Track & Follow Up on Your Tests

Jul 06, 2017 at 05:25 pm by Staff


Missed or delayed diagnosis is one of the most often litigated allegations in medical malpractice.[1] These claims often result from tracking and follow-up procedure failures.

Lab testing is one of three key areas (the others are referrals to specialists and missed/canceled appointments) where tracking and follow-up are vitally important. A retrospective study researched the frequency of patients not being informed of test results, concluding there was a 7.1 percent failure rate.[2] Tracking and follow-up procedural safeguards can be implemented and have a large impact on potential liability claims.

A reliable test tracking and follow-up system ensures the following steps occur:

  1. The test is performed.
  2. The results are reported to the practice.
  3. The results are made available to the ordering physician for review and sign-off.
  4. The results are communicated to the patient.
  5. The results are properly filed in the patient's chart.
  6. The results are acted upon when necessary.

Here are some suggestions for improving your process:

Ensuring all tests ordered by your physicians are handled a consistent manner will help avoid tracking and follow-up errors. Develop a system, which works within the context of your practice, and follow these protocols with every patient - helping to effectively and efficiently stay on top of test results.


1
"PIAA Closed Claims Comparative: A comprehensive analysis of medical professional liability data reported to the PIAA Data Sharing Project," 2015 Edition.
2 Casalino, L.P., et al., "Frequency of Failure to Inform Patients of Clinically Significant Outpatient Test Results." Archives of Internal Medicine 169 (2009): 1123-9.


Attorney Jeremy Wale works as a risk resource advisor for ProAssurance. He has authored numerous articles about mitigating medical professional liability risk and also conducts loss prevention seminars to educate physicians about new and emerging risks. www.ProAssurance.com.




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