Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content
Commentary

Liability reform should make patients safer: "Avoidable classes of events" are a key improvement.

Bovbjerg RR, Tancredi LR. Liability reform should make patients safer: "avoidable classes of events" are a key improvement. J Law Med Ethics. 2005;33(3):478-500.

Save
Print
October 19, 2005
Bovbjerg RR, Tancredi LR. J Law Med Ethics. 2005;33(3):478-500.
View more articles from the same authors.
While acknowledging the need for committed leadership and improved financing, this commentary argues for greater attention toward compensation for victims of medical errors as a mechanism to make real progress in patient safety. The authors applaud the patient safety movement but discuss the tension between current tort liability reform and the dependence on transparency and a no-blame culture that must precede safety improvements. They propose an administrative model for compensation that addresses the need to generate accountability for errors with simultaneous promotion of reporting from providers. A strategy to develop a list of uniformly accepted "avoidable classes of events," such as paralysis following anesthesia, is offered as a method to rapidly identify claims that provide early compensation to patients and prevent providers from large pain-and-suffering awards. The details of such a system, the cost impact, and examples of how it might operationally function are presented.
Save
Print
Cite
Citation

Bovbjerg RR, Tancredi LR. Liability reform should make patients safer: "avoidable classes of events" are a key improvement. J Law Med Ethics. 2005;33(3):478-500.

Related Resources From the Same Author(s)
Related Resources