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Minimizing medical litigation, Part 1.

Tan Keng Boon Harold1

  • 1Manpower Standards and Development Division, Ministry of Health, Singapore, Blk 618, Jurong West St. 65, #13-428, Singapore 640618. Harold_tan@moh.gov.sg

The Journal of Medical Practice Management : MPM
|March 28, 2006
PubMed
Summary

Global medical litigation is rising, increasing defensive practices and insurance costs. Addressing patient expectations, communication, and legal systems is crucial for control.

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Minimizing medical litigation, part 2.

The Journal of medical practice management : MPMยท2006
See all related articles

Area of Science:

  • Medical law
  • Healthcare policy
  • Sociology of health

Background:

  • The global increase in medical litigation presents significant challenges.
  • Defensive medical practices and rising malpractice insurance premiums are direct consequences.
  • There is a critical need to analyze factors contributing to societal litigiousness.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review factors influencing the rise in medical litigation.
  • To propose strategies for controlling medical litigation.
  • To identify key drivers of increased lawsuits in healthcare.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review of contributing factors to medical litigation.
  • Analysis of societal and healthcare system influences.
  • Synthesis of potential systemic, professional, and legislative strategies.

Main Results:

  • Higher patient expectations are a significant driver of litigation.
  • Poor provider-patient communication exacerbates the issue.
  • An adversarial legalistic societal approach contributes to increased lawsuits.

Conclusions:

  • A multi-faceted approach combining system, professional, and legislative strategies is necessary.
  • Controlling medical litigation requires addressing root causes.
  • Future work will focus on developing a dispute resolution framework.

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