  If you have lost a loved one and believe that substandard ICU care may be to blame, we can help you determine what really happened, and whether you have legal claims.

For a free consultation with a top-rated Chicago personal injury lawyer at Passen Law Group, call us at (312) 527-4500.

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New Guidelines for Treatment of Children with Cerebral Palsy

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

child cerebral palsy treatment 216x300 New Guidelines for Treatment of Children with Cerebral PalsyPassen Law Group’s premier Chicago personal injury lawyers represent individuals and families of those inflicted with cerebral palsy — often in the context of medical malpractice or birth injury negligence.   More than 100,000 babies each year in this country will develop cerebral palsy, a complex neurologic disorder that affects body movement and posture.

Our representation typically involves investigating the cause of the disorder, what should have been done to prevent the injury, and the permanent consequences of living with cerebral palsy.  We ensure that our clients receive proper treatment for their condition — and in that capacity, we discovered a new treatment guideline was recently recommended for children and adolescents with cerebral palsy.  Each Chicago cerebral palsy lawyer at Passen Law Group understands that while the disorder cannot be cured, effective treatment can dramatically improve a child’s condition.

According to the new guideline recently published in Neurology, a medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), the AAN and the Child Neurology Society found botulinum toxin type A to effectively treat spasticity in children and adolescents with cerebral palsy.  Cerebral palsy is the most common cause of spasticity, which describes muscle tightness and abnormal reflexes that interferes with movement in children with the disorder.

Researchers note that treatment with botulinum toxin type A is not without risk.  According to Mauricio Delgado, MD, Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology, “In reviewing this drug for treatment of spasticity in children, the Food and Drug Administration is investigating isolated cases of generalized weakness following use of botulinum toxin type A for spasticity.”

In any event, more research is needed to establish effective treatments for generalized spasticity, which affects the majority of children with cerebral palsy.

For a Free Consultation with a Chicago cerebral palsy lawyer with Passen Law Group, call us at (312) 527-4500.

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On Brain Injury Issues, NFL Puts its Money Where its Mouthguard Isn’t

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

nfl brain injury donation 300x216 On Brain Injury Issues, NFL Puts its Money Where its Mouthguard Isnt The Chicago personal injury attorneys of Passen Law Group were extremely heartened to see the news last Tuesday of the NFL’s generous donation to brain injury research.  The NFL recently announced a $1 million donation to the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy at the Boston University School of Medicine.  Encephalopathy, which includes traumatic brain injury (TBI), can occur after repetitive blows to the head and concussion, as frequently occurs in sports, and in football players in particular.  The premier Chicago brain injury lawyers at Passen Law Group have considerable experience handling cases involving severe and permanent brain injury, including encephalomalacia.

While this donation is laudable, it does not go nearly far enough.  Despite public pressure, the NFL has still refused to mandate that its players wear concussion-grade helmets, or even double-sided mouthguards.  These mouthguards, which cost only around $8 each, are the one of the single best methods of preventing concussion and thus encephalopathy caused by repeated concussion.

While the players in the NFL are professionals and are free to choose whether to purchase and wear these items themselves or take the risk of injury, the fact remains that NFL requirements trickle down to college programs, high school programs, and even pee-wee leagues.  The participants in these programs are not professionals, and at lower levels often will not have the information and ability to make the safe choice if the NFL does not lead the way.

We at Passen Law Group encourage the NFL to follow up its generous donation by setting a positive example on brain injury safety — especially since children, who look up to professional football players, are most at risk of sustaining severe and permanent TBI.  In the meantime, children who suffer permanent brain injury due to the failure of their schools simple precautions, either inside our out of the athletics context, may have a cause of action.

For instance, Stephen M. Passen of Passen Law Group received a $19 million jury verdict, one of the Top 100 Jury Verdicts in the Nation, on behalf of a 9-year-old boy who sustained a catastrophic traumatic brain injury when a TV fell onto his head in an unsupervised private school classroom.  See Our Results for other significant verdicts or settlements involving brain damage.  If your child has suffered such an injury, a top-rated brain injury lawyer at Passen Law Group can help you to determine whether to file a claim.

For a free consultation with an experienced Chicago brain injury attorney at Passen Law Group, call us at (312) 527-4500.

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