Posts Tagged ‘Wrongful Death Attorney’

Hospitals Increasingly Fail to Report Medical Malpractice to National Data Bank

Friday, May 7th, 2010

The Chicago medical malpractice attorneys at Passen Law Group understand that hospitals work hard to protect their reputation in their community and their bottom lines.  However, when that effort comes at the expense of the public health and safety of patients, something is wrong.

Twenty-four years ago, Congress became concerned that unethical or substandard doctors could avoid the consequences of their actions by simply changing hospitals or, if the situation were particularly bad, by moving out of state.  Enter the National Practitioner Data Bank.  Congress established the National Practitioner Data Bank to combat this risk, requiring that hospitals who discipline doctors – whether for ethical violations or more straightforward errors and medical malpractice – are required to report this discipline to the Data Bank.  Thus, potential future employers, including medical organizations, practices, and hospitals, can check a doctor’s disciplinary history before hiring, without having to undergo the cumbersome and prohibitive exercise of attempting to check with the boards of all 50 states.

Our medical malpractice attorneys support the National Practitioner Data Bank and other commonsense, straightforward laws that can help to promote safe medical practices performed by competent physicians.  However, a study by nonprofit consumer group Public Citizen, titled “Hospitals Drop the Ball on Physician Oversight,” suggests that the Data Bank is not functioning as an effective tool for preventing malpractice, for the simple reason that the law requiring reporting is regularly violated by U.S. hospitals.

For example, from 1990 to 2007, nearly half of U.S. hospitals did not make even one report to the Data Bank.  In some states, this rate is even more extreme.  In Ohio, for instance, fewer than 43% of hospitals have ever reported even a single instance of discipline to the Data Bank.

While we would like to believe that the quality of care in the U.S. is so high that half of the hospitals had no need to discipline even a single physician, our experience tells us otherwise.  The only explanation for this report rate is that hospitals are not reporting their disciplinary measures as required.

For those who are not convinced, there is hard data.  Over one three-year period, about 8,000 physicians were disciplined by state medical boards in the U.S.  Over that same period, however, only about 3,000 reports were made to the National Practitioner Data Bank.

Indeed, Public Citizen’s report shows that hospitals are taking steps specifically targeted to avoid the law.  As an example, hospitals are required to report to the Data Bank any suspension of a physician for longer than 30 days.  So, many hospitals have stopped suspending doctors for this long, choosing instead to discipline physicians with shorter suspensions, a leave of absence, educational requirements, or some combination of these measures.  No 30-day suspension means no report required:  the physician is protected, and her future patients are not.

At other times, hospitals do not even bother to skirt the law, but simply ignore it.  Public Citizen’s report identifies at least one instance (at a hospital in California) where a group of physicians who performed numerous unnecessary surgeries was not reported because of the prestige of one of the physicians and the funds those surgeries generate for the hospital.

It is small wonder that hospitals have not complied with the law.  As of a few years ago, there had not been a single action taken, against any hospital, for failure to follow the law.  Hospitals are not ignorant of the fact that there have been no consequences for noncompliance.  As experienced medical negligence lawyers are well aware, without the realistic threat of punishment, through law enforcement or the courts, doctors and hospitals will do no more than is absolutely necessary to protect their patients.  That is why literally tens of thousands of people die each year in the U.S. from preventable medical errors in hospitals.

This situation is obviously untenable.  Doctors and hospitals cannot be permitted to simply ignore laws that are meant to protect the public.  The lawyers of Passen Law Group add our voices to those demanding that these laws be enforced, and that hospitals be required to place protecting the innocent above protecting unethical or incompetent physicians, and their own bottom lines.

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

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Parents and Professionals Alike Fail to Recognize the Warning Signs of “Huffing”

Friday, April 30th, 2010

huffing inhalants danger 300x282 Parents and Professionals Alike Fail to Recognize the Warning Signs of “Huffing”The Chicago personal injury attorneys at Passen Law Group are becoming increasingly concerned by the practice of huffing, and the apparent ignorance of this practice in the adult professionals charged with ensuring the safety of our children and teens.  “Huffing,” or the use of inhalants to get high, is one of the most popular drugs for teen users, and one of the most widely abused.  In fact, only the use of alcohol and marijuana exceed huffing in American teens.  Huffing is also among the more dangerous forms of drug abuse.  Huffing can and does cause permanent brain injury or death after only a single use.

Although there has not yet been a comprehensive study of the number of deaths from huffing, The National Inhalant Prevention Coalition, a group dedicated to educating the public about the dangers of huffing, receives about 150 calls a year from parents whose children have died.  In addition to these deaths, many teens who huff suffer lesser, but still serious, effects, including mild to severe brain injury.

Part of the danger of huffing is the ready availability of the inhalants – teens who might balk at the challenge or legal implications of obtaining marijuana or other illicit drugs do not have the same qualms about purchasing air freshener, spray paint, computer cleaner, shoe polish, gasoline, or propane.  Some teens even attempt to huff the chemicals used to foam whipped cream by releasing the chemical from the can.  Adding to the problem, teens who huff will usually not test positive on a drug test, as these tests only look for illegal substances, and cannot detect the misuse of legal substances.

This issue has been brought into focus in Chicago this week by the tragic death of Aaron Hunt, an area teenager.  Aaron died after huffing propane.  He was only 18, in his senior year at McHenry West High School.  He is described as a charming young man who played football and video games and dreamed of being a mechanic like his father.

In spite of the prevalence and dangers of huffing, many parents are oblivious to the practice and the risk, and the warning signs that their children may be using inhalants.  The National Inhalant Prevention Coalition notes that parents who talk to their kids about risky behavior, including drug use, often fail to warn their children about huffing.

Unfortunately, this oblivion also extends to the professionals tasked with preventing and treating drug abuse in the teen population.  Unless these professionals wake up to the dangers and signs of huffing, there will be more deaths and injuries.  Aaron Hunt himself, who had been caught smoking marijuana, was enrolled in counseling and drug education classes at the time of his death.  Yet these trained professionals failed to notice or respond to the classic warning signs of huffing.  Only an investigation can reveal whether these professionals’ mistake amounts to negligence in Hunt’s case, and thus whether this is a case of wrongful death.  But the failure to recognize warning signs in a child who was known to be at risk for drug abuse is shocking in the least.

Hunt’s parents reported that for several weeks before his death, they noticed several of these signs.  The teen was rapidly losing a great deal of weight, and seemed listless when he was normally vibrant.  Rapid weight loss and personality change are important warnings that should never be ignored.  Other warning signs include deteriorating memory, chemical smells on a child’s breath and chemicals in a child’s room or belongings.  It is tragic that the professionals tasked with ensuring Aaron’s safety ignored these signs.

Further, product manufacturers and distributors of products that are known to be misused in such a deadly way should include adequate warnings of such misuse.

In situations where professional ignorance amounts to negligence or product liability, an experienced Chicago wrongful death attorney can help the victim’s family members seek justice.  Sadly, at times only a lawsuit against some of its members can force an industry as a whole to sit up and take notice, and make the changes required to prevent further death and injury.

With studies showing that 8% of eighth graders and 6% of high school sophomores report having huffed in the past year, parents and professionals simply cannot afford to continue in their ignorance.  The personal injury lawyers at Passen Law Group urge counselors and educators of teens, particularly drug counselors, to wake up to the dangers and warning signs of huffing before further damage is done.  As Hunt’s father said, “People don’t need to die this way.”

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

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