Anesthesiology Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Anesthesiology, including details on clinical anesthesiology, evidence based practice, techniques. | ||||||||
|
Failure to recognize loss of incoming data in an anesthesia record-keeping system may have increased medical liability.Vigoda MM, Lubarsky DA Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative Medicine and Pain Management, Center for Informatics and Perioperative Management, University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Medical Center, Miami, Florida 33136, USA. Mvigoda@med.miami.edu Automated anesthesia record-keeping systems (AARKs) are increasingly being used. There is a perception that AARKs may limit medical liability. We report a case in which our AARK may have increased our medical liability exposure. Nine months after a patient suffered a serious intraoperative complication, the anesthesiologist was named (as one of several defendants) in a claim alleging failure to properly monitor anesthetic care. One reason why the anesthesiologist was named related to a gap of 93 min in which no vital signs were documented in the anesthesia record. Relying on the physiological monitors to assess the patient's condition, the anesthesiologist did not recognize the interruption of data transmission, because the "active" medication window obscured the graphical display of the vital sign window. Published 23 May 2006 in Anesth Analg, 102(6): 1798-802.
© 2005-2008 Anesthesiology Research Today. All Rights Reserved. |
| ||||||