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114. An Insider’s Guide to Medical Malpractice | Why the US system is so peculiar and how to navigate the morass

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Manage episode 386081040 series 2637977
Content provided by Rob Orman, MD, Rob Orman, and MD. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rob Orman, MD, Rob Orman, and MD or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The specter of medical malpractice lawsuits looms large for many clinicians, but according to Mark Brown, MD, JD, this anxiety may be disproportionate to the actual risk. In this discussion, we explore the contrasting nature of law and medicine, the unpredictable and capricious nature of legal proceedings, the systemic elements that fuel the high number of medical malpractice lawsuits in the United States, and several practices to reduce the risk of lawsuits.

Guest Bio:

Mark W. Brown, M.D., J.D., holds a JD from Harvard Law School (1970), and an MD from Dartmouth Medical School (1982). His career includes roles in the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office, criminal defense practice, and teaching law at Southwestern School of Law. In medicine, he completed his internship and residency in Emergency Medicine at Presbyterian Hospital, San Francisco, and UCLA and is currently an emergency physician at Antelope Valley Medical Center and clinical faculty member at UCLA School of Medicine.

Awake and Aware | Our 2024 Live Event

Join us at Awake and Aware 2024, a transformative 3-day workshop from May 1st to 3rd in Bend, Oregon. Mitigate stress and stay cool under pressure. Create the mindset you want and lock it in. Limited slots.

Website: Awakeandawarebend.com

16.25 Hours Category 1 AMA CME

The Flameproof Course

The hidden anti-burnout curriculum we all should have learned in training. Cohort 3 begins Sept 10, 2024. Get the deets

For full show notes of this episode and all sorts of other goodies, visit our podcast website


We Discuss:

  • The Fundamental Difference Between Law and Medicine
  • Should you be worried about the National Practitioner Data Bank?
  • Can Getting Sued Lead to Getting Sanctioned by the Medical Board?
  • The Odds of Getting Sued
  • Three Reasons Why The US Has So Many Malpractice Suits
  • Should You Push For Settling a Lawsuit?
  • The Plaintiff's Attorney Is Not Your Friend, Even If They Act Like It
  • When the Doctor's Med Mal Fear Supersedes the Patient's Risk Tolerance
  • What's Really Happening in a Deposition
  • High Yield and Low-Cost Ways to Reduce Med Mal Risk and Anxiety
  • There's a Big Ticket Item That Your Documentation Doesn't Capture
  • What to do About Hindsight Bias

  continue reading

128 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 386081040 series 2637977
Content provided by Rob Orman, MD, Rob Orman, and MD. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Rob Orman, MD, Rob Orman, and MD or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The specter of medical malpractice lawsuits looms large for many clinicians, but according to Mark Brown, MD, JD, this anxiety may be disproportionate to the actual risk. In this discussion, we explore the contrasting nature of law and medicine, the unpredictable and capricious nature of legal proceedings, the systemic elements that fuel the high number of medical malpractice lawsuits in the United States, and several practices to reduce the risk of lawsuits.

Guest Bio:

Mark W. Brown, M.D., J.D., holds a JD from Harvard Law School (1970), and an MD from Dartmouth Medical School (1982). His career includes roles in the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office, criminal defense practice, and teaching law at Southwestern School of Law. In medicine, he completed his internship and residency in Emergency Medicine at Presbyterian Hospital, San Francisco, and UCLA and is currently an emergency physician at Antelope Valley Medical Center and clinical faculty member at UCLA School of Medicine.

Awake and Aware | Our 2024 Live Event

Join us at Awake and Aware 2024, a transformative 3-day workshop from May 1st to 3rd in Bend, Oregon. Mitigate stress and stay cool under pressure. Create the mindset you want and lock it in. Limited slots.

Website: Awakeandawarebend.com

16.25 Hours Category 1 AMA CME

The Flameproof Course

The hidden anti-burnout curriculum we all should have learned in training. Cohort 3 begins Sept 10, 2024. Get the deets

For full show notes of this episode and all sorts of other goodies, visit our podcast website


We Discuss:

  • The Fundamental Difference Between Law and Medicine
  • Should you be worried about the National Practitioner Data Bank?
  • Can Getting Sued Lead to Getting Sanctioned by the Medical Board?
  • The Odds of Getting Sued
  • Three Reasons Why The US Has So Many Malpractice Suits
  • Should You Push For Settling a Lawsuit?
  • The Plaintiff's Attorney Is Not Your Friend, Even If They Act Like It
  • When the Doctor's Med Mal Fear Supersedes the Patient's Risk Tolerance
  • What's Really Happening in a Deposition
  • High Yield and Low-Cost Ways to Reduce Med Mal Risk and Anxiety
  • There's a Big Ticket Item That Your Documentation Doesn't Capture
  • What to do About Hindsight Bias

  continue reading

128 episodes

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