Abstract

BackgroundPracticing safe behavior regarding patients is an intrinsic part of a physician’s ethical and professional standards. Despite this, physicians practice behaviors that run counter to patient safety, including practicing defensive medicine, failing to report incidents, and hesitating to disclose incidents to patients. Physicians’ risk of malpractice litigation seems to be a relevant factor affecting these behaviors. The objective of this study was to identify conditions that influence the relationship between malpractice litigation risk and physicians’ behaviors.MethodsWe carried out an exploratory field study, consisting of 22 in-depth interviews with stakeholders in the malpractice litigation process: five physicians, two hospital board members, five patient safety staff members from hospitals, three representatives from governmental healthcare bodies, three healthcare law specialists, two managing directors from insurance companies, one representative from a patient organization, and one representative from a physician organization. We analyzed the comments of the participants to find conditions that influence the relationship by developing codes and themes using a grounded approach.ResultsWe identified four factors that could affect the relationship between malpractice litigation risk and physicians’ behaviors that run counter to patient safety: complexity of care, discussing incidents with colleagues, personalized responsibility, and hospitals’ response to physicians following incidents.ConclusionIn complex care settings procedures should be put in place for how incidents will be discussed, reported and disclosed. The lack of such procedures can lead to the shift and off-loading of responsibilities, and the failure to report and disclose incidents. Hospital managers and healthcare professionals should take these implications of complexity into account, to create a supportive and blame-free environment. Physicians need to know that they can rely on the hospital management after reporting an incident. To create realistic care expectations, patients and the general public also need to be better informed about the complexity and risks of providing health care.

Highlights

  • Practicing safe behavior regarding patients is an intrinsic part of a physician’s ethical and professional standards

  • Conditional factors that affect the relationship between malpractice litigation risk and physicians’ behavior The first conditional factor that was revealed by our analysis was the complexity of care given

  • Hospital managers and healthcare professionals should take these implications of complexity into account, to create a supportive and blame-free environment

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Summary

Introduction

Practicing safe behavior regarding patients is an intrinsic part of a physician’s ethical and professional standards. Physicians practice behaviors that run counter to patient safety, including practicing defensive medicine, failing to report incidents, and hesitating to disclose incidents to patients. Physicians’ risk of malpractice litigation seems to be a relevant factor affecting these behaviors. The objective of this study was to identify conditions that influence the relationship between malpractice litigation risk and physicians’ behaviors. Practicing safe behavior is an intrinsic part of a physician’s ethical and professional standards, physicians why, to receive financial compensation, or to hold staff or organizations accountable for their actions [13,14]. We identify influences on the relationship between the risk of malpractice litigation and the unsafe behaviors of physicians. Physicians may fail to disclose incidents to patients because of the health services’ blame culture [18], a lack of confidence in their communication skills [9], a lack of insight into patients’ and relatives’ experience and understanding of incidents, and the challenge of dealing with patients’ and colleagues’ emotions [19]

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