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CorrectCare
Don’t Let
Outside Consultations Be a Liability Minefield
By Deana
Johnson, JD
You have
properly determined that your inmate patient needs an outside
neurosurgical consult for a lingering arrest-related injury. You
fully document the justification for the consult, the request is
granted and the appointment scheduled. On the selected day, the
inmate is transported by security and meets with the specialist.
You are fully protected from liability, right? Not so fast.
What systems
does your institution have in place to schedule any recommended
follow-up, monitor to make sure the inmate is transported to any
such follow-up appointments and ensure that missed appointments
are rescheduled?
Also, since
many practitioners in the free world have a poor understanding
of realistic limitations on prison medical care, they often make
treatment recommendations your department simply cannot comply
with, such as metal braces that can be used as weapons or drugs
that are not on your formulary. When your department cannot
comply with the recommendations, the inference arises that the
inmate is not receiving the care recommended by the specialist
you elected to send him to.
Case in
Point
Dr. V served as the medical director at a large city jail. One
of his inmate patients was shot in the wrist during arrest. The
result was an inability to straighten four fingers on the
dominant hand (claw hand). Dr. V was relieved when the sheriff’s
office granted his well-documented and detailed request for an
outside consult at the large urban hospital. His optimism was
sorely misplaced.
The inmate made
it to the initial appointment with the neurosurgeon. The
specialist recommended a brace containing metal stabilizers,
daily physical therapy and a follow-up appointment in six weeks.
The metal brace was not allowed by security. The inmate was
approved for only half of the PT sessions. Then, on the day
scheduled for the follow-up visit, too many correctional
officers called in sick and the inmate missed the appointment.
Dr. V’s luck
got worse. His department had systems in place to automatically
schedule a new appointment when the first one was missed. When
the new appointment date came up, however, the inmate was in
court and missed it. The hospital never sent documents to
reschedule, and the jail system did not have a mechanism to flag
inmates who missed more than one scheduled outside appointment.
As a result, this inmate fell through the cracks of both the
hospital and jail systems.
By the time the
inmate got back to the specialist, 18 months had passed and
surgical repair was no longer an option. When the inevitable
lawsuit was filed, the inmate’s lawyer did not sue the hospital
or the specialist, just Dr. V. The doctor’s well-intentioned,
well-documented consultation request forms served as the main
exhibits against him at trial. After all, if the consult was so
important to the inmate’s well-being, why didn’t the doctor
ensure that all of the specialist’s recommendations were met and
the follow-up appointments were scheduled and attended? The jury
agreed and rendered a verdict for the inmate.
A Better
System
As should now be apparent, obtaining permission for an outside
consult is just the beginning of the steps necessary to protect
yourself and your department from potential liability. Your
department needs documented policies that are regularly
monitored and followed.
When outside
consultations have a medical necessary time parameter, this fact
needs to be clearly documented not only in the medical record
but in the paperwork provided to security and transport. If you
send an inmate down for transport to a hospital ER for
evaluation within the hour, the transport team needs to see
documentation of this order or the inmate could sit around
waiting far longer than you intended.
After the
initial appointment with the specialist, the recommending
provider from your facility needs to review and initial the
specialist’s recommendations. In the likely event that your
department cannot comply with all of the requests, there needs
to be documented communication with the specialist as well as
the resulting consensus for treatment. For instance, if your
pharmacy does not stock a particular drug, document an agreement
as to an alternative medication. That way, it does not appear
your department ignored the recommendations of the specialist
after seeking his/her opinion.
A critically
important area for concern is follow-up appointments. Your
department needs a well-organized system to track inmate
appointments and automatically reschedule when they are missed
for any reason. You cannot rely upon the consulting physician to
alert your institution to the need for follow-up.
In fact, you
should consider multiple systems designed to ensure compliance.
In addition to automatic rescheduling by a clerk or lower-level
provider, the referring provider should periodically review the
inmate’s chart until the specialist releases the patient from
further care. That way, if a recommendation cannot be carried
out or a follow-up appointment has not been scheduled during the
time parameters set by the specialist, the provider who
requested the consult will be aware of the problem.
Also, lawyers
always emphasize the importance of documentation. In this
context, the rule applies not only to your department’s
documentation of the need for the consult, but also copies of
all records and recommendations from the specialist, notes about
conversations with the outside provider, printouts of your
system for tracking appointments and follow-up, etc. The more
closely the documents demonstrate you were tracking the inmate’s
care with the specialist, the better off you will be.
Finally, the
closer your department can work with security/transport, the
less potential for liability. How does your institution’s
security staff note transports and reasons for missed
transports? Whether by handwritten log or computer, your
department needs a printout to place in each inmate’s medical
chart. If an inmate is not transported, you will then have a
written record justifying the missed appointment. You also can
see if security is heeding the medical department’s advice about
timing of transports.
An Alternate
Ending
Returning to Dr. V, if his department had these systems in
place, here is what would have happened:
1. When the
neurosurgeon recommended the metal brace, Dr. V would have
documented a conversation and institution-appropriate
alternative.
2. When the
inmate missed the first follow-up due to security officers’
illness, the handwritten page of the transport log showing same
would become part of the inmate’s chart.
3. When the
inmate missed the second appointment because of court, that
handwritten security sheet would be part of his medical record.
4. The second
follow-up appointment would be made automatically and documented
in the chart.
5. The
specialist’s treatment note would evidence the appointment and
surgery recommendation.
Those five
pieces of paper would have been Dr. V’s trial exhibits and, most
likely, the key to his defense verdict.
—
About the author:
Deana
Johnson, JD, is a partner in the Atlanta branch of Cruser &
Mitchell, LLP, Norcross, GA, and represents correctional medical
companies and providers. E-mail her at
djohnson@cmlawfirm.com.
[This article first appeared in the
Winter 2006 issue of CorrectCare.]
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