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Delay in diagnosing blastomycosis cuts a young life short
COUGH, FEVER, AND FLU-LIKE SYMPTOMS for a week prompted a 25-year-old man to visit his physician, who prescribed an antibiotic. When the symptoms didn‘t improve after 3 days, the patient went to a local health care group, where a physician assistant continued the antibiotic, performed a tuberculosis test, and instructed the young man to return in 3 days.
At the return visit, the patient still had the cough and a fever of 101°F, as well as decreased breath sounds and bilateral pain in his lower lungs when reclining. Another physician assistant diagnosed pneumonia and prescribed a different antibiotic, but didn’t order chest radiographs or blood work—or measure oxygen saturation. He wrote the patient a 5-day excuse from work and told him to return if his condition worsened.
A few days later, the patient went to the emergency department, where he was diagnosed with a pulmonary blastomycosis infection. The infection was too far advanced to treat effectively, and the man died shortly thereafter.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The physician assistants were negligent for not having radiographs or blood work done and not consulting the supervising physician. The supervising physician didn’t review the examination and treatment notes.
THE DEFENSE No negligence occurred; an earlier diagnosis wouldn’t have changed the outcome.
VERDICT $3.7 million Wisconsin verdict.
COMMENT This case sends shivers down my spine. I really get worried when huge verdicts are returned for failure to diagnose rare conditions. How many times a week do we treat patients for “bronchitis” or community-acquired pneumonia without getting a radiograph or oxygen saturation measurement—especially in a 25-year-old!
A drug overdose, with plenty of blame to go around
AN 85-YEAR-OLD WOMAN was admitted to a nursing home for a temporary stay after she broke her arm shoveling snow in her driveway. Her physician prescribed a medication, to be given once a week, for the woman’s rheumatoid arthritis. But because a nurse transcribed the order incorrectly, the patient was given the medication every day. After 17 days, she died of an overdose.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The nurse was negligent in transcribing the order incorrectly, the doctor was negligent for signing the order without reading the nurse’s note, and the pharmacy was negligent for failing to discover the dosage error.
THE DEFENSE No information about the defense is available.
VERDICT $1 million Ohio settlement.
COMMENT The moral of this story: Don’t sign those nursing home orders on autopilot!
Unexamined mass isn’t benign after all
A PEA-SIZED MASS on a 34-year-old woman’s head was diagnosed as a sebaceous cyst. A physician assistant removed the mass, which was thrown away without being sent for pathologic examination. A year later, the mass reappeared and was identified as a sarcoma. The woman died a year later.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The doctor and physician assistant were negligent in failing to diagnose the mass accurately and failing to send it for pathologic analysis.
THE DEFENSE The mass appeared normal and didn’t require examination.
VERDICT $1.5 million Texas settlement.
COMMENT I make it a policy to send all skin specimens—no matter how innocuous—for pathologic determination. I recently testified for a defendant in a case similar to this one (fortunately the physician won).
Delay in diagnosing blastomycosis cuts a young life short
COUGH, FEVER, AND FLU-LIKE SYMPTOMS for a week prompted a 25-year-old man to visit his physician, who prescribed an antibiotic. When the symptoms didn‘t improve after 3 days, the patient went to a local health care group, where a physician assistant continued the antibiotic, performed a tuberculosis test, and instructed the young man to return in 3 days.
At the return visit, the patient still had the cough and a fever of 101°F, as well as decreased breath sounds and bilateral pain in his lower lungs when reclining. Another physician assistant diagnosed pneumonia and prescribed a different antibiotic, but didn’t order chest radiographs or blood work—or measure oxygen saturation. He wrote the patient a 5-day excuse from work and told him to return if his condition worsened.
A few days later, the patient went to the emergency department, where he was diagnosed with a pulmonary blastomycosis infection. The infection was too far advanced to treat effectively, and the man died shortly thereafter.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The physician assistants were negligent for not having radiographs or blood work done and not consulting the supervising physician. The supervising physician didn’t review the examination and treatment notes.
THE DEFENSE No negligence occurred; an earlier diagnosis wouldn’t have changed the outcome.
VERDICT $3.7 million Wisconsin verdict.
COMMENT This case sends shivers down my spine. I really get worried when huge verdicts are returned for failure to diagnose rare conditions. How many times a week do we treat patients for “bronchitis” or community-acquired pneumonia without getting a radiograph or oxygen saturation measurement—especially in a 25-year-old!
A drug overdose, with plenty of blame to go around
AN 85-YEAR-OLD WOMAN was admitted to a nursing home for a temporary stay after she broke her arm shoveling snow in her driveway. Her physician prescribed a medication, to be given once a week, for the woman’s rheumatoid arthritis. But because a nurse transcribed the order incorrectly, the patient was given the medication every day. After 17 days, she died of an overdose.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The nurse was negligent in transcribing the order incorrectly, the doctor was negligent for signing the order without reading the nurse’s note, and the pharmacy was negligent for failing to discover the dosage error.
THE DEFENSE No information about the defense is available.
VERDICT $1 million Ohio settlement.
COMMENT The moral of this story: Don’t sign those nursing home orders on autopilot!
Unexamined mass isn’t benign after all
A PEA-SIZED MASS on a 34-year-old woman’s head was diagnosed as a sebaceous cyst. A physician assistant removed the mass, which was thrown away without being sent for pathologic examination. A year later, the mass reappeared and was identified as a sarcoma. The woman died a year later.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The doctor and physician assistant were negligent in failing to diagnose the mass accurately and failing to send it for pathologic analysis.
THE DEFENSE The mass appeared normal and didn’t require examination.
VERDICT $1.5 million Texas settlement.
COMMENT I make it a policy to send all skin specimens—no matter how innocuous—for pathologic determination. I recently testified for a defendant in a case similar to this one (fortunately the physician won).
Delay in diagnosing blastomycosis cuts a young life short
COUGH, FEVER, AND FLU-LIKE SYMPTOMS for a week prompted a 25-year-old man to visit his physician, who prescribed an antibiotic. When the symptoms didn‘t improve after 3 days, the patient went to a local health care group, where a physician assistant continued the antibiotic, performed a tuberculosis test, and instructed the young man to return in 3 days.
At the return visit, the patient still had the cough and a fever of 101°F, as well as decreased breath sounds and bilateral pain in his lower lungs when reclining. Another physician assistant diagnosed pneumonia and prescribed a different antibiotic, but didn’t order chest radiographs or blood work—or measure oxygen saturation. He wrote the patient a 5-day excuse from work and told him to return if his condition worsened.
A few days later, the patient went to the emergency department, where he was diagnosed with a pulmonary blastomycosis infection. The infection was too far advanced to treat effectively, and the man died shortly thereafter.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The physician assistants were negligent for not having radiographs or blood work done and not consulting the supervising physician. The supervising physician didn’t review the examination and treatment notes.
THE DEFENSE No negligence occurred; an earlier diagnosis wouldn’t have changed the outcome.
VERDICT $3.7 million Wisconsin verdict.
COMMENT This case sends shivers down my spine. I really get worried when huge verdicts are returned for failure to diagnose rare conditions. How many times a week do we treat patients for “bronchitis” or community-acquired pneumonia without getting a radiograph or oxygen saturation measurement—especially in a 25-year-old!
A drug overdose, with plenty of blame to go around
AN 85-YEAR-OLD WOMAN was admitted to a nursing home for a temporary stay after she broke her arm shoveling snow in her driveway. Her physician prescribed a medication, to be given once a week, for the woman’s rheumatoid arthritis. But because a nurse transcribed the order incorrectly, the patient was given the medication every day. After 17 days, she died of an overdose.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The nurse was negligent in transcribing the order incorrectly, the doctor was negligent for signing the order without reading the nurse’s note, and the pharmacy was negligent for failing to discover the dosage error.
THE DEFENSE No information about the defense is available.
VERDICT $1 million Ohio settlement.
COMMENT The moral of this story: Don’t sign those nursing home orders on autopilot!
Unexamined mass isn’t benign after all
A PEA-SIZED MASS on a 34-year-old woman’s head was diagnosed as a sebaceous cyst. A physician assistant removed the mass, which was thrown away without being sent for pathologic examination. A year later, the mass reappeared and was identified as a sarcoma. The woman died a year later.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM The doctor and physician assistant were negligent in failing to diagnose the mass accurately and failing to send it for pathologic analysis.
THE DEFENSE The mass appeared normal and didn’t require examination.
VERDICT $1.5 million Texas settlement.
COMMENT I make it a policy to send all skin specimens—no matter how innocuous—for pathologic determination. I recently testified for a defendant in a case similar to this one (fortunately the physician won).