Abstract

The cost of clinical negligence claims continues to rise, despite efforts to reduce this now ageing burden to the National Health Service (NHS) in England. From a welfarist perspective, reforms are needed to reduce avoidable harm to patients and to settle claims fairly for both claimants and society. Uncertainty in the estimation of quanta of damages, better known as financial settlements, is an important yet poorly characterised driver of societal outcomes. This reflects wider limitations to evidence informing clinical negligence policy, which has been discussed in recent literature. There is an acute need for practicable, evidence-based solutions that address clinical negligence issues, and these should complement long-standing efforts to improve patient safety. Using 15 claim cases from one NHS Trust between 2004 and 2016, the quality of evidence informing claims was appraised using methods from evidence-based medicine. Most of the evidence informing clinical negligence claims was found to be the lowest quality possible (expert opinion). The extent to which the quality of evidence represents a normative deviance from scientific standards is discussed. To address concerns about the level of uncertainty involved in deriving quanta, we provide five recommendations for medico-legal stakeholders that are designed to reduce avoidable bias and correct potential market failures.

Highlights

  • High quality, evidence-based medicine (EBM) is central to health system strengthening and an important part of this agenda in high-income settings is clinical negligence reform

  • A sample of 15 high-value, non-consecutive clinical negligence claims were drawn from a repository of paper-based claims that settled through litigation for at least £100,000 between 2004 and 2016 in one large National Health Service (NHS) Trust

  • Of the Level 2c evidence identified, three citations were published by professional bodies or the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence-based medicine (EBM) is central to health system strengthening and an important part of this agenda in high-income settings is clinical negligence reform. Expenditure on clinical negligence is a growing portion of the total National Health Service (NHS) spending (NHS Resolution, 2019), reflecting the mix of changing consumer behaviours and growth in medico-legal activity. This is occurring at a time when health and social care must contend with rising demand and consequent funding challenges (Licchetta and Stelmach, 2016). Whilst much research attention has been given to medico-legal issues in the USA, practical solutions that reduce the growing burden of claims against care providers are lacking in the English system (National Audit Office, 2017).

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