In addition, because of the nature of the allegation, and the fact that normal members of a jury or judge cannot be expected to understand complext medical terms and procedures, expert witnesses are typically called -- usually for both sides (Uribe, 1999).
In the United States, there have been several cases that have set international precedence on what constitutes "expertise." One cannot be qualified just because of a diploma, and the expert witness must also be qualified for reliability and relevance. There are two models that attempt to do just this: 1) the Gatekeeper Model which requires a hearing with the Judge prior to the trial in which the Court considers the expert's testimony as being reliable and relevant; whether a theory is tested, peer reviewed, is there a known potential error rate, and is the expert an expert on standards controlling the care or procedure given (Reegna and Bebout, 1997). The second method requires that a certificate of merit be presented by a medical doctor or panel of doctors attesting to the accused as likely having been negligent in some aspect of the case (Uribe).
Damages in medical malpractice are rather complicated, greatly depending on the case, the view of the jury as to the damages, and whether those damages are compensatory or punative or both. Compensatory damages, for instance, are both economic and non-economic. Econonic includes potential lost wages (the earning capacity of an individual), medical and/or life care expenses. Non-economic damages (fines) are assesssed by the jury for physical or psychological harm, or both -- loss of vision in one eye, loss of a limb or organ that is not life threatening, but may reduce quality of life. Punative damages (to punish) are quite rare, and only appear in cases in which the conduct is wanton, reckless, and/or purposeful. In the case of suicide, physicians and psychiatriats are held to a different standard than in other claims. Legally, suicide is viewed as an act which terminates life. For instance, the defendant may be held negligent for another person's suicide, but not responsible for damages after this -- an exception is made for physicians. Further, simply by allowing a patient access to suicide producing products can, in some cases, be seen as malpractice (Giannini, Gianinini and Slaby, 1989).
There are some additional distinctions when discussing malpractice. From the micrcosm, a 1999 and 2006 study found that medication errors are the most common medical mistakes; harming about 1.5 million patients per annum. Most occur in long-term care and Medicare outpatient clinics -- in other words, in the areas in which there are fewer doctors to patients and the time spent with patients is lower. Most of these are settled, as are almost ae of malpractice suites that involve a medical error. Most of the expense goes to litigation and there is a 50/50 chance the entire claim will be denied. The statistics are staggering: for every dollar spent on compensation, 54 cents when to lawyers, experts, and courts -- also bumping up premiums on all sides of the equation (Studdert, Mello, Phil, Gawande, et.al., 2006).
However, the gray complication comes when one examines national statistics dealing with morbidity. Approximateluy 200,000 hospital deaths were studied between 2000-2002 were studied and found that when research demographics, mortality and economic records are applied to this population at least 1/2 were due to potentailly preventable medical errors. Additional studies showed that if this were a single disease (measles, flu, etc.) there would be a certain call for a national epidemic. The study is not without its critics, of course, and the challenge comes in what one can define as preventable death. The conclusions reached form the view that 50% of those who die while in the hospital may have lived longer had there been a higher standard of care applied (Loughran, 2004).
Because of the very nature of nursing, these statistics are both alarming and relevant. Nurses are necessarily at the front line of clinical care, therefore, they often have the basal responsibility to monitor and recommend treatment, or call a physician when conditions worsen. In most of the literature (Stencel, 2006; (Bernzweig, 1996), lack of adequate budgets and staff are blamed for a large majority of these cases. This, of course, brings up a serious issue when reviewing a nurse's responsibility and diligence regarding malpractice.
To be effective, a modern nursing must balance a precarious load: patient care vs. staffing; procedures vs. patient load; egos vs. patient need; and, unfortunately fiscal budgeting vs. appropriate...
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