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You are here: Home / Employment / Nurse Practitioner Liability

Nurse Practitioner Liability

August 23, 2018 by LORIE A BROWN, R.N., M.N., J.D. Leave a Comment

NSO joins up with CNA Insurance Company to publish Claims Analysis for Nurses and Nurse Practitioners.  Here, I want to talk about the analysis for Nurse Practitioners.

It was determined that 29.4% of the closed claims, meaning medical malpractice cases against Nurse Practitioners, were medication related.  The average claim against NPs was in the amount of $240,471, an amount which is interestingly low.  Apparently, this is in line with Physician and Physician Assistant payments.

In addition, the average expense to defend these claims was about $60,000.  I bet you’re grateful that you have insurance!  Can you imagine having to pay that sum to defend yourself against a medical practice claim?

I also found it interesting that most of claims resolved in the $100,000 to $249,999 range.  That range has increased since last 2009.

The highest setting where the actions leading to the claims took place was for Nurse Practitioners working in a Physician Office, followed by a Nurse Practitioner Office.  Third on the list was in aged services Skilled Care Nursing Facilities.  These three make sense since they are the places where most Nurse Practitioners work.

Thirty-Two-point eight percent (32.8%) of the claims were in the area of diagnosis followed by medication at 29.4% and treatment/care management at 22.3%.  Therefore, the majority of claims against Nurse Practitioners are for providing improper medication management.

A further subdivision of the medication prescription claims reveals that the majority of claims were for improper prescribing or managing of controlled drugs.  This is very serious as controlled substances are such an issue these days.

The second highest, which lagged quite a bit behind, was failure to recognize contraindications and/or known adverse interaction between ordered medications.  Nurse practitioners and other health care providers frequently get alert fatigue.  So, when an alert pops on the screen to warn that there may be an interaction, many times they are disregarded because the alert popups are so numerous. It is very important to make sure that your patient is not allergic to medication provided or even medication related to the medication provided such as penicillin and cephalosporins.        The Institute for Safe Medical Practices regards allergy as “never events” meaning that this should never happen.

Also of interest is the claims of illness or injuries related to medication management was headed by medication that resulted in death where the second highest was addiction.

Some risk management tips would include always checking to make sure the patient is not allergic to medications.  Follow the guidelines for safe prescribing of controlled substances including urine testing and contracting, if necessary.  Always review the prescription monitoring drug program reports of your State for patients if you are prescribing controlled substances.

Lastly: good documentation.  Make sure that if you do make a diagnosis, document your rationale and your thought process in making that diagnosis so that even if it is an incorrect diagnosis, someone acting under same or similar circumstances will understand your diagnosis and come to the same conclusion.  The standard of care is what those acting under same or similar circumstances would do.  So by documenting your thought process, even if wrong, and others agree with your thought process, then there can be no liability.

If you would like to review the NSO claims report, you can look up both nurses as well as nurse practitioners at the nso.com website or just click on THIS LINK to be taken directly to the report.

What types of things do you do to protect your most valuable asset, your license?  Feel free to comment below.

 

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Filed Under: Employment, License Protection, Newsletter, Workplace Issues

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