© Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2015
Barbara G. Jericho (ed.)Ethical Issues in Anesthesiology and Surgery10.1007/978-3-319-15949-2_1212. Honesty in the Perioperative Setting: Error and Communication
(1)
Department of Surgery, The University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, 5841 S. Maryland Avenue, MC 5030, Chicago, IL 60637, USA
(2)
Department of Surgery, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, The University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract
Since the Institute of Medicine report, “To Err is Human,” there has been a great focus on medical errors and the creation of systems to prevent the occurrence of these errors. Error disclosure is critical to managing medical errors in order to uphold the ethical principles of autonomy and truth-telling, both integral to the physician-patient relationship. Surgeons feel responsible for their patients’ outcomes and report that errors should be disclosed though the surgeon may not have the proper training in disclosure. Institutional support, both for the emotional disruption that physicians face and for disclosure training programs, is important to advance patient-centered communication and high-quality health care.
Keywords
Medical ErrorDisclosureCommunicationPhysician-Patient RelationshipEthicsCase Presentations
Case Presentation 1
Prior to a gynecological tumor resection, a 54-year-old woman underwent an inferior vena cava (IVC) filter placement due to a recent deep venous thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE). She recovered well from both the IVC placement and the resection of her tumor. Now, she presents to the operating room for the removal of the IVC filter. The IVC filter is unable to be removed due to a technical difficulty in the operating room. The unsuccessful procedure is described in detail to the patient and her family. A CT scan is obtained and there is no evidence of recurrent cancer, but the tip of the IVC filter is nearly embedded in the wall of the vena cava. The patient returns to the surgeon’s office for a reevaluation and a mutual decision between the patient and surgeon is made to reattempt the removal of the IVC filter. In the operating room, the surgeon utilizes a new technique and the IVC filter is easily removed from the IVC wall, but the IVC filter is nearly released from the snaring mechanism. If lost, the IVC filter could have traveled to the patient’s heart. After a few minutes, the IVC filter was successfully removed and there was no harm to the patient.
Case Presentation 2
A 64-year-old man presents to a surgeon for a second opinion regarding the management of an aneurysmal degeneration in the right iliac artery above a prior endovascular repair. The patient has a past medical history of cardiac disease and severe pulmonary disease for which he uses oxygen at home. The surgeon has a lengthy discussion with the patient and family regarding the repair of the aneurysmal degeneration and the possibility of a complex endovascular repair that will require multiple devices. The surgeon explains to the patient and the family that some of the devices will be used in an off-label fashion. The patient and his family understand the risks and benefits of this complicated approach and agree to proceed. The patient undergoes a surgical repair of the aneurysmal degeneration with the last step of the surgery being the removal of one sheath from a renal artery. However, the sheath in the renal artery is trapped on a new device that was placed in the aorta. Finally, after multiple careful attempts, the surgeon is able to dislodge the sheath, but the sheath pulls the newly placed aortic stent into the proximal descending thoracic aorta and a portion of the sheath remains attached to the stent in the thoracic aorta. Fortunately, the stent does not cover any of the great vessels, which would have likely caused the patient to have a stroke. The sheath is eventually separated from the stent and the surgical procedure is then completed with a different endovascular approach. The patient remained in the hospital for a short time and was discharged from the hospital with no neurologic sequelae.
Introduction
Medical error and its impact on the healthcare system were thrust into the spotlight by the 1999 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, “To Err is Human.” This report detailed the types of preventable medical errors, the number of resulting deaths, the costs of these errors, and strategies to improve patient safety and the healthcare system. Furthermore, the authors described the effects of errors on the patient and family, the physician, and the physician-patient relationship [1]. This report remains fundamental in the patient safety movement and critical to discussions about error and the disclosure of error.
The IOM defines medical error as “failure of a planned action to be completed as intended or use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim” [1]. Medical errors include serious errors, minor errors and near misses that can potentially cause an adverse event, “an injury resulting from a medical intervention” [2]. Serious errors, often resulting from ineffective team communication [3] (e.g. the operating room team), are most likely to occur in the operating room, emergency department, and intensive care unit [1]. It is part of human nature to err and, thus, it is essential to work toward solutions to minimize medical errors. A critical aspect of the management of medical errors, in order to uphold the ethical principles of autonomy and truth-telling, is error disclosure.
This chapter discusses the history of disclosure; the patient and physician perspective on medical error; the surgeon-patient relationship; the ethical dilemmas that might arise from medical errors, in particular perioperative errors; and how physicians might navigate these situations in the disclosure of medical error.
The History of Disclosure
In the 1930s, doctors were advised to “keep a cautious tongue” with regard to errors [4]. This attitude toward error disclosure persisted throughout much of the twentieth century until specific disclosure programs such as the Lexington Model emerged [5]. In 1987, the Lexington Veterans Administration Medical Center (VAMC) lost two medical malpractice cases and discovered that a patient death was due to medical negligence. Subsequently, the facility, including the chief of staff and staff attorney, decided that the “right thing to do” was to disclose the medical error to the family [5, 6]. Kraman and Hamm, who led this innovative disclosure program, described this approach to ethical dilemmas involving medical error as “humanistic risk management,” in which the physician and facility continued the caregiver role in communicating the error to the patient and/or family [6]. While their policy did not significantly impact litigation, the litigation costs were lower. The Lexington VAMC continued to report a high number of tort claims compared to other VAMCs, but interestingly the Lexington VAMC placed in the lowest quartile for litigation costs [7]. More importantly, the physicians and the VAMC believed disclosure to be their ethical and professional responsibility. The success of the Lexington Model led the Veterans Administration National Center for Ethics in 2008 (updated in 2012) to write a disclosure policy based on their model, although there has been significant variation in the uptake of these disclosure policies [5, 6]. This development of a disclosure policy in the Veterans Administration also prompted the creation of a simulation-based disclosure training programming for the VAMCs [5].
The IOM report and the success of the Lexington Model motivated other institutions and organizations to create policies on error communication. The Joint Commission released the first national standard in 2001 that required physicians to disclose outcomes of any treatment when they “differ significantly from the anticipated outcomes” [8]. Though the Joint Commission provided little detail about what should be disclosed and how this information should be disclosed, the Joint Commission release of the first national standard on disclosure was an important step because of the Joint Commission’s role in accrediting hospitals [9]. Furthermore, the National Quality Forum created a safe-practice guideline on the disclosure of serious unanticipated outcomes with the goal of promoting high-quality health care [10]. Other organizations such as the American Medical Association (AMA) developed their own standards in their Code of Medical Ethics to advise physicians to “deal honestly and openly with patients,” provide full disclosure to patients to support patients’ autonomy in medical decision-making, and not be influenced by legal liability [11]. Another prominent policy addressing error communication is the Charter on Medical Professionalism, which is endorsed by over 100 organizations and calls for open and honest communication with patients including discussions of medical errors [12].
Similar to the Lexington VAMC, other institutions and organizations have demonstrated a link between transparency in error communication and decreased litigation costs [13]. The University of Michigan Health Systems showed that their open disclosure program reduced the number of litigation cases and the cost of litigation over 5 years. At the University of Michigan, the open disclosure program accomplished these reductions in cases and costs by acknowledging medical errors, fairly compensating patients and families, defending cases that did not have merit, and studying prior events to determine prevention strategies [14]. In addition, the American College of Surgeons Closed Claims Study, which examined 460 claims against general surgeons, demonstrated that transparency and communication in the surgeon-patient relationship decreased litigation and prevented errors and bad outcomes [15]. These nationally recognized organizations demonstrate that disclosure policies can be beneficial for all parties involved.
The Patient Perspective on Medical Error
As an autonomous stakeholder in the physician-patient relationship, patients desire full disclosure of medical errors. Delbanco and Bell conducted focus groups with patients and families and three themes emerged [16]: (1) Family members have strong feelings of guilt after an error occurs. (2) Patients and their families may fear further harm and/or retribution if they ask questions about the error or voice their feelings. (3) The patient and family may also feel abandoned, perhaps in response to how the physician feels and behaves toward them [16]. The patients and family members that were interviewed expressed their desire for an apology and direct, honest communication [16]. Furthermore, Gallagher et al. and Marcus et al., after interviewing patients and families about what they wanted after an error had occurred, found that patients and families wanted full disclosure of the error including the implications on their health, a genuine apology and a commitment to prevention of the error in the future [17, 18]. Further supporting the fact that patients want full disclosure, Mazor et al. conducted a study of nearly 1000 patients who responded to a mail survey with vignettes describing medical errors and reported that 98.8% of patients wanted full disclosure and 88% wanted a sincere apology [19]. Of interest, Mazor et al. found that nondisclosure was associated with respondents obtaining legal advice, yet disclosure was associated with increased patient satisfaction and trust – both of which are critical to the physician-patient relationship [19]. Not surprisingly, they also found that the type of error and the severity of the outcome might influence patients to seek legal advice despite physician disclosure [19]. Nevertheless, these studies reinforce the idea that open and honest communication can address the patient’s need for information after a medical error occurs.
The Physician Perspective on Medical Error
The disclosure gap persists despite the existence of many organizational and national policies and the patient’s desire for information. Patients and their families continue to have unmet needs following a medical error. In contrast to institutional disclosure, which is conducted by the organization after an adverse event rises above a certain threshold of harm, clinical disclosure is conducted by the physician and should occur routinely in the physician-patient relationship [5]. Thus, physicians have the greatest potential impact on error disclosure. Several studies have examined physician attitudes on the communication of errors and the barriers that exist which may explain the disclosure gap.