More strategies to avoid malpractice hazards on labor and delivery

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More strategies to avoid malpractice hazards on labor and delivery

READ PART 1 OF THE SERIES

Sound strategies to avoid malpractice hazards on labor and delivery
Martin L. Gimovsky, MD, and Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD

CASE 1: Pregestational diabetes, large baby, birth injury

A 31-year-old gravida 1 is admitted to labor and delivery. She is at 39-5/7 weeks’ gestation, dated by last menstrual period and early sonogram. The woman is a pregestational diabetic and uses insulin to control her blood glucose level.

Three weeks before admission, ultrasonography (US) revealed an estimated fetal weight of 3,650 g—at the 71st percentile for gestational age.

After an unremarkable course of labor, delivery is complicated by severe shoulder dystocia. The newborn has a birth weight of 4,985 g and sustains an Erb’s palsy-type injury. The mother develops a rectovaginal fistula after a fourth-degree tear.


In the first part of this article, we discussed how an allegation of malpractice can arise because of an unexpected event or outcome for a mother in your care, or her baby, apart from any specific clinical action you undertook. We offered an example: Counseling that you provide about options for prenatal care that falls short of full understanding by the patient.

In this article, we enter the realm of the hands-on practice of medicine and discuss causation: namely, the actions of a physician, in the course of managing labor and delivering a baby, that put that physician at risk of a charge of malpractice because the medical care 1) is inconsistent with current medical practice and thus 2) harmed mother or newborn.

Let’s return to the opening case above and discuss key considerations for the physician. Three more cases follow that, with analysis and recommendations.

Considerations in CASE 1

  • A woman who has pregestational diabetes should receive ongoing counseling about the risks of fetal anomalies, macrosomia, and problems in the neonatal period. Be certain that she understands that these risks can be ameliorated, but not eliminated, with careful blood glucose control.
  • The fetus of a diabetic gravida develops a relative decrease in the ratio of head circumference-to-abdominal circumference that predisposes it to shoulder dystocia. Cesarean delivery can decrease, but not eliminate, the risk of traumatic birth injury in a diabetic mother. (Of course, cesarean delivery will, on its own, substantially increase the risk of maternal morbidity—including at any subsequent cesarean delivery.)

What do they mean? terms and concepts intended to bolster your work and protect you

It’s not easy to define what constitutes “best care” in a given clinical circumstance. Generalizations are useful, but they may possess an inherent weakness: “Best practices,” “evidence-based care,” “standardization of care,” and “uniformity of care” usually apply more usefully to populations than individuals.

Such concepts derive from broader applications in economics, politics, and science. They are useful to define a reasonable spectrum of anticipated practices, and they certainly have an expanding role in the care of patients and in medical education (TABLE). Clinical guidelines serve as strategies that may be very helpful to the clinician. All of us understand and implement appropriate care in the great majority of clinical scenarios, but none of us are, or can be, expert in all situations. Referencing and using guidelines can fill a need for a functional starting point when expertise is lacking or falls short.

Best practices result from evidence-directed decision-making. This concept logically yields a desirable uniformity of practice. Although we all believe that our experience is our best teacher, we may best serve patients if we sample knowledge and wisdom from controlled clinical trials and from the experiences of others. What is accepted local practice must also be considered important when you devise a plan of care.1,2

A selected glossary of clinical care guidelines

TermWhat does it mean?
“Best practice”A process or activity that is believed to be more effective at delivering a particular outcome than any other when applied to a particular condition or circumstance. The idea? With proper processes, checks, and testing, a desired outcome can be delivered with fewer problems and unforeseen complications than otherwise possible.5
“Evidence-based care”The best available process or activity arising from both 1) individual expertise and 2) best external evidence derived from systematic research.6
“Standard of care”A clinical practice to maximize success and minimize risk, applied to professional decision-making.7
“Uniformity of practice”Use of systematic, literature-based research findings to develop an approach that is efficacious and safe; that maximizes benefit; and that minimizes risk.8

Consider the management of breech presentation that is recognized at the 36th week antepartum visit: Discussion with the patient should include 1) reference to concerns with congenital anomalies and genetic syndromes, 2) in-utero growth and development, and 3) the delivery process. The management algorithm may include external cephalic version, elective cesarean delivery before onset of labor, or cesarean delivery after onset of labor. Each approach has advocates—based on expert opinion clinical trials.

 

 

Management options may vary from institution to institution, however, because of limited availability of certain services—such as the expertise required for a trial of external cephalic version, the availability of on-site cesarean delivery capabilities, and patient and clinician preferences.

Uniformity of care, based on best practices, can therefore simplify the care process and decrease the risk that may be associated with individual experience-based management. Adhering to a uniform practice augments the clinician’s knowledge and allows for enhanced nursing and therapeutic efficiency.

The greatest benefit of using an evidence-based, widely accepted approach, however, is the potential to diminish poor practice and consequent malpractice exposure for both clinicians and the hospital.

Note: Although your adherence to clinical guidelines, best practices, and uniformity of care ought to be consistent with established standards of care, don’t automatically consider any deviation a lapse or failing because it’s understood and accepted that some local variability exists in practice.

Prelude to birth: triage and admission Triage. Most women in labor arrive at the hospital or birthing center to an area set aside for labor and delivery triage. There, 1) recording of the chief complaint and vital signs and 2) completion of a brief history and physical generate a call to the clinician.

The record produced in triage should be scrutinized carefully for accuracy. Clarify, in as timely a manner as possible, any errors in:

  • timing (possibly because of different clocks set to different times)
  • the precise capture of the chief complaint
  • reporting difficulty or ease in reaching the responsible clinician.

Whether these records are electronic or paper, an addendum marked with the time is always acceptable. Never attempt to correct a record! Always utilize a late entry or addendum.

Admission. After the patient is admitted, she generally undergoes an admission protocol, specific to the hospital, regarding her situation. This includes:

  • the history
  • special requests
  • any previously agreed-on plan of care
  • any problems that have developed since her last prenatal visit.

This protocol is generally completed by a nurse, resident, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant.

Hospitals generally request input from the attending physician on the specifics of the admission, based on those hospital protocols. There may be some room to individualize the admission process to labor and delivery.

4 pillars of care during labor

In general, labor is defined as progressive dilation of the cervix. Several parameters serve as guidelines regarding adequate progress through the various stages of labor.

Fetal monitoring. Continuous evaluation of the fetus during labor is a routine part of intrapartum care. Recording and observing the FHR tracing is an accepted—and expected—practice. Documentation of the FHR in the medical record is specifically required, and should include both the physician’s and nursing notes.

Anesthesia care. The patient’s preference and the availability of options allows for several accepted practices regarding anesthesia and analgesia during L & D. Does she want epidural anesthesia during labor, for example? Intravenous narcotics? Her choice is an important facet of your provision of care.

However, such choice requires the patient to give consent and to understand the risk-benefit equation. Documentation by nursing of the patient’s consent and understanding should be complete, including discussion and administration. Anesthesia staff should be clear, complete, and legible in making a record.

Neonatal care. If logistics permit, a member of the pediatrics service should be routinely available to see the newborn at delivery. The patient should view the pediatrician and obstetrician as partners working as a team for the benefit of the mother and her family. This can enhance the patient’s understanding and confidence about the well being of her baby.

Documentation. Although deficient documentation does not, itself, lead to a finding of malpractice, appropriate documentation plays an important role in demonstrating that clinical practices have addressed issues about both allegation and causation of potential adverse outcomes.

We cannot overemphasize that nursing documentation should complement and be consistent with notes made by the physician. That said, nursing notes are not a substitute for the physician’s notes. Practices that integrate the written comments of nursing and physician into a single set of progress notes facilitate this complementary interaction.

3 more clinical scenarios

CASE 2: Admitted at term with contractions

The initial exam determines that this 21-year-old gravida 1 is 2/80/-1. Re-examination in 3 hours finds her at 3-4/80/0.

She requests pain relief and states that she wants epidural anesthesia.

Evaluation 2 hours later suggests secondary arrest of dilation. Oxytocin is begun.

Soon after, late decelerations are observed on the FHR monitor.


Use of exogenous oxytocin in L & D is a double-edged sword: The drug can enhance the safety and efficacy of labor and delivery for mother and fetus, but using it in an unregulated manner (in terms of its indication and administration) can subject both to increased risk.

 

 

In fact, it is fair to say that the most widespread and potentially dangerous intervention during labor is the administration of oxytocin. Many expert opinions, guidelines, and strategies have been put forward about intrapartum use of oxytocin. These include consideration of:

  • indications
  • dosage (including the maximum)
  • interval
  • fetal response
  • ultimately, the availability of a physician during administration to manage any problem that arises.

Considerations in CASE 2

  • Always clearly indicate the reason for using oxytocin: Is this an induction? Or an augmentation? Was there evidence of fetal well-being, or non-reassurance, before oxytocin was administered? Certainly, there are circumstances in which either fetal status or non-progression of labor (or both) are an indication for oxytocin. A clear, concise, and properly timed progress note is always appropriate under these circumstances.
  • Discuss treatment with the patient. Does she understand why this therapy is being recommended? Does she agree to its use? And does she understand what the alternatives are?
  • Verify that nursing has accurately charted this process. Ensure that the nursing staff’s notes are complete and are consistent with yours.
  • Simplify the entire process: Use premixed solution and protocol-driven orders. Know what the standards and protocols are in your department. Minimizing patient-to-patient variability should lessen the risk of error.
  • Always be available in L & D for the first 30 minutes that oxytocin is being administered. If a problem with excessive uterine activity is going to occur, it is most likely to do so upon initial administration.
  • Monitor the FHR continuously. At the first suggestion of a change in fetal status, discontinue oxytocin. Perform a pelvic exam to reassess the situation. Understand and apply appropriate inutero resuscitative measures (IV fluids, O2, change in maternal position). Depending on circumstances, you can consider a restart of oxytocin after the FHR returns to its pre-oxytocin pattern.
  • Monitor uterine response to oxytocin. If the membranes are ruptured and if it is clinically feasible, an intrauterine pressure transducer will allow you to more objectively assess the uterine response to oxytocin and make decisions on that basis. Determine beforehand whether the patient is agreeable to this intervention.
  • When oxytocin is used for augmentation, reassess labor within 4 hours of achieving a satisfactory pattern. If minimal progress is not made, assess the clinical situation to determine why oxytocin, at an adequate response level, has failed to return labor to a normal active phase slope. Are there minor degrees of malposition? Is there an element of cephalopelvic disproportion? Recall that progress in labor is dependent on multiple factors.
  • Chart the process concurrently. Specify options for delivery before delivery.

CASE 3: Spontaneous delivery arrests after delivery of the head

The patient is a multipara with three prior normal vaginal deliveries. Her diabetic screen is negative. At admission, the estimated fetal weight was 3,628 g—in the same range as her other deliveries. A nuchal cord is absent.

After the patient assumes the McRobert’s position, delivery is accomplished with suprapubic pressure. Weakness is noted in the newborn’s right upper extremity. Birth weight is 3,515 g.


Maneuvers to manage shoulder dystocia should be part of all clinicians’ skill set. The sequence of those maneuvers, and their timing, are subject to some variation. Efficacy seems to be related most to recognizing and performing each maneuver properly.

Guidelines for managing shoulder dystocia should include reference to 1) the initial evaluation of the patient on admission to labor and delivery and 2) the delivery itself.3

Considerations in CASE 3

  • Before you admit them to L & D, counsel patients who have diabetes, morbid obesity (body mass index >40), or birth trauma in a prior delivery, or who have had a prior large infant (>9 lb birth weight), about the risk of shoulder dystocia. Present possible alternatives, and draw the patient into the conversation.
  • Consider delivering all women at term in the McRobert’s position, prophylactically.
  • Always check for a nuchal cord after delivery of the head. If you find one, reduce it if possible. Take a few seconds and carefully assess the situation before you cut the umbilical cord.
  • Lateral traction on the fetus’ head has the potential to cause tension on the brachial plexus, or make it worse. Gentle rotation of the head (<90 degrees) can move the shoulders into a more favorable location for delivery. Don’t rush—call for assistance! Continuously explain to the patient what you are doing; reassure her about the process.
  • Use suprapubic pressure wisely. The anterior shoulder may be dislodged by direct downward force; suprapubic force in a lateral direction may also dislodge the shoulder. Apply force from above the patient’s pelvis. Your assistant will have the best mechanical advantage by standing on a stool.
  • Is an episiotomy or episioproctotomy advantageous? In attempting to reach either the anterior or posterior shoulder vaginally, individualized assessment is called for.
  • When the posterior shoulder cannot be satisfactorily engaged and moved, try doing so with the anterior shoulder. Insert your hand between the symphysis and the fetal head and place downward pressure on the head to dislodge it and complete the delivery.
  • If it becomes necessary to attempt delivery by direct traction on the posterior hand or arm, try to avoid extension. Maintain flexion and move the upper extremity across the fetal chest before you attempt extension.
  • Repeat these maneuvers a second time before you attempt cephalic replacement or other maneuvers. Remember to move with deliberate speed to lessen the risk of making the injury worse. Have pediatric support present. Continue speaking with and reassuring the patient.
  • Under anesthesia in the operating room, perform a hysterotomy incision. With an assistant working through the vagina, combine the forces available to complete the delivery.
  • After delivery is complete, take time to write a note. (Speak with the patient and her family first, however.) Read the notes written by nursing. If they are not available when you write your note, mention that. Add a second note later, when nursing notes become available.
 

 

CASE 4: Meconium-stained fluid

A 35-year-old multigravida is 6 to 7 cm dilated. Her membranes have just spontaneously ruptured; you note copious meconium-stained fluid. The FHR demonstrates recurrent variable decelerations; baseline fetal heart rate remains normal.


The description and implications of various FHR patterns are important when documenting the fetal metabolic state during the birth process. Current guidelines have attempted to simplify, standardize, and clarify the interpretation of the FHR tracing.4

Considerations in CASE 4

  • Explain the situation to the patient. Perform a pelvic examination. If possible, wait for nursing assistance to ensure accurate documentation.
  • Reassure the patient; help her move to a lateral position. Observe the FHR monitor for a response.
  • Administer supplemental O2. Increase IV fluids to facilitate utero-placental perfusion.
  • If useful or necessary, consider attaching a fetal scalp electrode to better delineate fetal status.
  • When the FHR returns to baseline state (before spontaneous rupture of membranes), perform vibro-acoustic stimulation as a test to support fetal well-being.
  • Engage the patient and her family in a discussion about the sequence of events. Depending on the acuity of the situation, allow her to voice her concerns and reiterate what has occurred, and what will occur.
  • Outline a plan of management to the patient—verbally and in the record—with clear reference to events that have occurred. Then, stick to that plan!
  • Carefully review corresponding nursing notes. Always write your own assessment of events and actions.

Summing up: three “keepers”

First, the cornerstones of your effort to reduce malpractice risk are 1) thoughtful and informed discussion with the patient and 2) clear, concise documentation.

Second, don’t expect to be able to eliminate unnecessary or inappropriate allegations of medical malpractice; the best you can do is limit them.

Third, and most important, remember: The knowledgeable clinician you strive to be will make appropriate judgments in a timely fashion and will take appropriate actions to provide good medical care.

We want to hear from you! Tell us what you think.

References

1. Clark SL, Belfort MA, Dildy GA, Meyers JA. Reducing obstetric litigation through alterations in practice patterns. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(6):1279-1283.

2. Clark SL, Belfort MA, Byrum SL, Meyers JA, Perlin JB. Improved outcomes, fewer cesarean deliveries, and reduced litigation: results of a new paradigm in patient safety. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;199(2):105.e1-e7.

3. Crofts JF, Fox F, Ellis D. Observations from 450 shoulder dystocia simulations: lessons for skills training. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(4):906-912.

4. Macones GA, Hankins GD, Spong CY, Hauth J, Moore T. The 2008 National Institute of Child Health and Human Development workshop report on electronic fetal monitoring. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(3):661-666.

5. Best practice. Web site. 2010. http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/best-practice.html. Accessed December 17, 2010.

6. Sackett DL, Rosenberg WC, Gray JA, Haynes BR, Richardson WS. Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn’t 1996;312(7023):71-72.

7. Hayes EJ, Weinstein L. Improving patient safety and uniformity of care by a standardized regimen for the use of oxytocin. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;198(6):622.e1-7.

8. Proctor SJ, Taylor PR. A practical guide to continuous population-based data collection (PACE): a process facilitating uniformity of care and research into practice. 2000;93(2):67-73.

9. Cohen W, Friedman EA. Management of Labor. Baltimore, MD: University Park Press; 1983.

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Martin L. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Martin Gimovsky is Vice Chair and Program Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, NJ, and Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.

Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Alexis Gimovsky is a house officer in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

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Martin L. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Martin Gimovsky is Vice Chair and Program Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, NJ, and Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.

Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Alexis Gimovsky is a house officer in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

Author and Disclosure Information

Martin L. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Martin Gimovsky is Vice Chair and Program Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, NJ, and Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.

Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Alexis Gimovsky is a house officer in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

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READ PART 1 OF THE SERIES

Sound strategies to avoid malpractice hazards on labor and delivery
Martin L. Gimovsky, MD, and Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD

CASE 1: Pregestational diabetes, large baby, birth injury

A 31-year-old gravida 1 is admitted to labor and delivery. She is at 39-5/7 weeks’ gestation, dated by last menstrual period and early sonogram. The woman is a pregestational diabetic and uses insulin to control her blood glucose level.

Three weeks before admission, ultrasonography (US) revealed an estimated fetal weight of 3,650 g—at the 71st percentile for gestational age.

After an unremarkable course of labor, delivery is complicated by severe shoulder dystocia. The newborn has a birth weight of 4,985 g and sustains an Erb’s palsy-type injury. The mother develops a rectovaginal fistula after a fourth-degree tear.


In the first part of this article, we discussed how an allegation of malpractice can arise because of an unexpected event or outcome for a mother in your care, or her baby, apart from any specific clinical action you undertook. We offered an example: Counseling that you provide about options for prenatal care that falls short of full understanding by the patient.

In this article, we enter the realm of the hands-on practice of medicine and discuss causation: namely, the actions of a physician, in the course of managing labor and delivering a baby, that put that physician at risk of a charge of malpractice because the medical care 1) is inconsistent with current medical practice and thus 2) harmed mother or newborn.

Let’s return to the opening case above and discuss key considerations for the physician. Three more cases follow that, with analysis and recommendations.

Considerations in CASE 1

  • A woman who has pregestational diabetes should receive ongoing counseling about the risks of fetal anomalies, macrosomia, and problems in the neonatal period. Be certain that she understands that these risks can be ameliorated, but not eliminated, with careful blood glucose control.
  • The fetus of a diabetic gravida develops a relative decrease in the ratio of head circumference-to-abdominal circumference that predisposes it to shoulder dystocia. Cesarean delivery can decrease, but not eliminate, the risk of traumatic birth injury in a diabetic mother. (Of course, cesarean delivery will, on its own, substantially increase the risk of maternal morbidity—including at any subsequent cesarean delivery.)

What do they mean? terms and concepts intended to bolster your work and protect you

It’s not easy to define what constitutes “best care” in a given clinical circumstance. Generalizations are useful, but they may possess an inherent weakness: “Best practices,” “evidence-based care,” “standardization of care,” and “uniformity of care” usually apply more usefully to populations than individuals.

Such concepts derive from broader applications in economics, politics, and science. They are useful to define a reasonable spectrum of anticipated practices, and they certainly have an expanding role in the care of patients and in medical education (TABLE). Clinical guidelines serve as strategies that may be very helpful to the clinician. All of us understand and implement appropriate care in the great majority of clinical scenarios, but none of us are, or can be, expert in all situations. Referencing and using guidelines can fill a need for a functional starting point when expertise is lacking or falls short.

Best practices result from evidence-directed decision-making. This concept logically yields a desirable uniformity of practice. Although we all believe that our experience is our best teacher, we may best serve patients if we sample knowledge and wisdom from controlled clinical trials and from the experiences of others. What is accepted local practice must also be considered important when you devise a plan of care.1,2

A selected glossary of clinical care guidelines

TermWhat does it mean?
“Best practice”A process or activity that is believed to be more effective at delivering a particular outcome than any other when applied to a particular condition or circumstance. The idea? With proper processes, checks, and testing, a desired outcome can be delivered with fewer problems and unforeseen complications than otherwise possible.5
“Evidence-based care”The best available process or activity arising from both 1) individual expertise and 2) best external evidence derived from systematic research.6
“Standard of care”A clinical practice to maximize success and minimize risk, applied to professional decision-making.7
“Uniformity of practice”Use of systematic, literature-based research findings to develop an approach that is efficacious and safe; that maximizes benefit; and that minimizes risk.8

Consider the management of breech presentation that is recognized at the 36th week antepartum visit: Discussion with the patient should include 1) reference to concerns with congenital anomalies and genetic syndromes, 2) in-utero growth and development, and 3) the delivery process. The management algorithm may include external cephalic version, elective cesarean delivery before onset of labor, or cesarean delivery after onset of labor. Each approach has advocates—based on expert opinion clinical trials.

 

 

Management options may vary from institution to institution, however, because of limited availability of certain services—such as the expertise required for a trial of external cephalic version, the availability of on-site cesarean delivery capabilities, and patient and clinician preferences.

Uniformity of care, based on best practices, can therefore simplify the care process and decrease the risk that may be associated with individual experience-based management. Adhering to a uniform practice augments the clinician’s knowledge and allows for enhanced nursing and therapeutic efficiency.

The greatest benefit of using an evidence-based, widely accepted approach, however, is the potential to diminish poor practice and consequent malpractice exposure for both clinicians and the hospital.

Note: Although your adherence to clinical guidelines, best practices, and uniformity of care ought to be consistent with established standards of care, don’t automatically consider any deviation a lapse or failing because it’s understood and accepted that some local variability exists in practice.

Prelude to birth: triage and admission Triage. Most women in labor arrive at the hospital or birthing center to an area set aside for labor and delivery triage. There, 1) recording of the chief complaint and vital signs and 2) completion of a brief history and physical generate a call to the clinician.

The record produced in triage should be scrutinized carefully for accuracy. Clarify, in as timely a manner as possible, any errors in:

  • timing (possibly because of different clocks set to different times)
  • the precise capture of the chief complaint
  • reporting difficulty or ease in reaching the responsible clinician.

Whether these records are electronic or paper, an addendum marked with the time is always acceptable. Never attempt to correct a record! Always utilize a late entry or addendum.

Admission. After the patient is admitted, she generally undergoes an admission protocol, specific to the hospital, regarding her situation. This includes:

  • the history
  • special requests
  • any previously agreed-on plan of care
  • any problems that have developed since her last prenatal visit.

This protocol is generally completed by a nurse, resident, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant.

Hospitals generally request input from the attending physician on the specifics of the admission, based on those hospital protocols. There may be some room to individualize the admission process to labor and delivery.

4 pillars of care during labor

In general, labor is defined as progressive dilation of the cervix. Several parameters serve as guidelines regarding adequate progress through the various stages of labor.

Fetal monitoring. Continuous evaluation of the fetus during labor is a routine part of intrapartum care. Recording and observing the FHR tracing is an accepted—and expected—practice. Documentation of the FHR in the medical record is specifically required, and should include both the physician’s and nursing notes.

Anesthesia care. The patient’s preference and the availability of options allows for several accepted practices regarding anesthesia and analgesia during L & D. Does she want epidural anesthesia during labor, for example? Intravenous narcotics? Her choice is an important facet of your provision of care.

However, such choice requires the patient to give consent and to understand the risk-benefit equation. Documentation by nursing of the patient’s consent and understanding should be complete, including discussion and administration. Anesthesia staff should be clear, complete, and legible in making a record.

Neonatal care. If logistics permit, a member of the pediatrics service should be routinely available to see the newborn at delivery. The patient should view the pediatrician and obstetrician as partners working as a team for the benefit of the mother and her family. This can enhance the patient’s understanding and confidence about the well being of her baby.

Documentation. Although deficient documentation does not, itself, lead to a finding of malpractice, appropriate documentation plays an important role in demonstrating that clinical practices have addressed issues about both allegation and causation of potential adverse outcomes.

We cannot overemphasize that nursing documentation should complement and be consistent with notes made by the physician. That said, nursing notes are not a substitute for the physician’s notes. Practices that integrate the written comments of nursing and physician into a single set of progress notes facilitate this complementary interaction.

3 more clinical scenarios

CASE 2: Admitted at term with contractions

The initial exam determines that this 21-year-old gravida 1 is 2/80/-1. Re-examination in 3 hours finds her at 3-4/80/0.

She requests pain relief and states that she wants epidural anesthesia.

Evaluation 2 hours later suggests secondary arrest of dilation. Oxytocin is begun.

Soon after, late decelerations are observed on the FHR monitor.


Use of exogenous oxytocin in L & D is a double-edged sword: The drug can enhance the safety and efficacy of labor and delivery for mother and fetus, but using it in an unregulated manner (in terms of its indication and administration) can subject both to increased risk.

 

 

In fact, it is fair to say that the most widespread and potentially dangerous intervention during labor is the administration of oxytocin. Many expert opinions, guidelines, and strategies have been put forward about intrapartum use of oxytocin. These include consideration of:

  • indications
  • dosage (including the maximum)
  • interval
  • fetal response
  • ultimately, the availability of a physician during administration to manage any problem that arises.

Considerations in CASE 2

  • Always clearly indicate the reason for using oxytocin: Is this an induction? Or an augmentation? Was there evidence of fetal well-being, or non-reassurance, before oxytocin was administered? Certainly, there are circumstances in which either fetal status or non-progression of labor (or both) are an indication for oxytocin. A clear, concise, and properly timed progress note is always appropriate under these circumstances.
  • Discuss treatment with the patient. Does she understand why this therapy is being recommended? Does she agree to its use? And does she understand what the alternatives are?
  • Verify that nursing has accurately charted this process. Ensure that the nursing staff’s notes are complete and are consistent with yours.
  • Simplify the entire process: Use premixed solution and protocol-driven orders. Know what the standards and protocols are in your department. Minimizing patient-to-patient variability should lessen the risk of error.
  • Always be available in L & D for the first 30 minutes that oxytocin is being administered. If a problem with excessive uterine activity is going to occur, it is most likely to do so upon initial administration.
  • Monitor the FHR continuously. At the first suggestion of a change in fetal status, discontinue oxytocin. Perform a pelvic exam to reassess the situation. Understand and apply appropriate inutero resuscitative measures (IV fluids, O2, change in maternal position). Depending on circumstances, you can consider a restart of oxytocin after the FHR returns to its pre-oxytocin pattern.
  • Monitor uterine response to oxytocin. If the membranes are ruptured and if it is clinically feasible, an intrauterine pressure transducer will allow you to more objectively assess the uterine response to oxytocin and make decisions on that basis. Determine beforehand whether the patient is agreeable to this intervention.
  • When oxytocin is used for augmentation, reassess labor within 4 hours of achieving a satisfactory pattern. If minimal progress is not made, assess the clinical situation to determine why oxytocin, at an adequate response level, has failed to return labor to a normal active phase slope. Are there minor degrees of malposition? Is there an element of cephalopelvic disproportion? Recall that progress in labor is dependent on multiple factors.
  • Chart the process concurrently. Specify options for delivery before delivery.

CASE 3: Spontaneous delivery arrests after delivery of the head

The patient is a multipara with three prior normal vaginal deliveries. Her diabetic screen is negative. At admission, the estimated fetal weight was 3,628 g—in the same range as her other deliveries. A nuchal cord is absent.

After the patient assumes the McRobert’s position, delivery is accomplished with suprapubic pressure. Weakness is noted in the newborn’s right upper extremity. Birth weight is 3,515 g.


Maneuvers to manage shoulder dystocia should be part of all clinicians’ skill set. The sequence of those maneuvers, and their timing, are subject to some variation. Efficacy seems to be related most to recognizing and performing each maneuver properly.

Guidelines for managing shoulder dystocia should include reference to 1) the initial evaluation of the patient on admission to labor and delivery and 2) the delivery itself.3

Considerations in CASE 3

  • Before you admit them to L & D, counsel patients who have diabetes, morbid obesity (body mass index >40), or birth trauma in a prior delivery, or who have had a prior large infant (>9 lb birth weight), about the risk of shoulder dystocia. Present possible alternatives, and draw the patient into the conversation.
  • Consider delivering all women at term in the McRobert’s position, prophylactically.
  • Always check for a nuchal cord after delivery of the head. If you find one, reduce it if possible. Take a few seconds and carefully assess the situation before you cut the umbilical cord.
  • Lateral traction on the fetus’ head has the potential to cause tension on the brachial plexus, or make it worse. Gentle rotation of the head (<90 degrees) can move the shoulders into a more favorable location for delivery. Don’t rush—call for assistance! Continuously explain to the patient what you are doing; reassure her about the process.
  • Use suprapubic pressure wisely. The anterior shoulder may be dislodged by direct downward force; suprapubic force in a lateral direction may also dislodge the shoulder. Apply force from above the patient’s pelvis. Your assistant will have the best mechanical advantage by standing on a stool.
  • Is an episiotomy or episioproctotomy advantageous? In attempting to reach either the anterior or posterior shoulder vaginally, individualized assessment is called for.
  • When the posterior shoulder cannot be satisfactorily engaged and moved, try doing so with the anterior shoulder. Insert your hand between the symphysis and the fetal head and place downward pressure on the head to dislodge it and complete the delivery.
  • If it becomes necessary to attempt delivery by direct traction on the posterior hand or arm, try to avoid extension. Maintain flexion and move the upper extremity across the fetal chest before you attempt extension.
  • Repeat these maneuvers a second time before you attempt cephalic replacement or other maneuvers. Remember to move with deliberate speed to lessen the risk of making the injury worse. Have pediatric support present. Continue speaking with and reassuring the patient.
  • Under anesthesia in the operating room, perform a hysterotomy incision. With an assistant working through the vagina, combine the forces available to complete the delivery.
  • After delivery is complete, take time to write a note. (Speak with the patient and her family first, however.) Read the notes written by nursing. If they are not available when you write your note, mention that. Add a second note later, when nursing notes become available.
 

 

CASE 4: Meconium-stained fluid

A 35-year-old multigravida is 6 to 7 cm dilated. Her membranes have just spontaneously ruptured; you note copious meconium-stained fluid. The FHR demonstrates recurrent variable decelerations; baseline fetal heart rate remains normal.


The description and implications of various FHR patterns are important when documenting the fetal metabolic state during the birth process. Current guidelines have attempted to simplify, standardize, and clarify the interpretation of the FHR tracing.4

Considerations in CASE 4

  • Explain the situation to the patient. Perform a pelvic examination. If possible, wait for nursing assistance to ensure accurate documentation.
  • Reassure the patient; help her move to a lateral position. Observe the FHR monitor for a response.
  • Administer supplemental O2. Increase IV fluids to facilitate utero-placental perfusion.
  • If useful or necessary, consider attaching a fetal scalp electrode to better delineate fetal status.
  • When the FHR returns to baseline state (before spontaneous rupture of membranes), perform vibro-acoustic stimulation as a test to support fetal well-being.
  • Engage the patient and her family in a discussion about the sequence of events. Depending on the acuity of the situation, allow her to voice her concerns and reiterate what has occurred, and what will occur.
  • Outline a plan of management to the patient—verbally and in the record—with clear reference to events that have occurred. Then, stick to that plan!
  • Carefully review corresponding nursing notes. Always write your own assessment of events and actions.

Summing up: three “keepers”

First, the cornerstones of your effort to reduce malpractice risk are 1) thoughtful and informed discussion with the patient and 2) clear, concise documentation.

Second, don’t expect to be able to eliminate unnecessary or inappropriate allegations of medical malpractice; the best you can do is limit them.

Third, and most important, remember: The knowledgeable clinician you strive to be will make appropriate judgments in a timely fashion and will take appropriate actions to provide good medical care.

We want to hear from you! Tell us what you think.

READ PART 1 OF THE SERIES

Sound strategies to avoid malpractice hazards on labor and delivery
Martin L. Gimovsky, MD, and Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD

CASE 1: Pregestational diabetes, large baby, birth injury

A 31-year-old gravida 1 is admitted to labor and delivery. She is at 39-5/7 weeks’ gestation, dated by last menstrual period and early sonogram. The woman is a pregestational diabetic and uses insulin to control her blood glucose level.

Three weeks before admission, ultrasonography (US) revealed an estimated fetal weight of 3,650 g—at the 71st percentile for gestational age.

After an unremarkable course of labor, delivery is complicated by severe shoulder dystocia. The newborn has a birth weight of 4,985 g and sustains an Erb’s palsy-type injury. The mother develops a rectovaginal fistula after a fourth-degree tear.


In the first part of this article, we discussed how an allegation of malpractice can arise because of an unexpected event or outcome for a mother in your care, or her baby, apart from any specific clinical action you undertook. We offered an example: Counseling that you provide about options for prenatal care that falls short of full understanding by the patient.

In this article, we enter the realm of the hands-on practice of medicine and discuss causation: namely, the actions of a physician, in the course of managing labor and delivering a baby, that put that physician at risk of a charge of malpractice because the medical care 1) is inconsistent with current medical practice and thus 2) harmed mother or newborn.

Let’s return to the opening case above and discuss key considerations for the physician. Three more cases follow that, with analysis and recommendations.

Considerations in CASE 1

  • A woman who has pregestational diabetes should receive ongoing counseling about the risks of fetal anomalies, macrosomia, and problems in the neonatal period. Be certain that she understands that these risks can be ameliorated, but not eliminated, with careful blood glucose control.
  • The fetus of a diabetic gravida develops a relative decrease in the ratio of head circumference-to-abdominal circumference that predisposes it to shoulder dystocia. Cesarean delivery can decrease, but not eliminate, the risk of traumatic birth injury in a diabetic mother. (Of course, cesarean delivery will, on its own, substantially increase the risk of maternal morbidity—including at any subsequent cesarean delivery.)

What do they mean? terms and concepts intended to bolster your work and protect you

It’s not easy to define what constitutes “best care” in a given clinical circumstance. Generalizations are useful, but they may possess an inherent weakness: “Best practices,” “evidence-based care,” “standardization of care,” and “uniformity of care” usually apply more usefully to populations than individuals.

Such concepts derive from broader applications in economics, politics, and science. They are useful to define a reasonable spectrum of anticipated practices, and they certainly have an expanding role in the care of patients and in medical education (TABLE). Clinical guidelines serve as strategies that may be very helpful to the clinician. All of us understand and implement appropriate care in the great majority of clinical scenarios, but none of us are, or can be, expert in all situations. Referencing and using guidelines can fill a need for a functional starting point when expertise is lacking or falls short.

Best practices result from evidence-directed decision-making. This concept logically yields a desirable uniformity of practice. Although we all believe that our experience is our best teacher, we may best serve patients if we sample knowledge and wisdom from controlled clinical trials and from the experiences of others. What is accepted local practice must also be considered important when you devise a plan of care.1,2

A selected glossary of clinical care guidelines

TermWhat does it mean?
“Best practice”A process or activity that is believed to be more effective at delivering a particular outcome than any other when applied to a particular condition or circumstance. The idea? With proper processes, checks, and testing, a desired outcome can be delivered with fewer problems and unforeseen complications than otherwise possible.5
“Evidence-based care”The best available process or activity arising from both 1) individual expertise and 2) best external evidence derived from systematic research.6
“Standard of care”A clinical practice to maximize success and minimize risk, applied to professional decision-making.7
“Uniformity of practice”Use of systematic, literature-based research findings to develop an approach that is efficacious and safe; that maximizes benefit; and that minimizes risk.8

Consider the management of breech presentation that is recognized at the 36th week antepartum visit: Discussion with the patient should include 1) reference to concerns with congenital anomalies and genetic syndromes, 2) in-utero growth and development, and 3) the delivery process. The management algorithm may include external cephalic version, elective cesarean delivery before onset of labor, or cesarean delivery after onset of labor. Each approach has advocates—based on expert opinion clinical trials.

 

 

Management options may vary from institution to institution, however, because of limited availability of certain services—such as the expertise required for a trial of external cephalic version, the availability of on-site cesarean delivery capabilities, and patient and clinician preferences.

Uniformity of care, based on best practices, can therefore simplify the care process and decrease the risk that may be associated with individual experience-based management. Adhering to a uniform practice augments the clinician’s knowledge and allows for enhanced nursing and therapeutic efficiency.

The greatest benefit of using an evidence-based, widely accepted approach, however, is the potential to diminish poor practice and consequent malpractice exposure for both clinicians and the hospital.

Note: Although your adherence to clinical guidelines, best practices, and uniformity of care ought to be consistent with established standards of care, don’t automatically consider any deviation a lapse or failing because it’s understood and accepted that some local variability exists in practice.

Prelude to birth: triage and admission Triage. Most women in labor arrive at the hospital or birthing center to an area set aside for labor and delivery triage. There, 1) recording of the chief complaint and vital signs and 2) completion of a brief history and physical generate a call to the clinician.

The record produced in triage should be scrutinized carefully for accuracy. Clarify, in as timely a manner as possible, any errors in:

  • timing (possibly because of different clocks set to different times)
  • the precise capture of the chief complaint
  • reporting difficulty or ease in reaching the responsible clinician.

Whether these records are electronic or paper, an addendum marked with the time is always acceptable. Never attempt to correct a record! Always utilize a late entry or addendum.

Admission. After the patient is admitted, she generally undergoes an admission protocol, specific to the hospital, regarding her situation. This includes:

  • the history
  • special requests
  • any previously agreed-on plan of care
  • any problems that have developed since her last prenatal visit.

This protocol is generally completed by a nurse, resident, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant.

Hospitals generally request input from the attending physician on the specifics of the admission, based on those hospital protocols. There may be some room to individualize the admission process to labor and delivery.

4 pillars of care during labor

In general, labor is defined as progressive dilation of the cervix. Several parameters serve as guidelines regarding adequate progress through the various stages of labor.

Fetal monitoring. Continuous evaluation of the fetus during labor is a routine part of intrapartum care. Recording and observing the FHR tracing is an accepted—and expected—practice. Documentation of the FHR in the medical record is specifically required, and should include both the physician’s and nursing notes.

Anesthesia care. The patient’s preference and the availability of options allows for several accepted practices regarding anesthesia and analgesia during L & D. Does she want epidural anesthesia during labor, for example? Intravenous narcotics? Her choice is an important facet of your provision of care.

However, such choice requires the patient to give consent and to understand the risk-benefit equation. Documentation by nursing of the patient’s consent and understanding should be complete, including discussion and administration. Anesthesia staff should be clear, complete, and legible in making a record.

Neonatal care. If logistics permit, a member of the pediatrics service should be routinely available to see the newborn at delivery. The patient should view the pediatrician and obstetrician as partners working as a team for the benefit of the mother and her family. This can enhance the patient’s understanding and confidence about the well being of her baby.

Documentation. Although deficient documentation does not, itself, lead to a finding of malpractice, appropriate documentation plays an important role in demonstrating that clinical practices have addressed issues about both allegation and causation of potential adverse outcomes.

We cannot overemphasize that nursing documentation should complement and be consistent with notes made by the physician. That said, nursing notes are not a substitute for the physician’s notes. Practices that integrate the written comments of nursing and physician into a single set of progress notes facilitate this complementary interaction.

3 more clinical scenarios

CASE 2: Admitted at term with contractions

The initial exam determines that this 21-year-old gravida 1 is 2/80/-1. Re-examination in 3 hours finds her at 3-4/80/0.

She requests pain relief and states that she wants epidural anesthesia.

Evaluation 2 hours later suggests secondary arrest of dilation. Oxytocin is begun.

Soon after, late decelerations are observed on the FHR monitor.


Use of exogenous oxytocin in L & D is a double-edged sword: The drug can enhance the safety and efficacy of labor and delivery for mother and fetus, but using it in an unregulated manner (in terms of its indication and administration) can subject both to increased risk.

 

 

In fact, it is fair to say that the most widespread and potentially dangerous intervention during labor is the administration of oxytocin. Many expert opinions, guidelines, and strategies have been put forward about intrapartum use of oxytocin. These include consideration of:

  • indications
  • dosage (including the maximum)
  • interval
  • fetal response
  • ultimately, the availability of a physician during administration to manage any problem that arises.

Considerations in CASE 2

  • Always clearly indicate the reason for using oxytocin: Is this an induction? Or an augmentation? Was there evidence of fetal well-being, or non-reassurance, before oxytocin was administered? Certainly, there are circumstances in which either fetal status or non-progression of labor (or both) are an indication for oxytocin. A clear, concise, and properly timed progress note is always appropriate under these circumstances.
  • Discuss treatment with the patient. Does she understand why this therapy is being recommended? Does she agree to its use? And does she understand what the alternatives are?
  • Verify that nursing has accurately charted this process. Ensure that the nursing staff’s notes are complete and are consistent with yours.
  • Simplify the entire process: Use premixed solution and protocol-driven orders. Know what the standards and protocols are in your department. Minimizing patient-to-patient variability should lessen the risk of error.
  • Always be available in L & D for the first 30 minutes that oxytocin is being administered. If a problem with excessive uterine activity is going to occur, it is most likely to do so upon initial administration.
  • Monitor the FHR continuously. At the first suggestion of a change in fetal status, discontinue oxytocin. Perform a pelvic exam to reassess the situation. Understand and apply appropriate inutero resuscitative measures (IV fluids, O2, change in maternal position). Depending on circumstances, you can consider a restart of oxytocin after the FHR returns to its pre-oxytocin pattern.
  • Monitor uterine response to oxytocin. If the membranes are ruptured and if it is clinically feasible, an intrauterine pressure transducer will allow you to more objectively assess the uterine response to oxytocin and make decisions on that basis. Determine beforehand whether the patient is agreeable to this intervention.
  • When oxytocin is used for augmentation, reassess labor within 4 hours of achieving a satisfactory pattern. If minimal progress is not made, assess the clinical situation to determine why oxytocin, at an adequate response level, has failed to return labor to a normal active phase slope. Are there minor degrees of malposition? Is there an element of cephalopelvic disproportion? Recall that progress in labor is dependent on multiple factors.
  • Chart the process concurrently. Specify options for delivery before delivery.

CASE 3: Spontaneous delivery arrests after delivery of the head

The patient is a multipara with three prior normal vaginal deliveries. Her diabetic screen is negative. At admission, the estimated fetal weight was 3,628 g—in the same range as her other deliveries. A nuchal cord is absent.

After the patient assumes the McRobert’s position, delivery is accomplished with suprapubic pressure. Weakness is noted in the newborn’s right upper extremity. Birth weight is 3,515 g.


Maneuvers to manage shoulder dystocia should be part of all clinicians’ skill set. The sequence of those maneuvers, and their timing, are subject to some variation. Efficacy seems to be related most to recognizing and performing each maneuver properly.

Guidelines for managing shoulder dystocia should include reference to 1) the initial evaluation of the patient on admission to labor and delivery and 2) the delivery itself.3

Considerations in CASE 3

  • Before you admit them to L & D, counsel patients who have diabetes, morbid obesity (body mass index >40), or birth trauma in a prior delivery, or who have had a prior large infant (>9 lb birth weight), about the risk of shoulder dystocia. Present possible alternatives, and draw the patient into the conversation.
  • Consider delivering all women at term in the McRobert’s position, prophylactically.
  • Always check for a nuchal cord after delivery of the head. If you find one, reduce it if possible. Take a few seconds and carefully assess the situation before you cut the umbilical cord.
  • Lateral traction on the fetus’ head has the potential to cause tension on the brachial plexus, or make it worse. Gentle rotation of the head (<90 degrees) can move the shoulders into a more favorable location for delivery. Don’t rush—call for assistance! Continuously explain to the patient what you are doing; reassure her about the process.
  • Use suprapubic pressure wisely. The anterior shoulder may be dislodged by direct downward force; suprapubic force in a lateral direction may also dislodge the shoulder. Apply force from above the patient’s pelvis. Your assistant will have the best mechanical advantage by standing on a stool.
  • Is an episiotomy or episioproctotomy advantageous? In attempting to reach either the anterior or posterior shoulder vaginally, individualized assessment is called for.
  • When the posterior shoulder cannot be satisfactorily engaged and moved, try doing so with the anterior shoulder. Insert your hand between the symphysis and the fetal head and place downward pressure on the head to dislodge it and complete the delivery.
  • If it becomes necessary to attempt delivery by direct traction on the posterior hand or arm, try to avoid extension. Maintain flexion and move the upper extremity across the fetal chest before you attempt extension.
  • Repeat these maneuvers a second time before you attempt cephalic replacement or other maneuvers. Remember to move with deliberate speed to lessen the risk of making the injury worse. Have pediatric support present. Continue speaking with and reassuring the patient.
  • Under anesthesia in the operating room, perform a hysterotomy incision. With an assistant working through the vagina, combine the forces available to complete the delivery.
  • After delivery is complete, take time to write a note. (Speak with the patient and her family first, however.) Read the notes written by nursing. If they are not available when you write your note, mention that. Add a second note later, when nursing notes become available.
 

 

CASE 4: Meconium-stained fluid

A 35-year-old multigravida is 6 to 7 cm dilated. Her membranes have just spontaneously ruptured; you note copious meconium-stained fluid. The FHR demonstrates recurrent variable decelerations; baseline fetal heart rate remains normal.


The description and implications of various FHR patterns are important when documenting the fetal metabolic state during the birth process. Current guidelines have attempted to simplify, standardize, and clarify the interpretation of the FHR tracing.4

Considerations in CASE 4

  • Explain the situation to the patient. Perform a pelvic examination. If possible, wait for nursing assistance to ensure accurate documentation.
  • Reassure the patient; help her move to a lateral position. Observe the FHR monitor for a response.
  • Administer supplemental O2. Increase IV fluids to facilitate utero-placental perfusion.
  • If useful or necessary, consider attaching a fetal scalp electrode to better delineate fetal status.
  • When the FHR returns to baseline state (before spontaneous rupture of membranes), perform vibro-acoustic stimulation as a test to support fetal well-being.
  • Engage the patient and her family in a discussion about the sequence of events. Depending on the acuity of the situation, allow her to voice her concerns and reiterate what has occurred, and what will occur.
  • Outline a plan of management to the patient—verbally and in the record—with clear reference to events that have occurred. Then, stick to that plan!
  • Carefully review corresponding nursing notes. Always write your own assessment of events and actions.

Summing up: three “keepers”

First, the cornerstones of your effort to reduce malpractice risk are 1) thoughtful and informed discussion with the patient and 2) clear, concise documentation.

Second, don’t expect to be able to eliminate unnecessary or inappropriate allegations of medical malpractice; the best you can do is limit them.

Third, and most important, remember: The knowledgeable clinician you strive to be will make appropriate judgments in a timely fashion and will take appropriate actions to provide good medical care.

We want to hear from you! Tell us what you think.

References

1. Clark SL, Belfort MA, Dildy GA, Meyers JA. Reducing obstetric litigation through alterations in practice patterns. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(6):1279-1283.

2. Clark SL, Belfort MA, Byrum SL, Meyers JA, Perlin JB. Improved outcomes, fewer cesarean deliveries, and reduced litigation: results of a new paradigm in patient safety. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;199(2):105.e1-e7.

3. Crofts JF, Fox F, Ellis D. Observations from 450 shoulder dystocia simulations: lessons for skills training. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(4):906-912.

4. Macones GA, Hankins GD, Spong CY, Hauth J, Moore T. The 2008 National Institute of Child Health and Human Development workshop report on electronic fetal monitoring. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(3):661-666.

5. Best practice. Web site. 2010. http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/best-practice.html. Accessed December 17, 2010.

6. Sackett DL, Rosenberg WC, Gray JA, Haynes BR, Richardson WS. Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn’t 1996;312(7023):71-72.

7. Hayes EJ, Weinstein L. Improving patient safety and uniformity of care by a standardized regimen for the use of oxytocin. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;198(6):622.e1-7.

8. Proctor SJ, Taylor PR. A practical guide to continuous population-based data collection (PACE): a process facilitating uniformity of care and research into practice. 2000;93(2):67-73.

9. Cohen W, Friedman EA. Management of Labor. Baltimore, MD: University Park Press; 1983.

References

1. Clark SL, Belfort MA, Dildy GA, Meyers JA. Reducing obstetric litigation through alterations in practice patterns. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(6):1279-1283.

2. Clark SL, Belfort MA, Byrum SL, Meyers JA, Perlin JB. Improved outcomes, fewer cesarean deliveries, and reduced litigation: results of a new paradigm in patient safety. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;199(2):105.e1-e7.

3. Crofts JF, Fox F, Ellis D. Observations from 450 shoulder dystocia simulations: lessons for skills training. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(4):906-912.

4. Macones GA, Hankins GD, Spong CY, Hauth J, Moore T. The 2008 National Institute of Child Health and Human Development workshop report on electronic fetal monitoring. Obstet Gynecol. 2008;112(3):661-666.

5. Best practice. Web site. 2010. http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/best-practice.html. Accessed December 17, 2010.

6. Sackett DL, Rosenberg WC, Gray JA, Haynes BR, Richardson WS. Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn’t 1996;312(7023):71-72.

7. Hayes EJ, Weinstein L. Improving patient safety and uniformity of care by a standardized regimen for the use of oxytocin. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;198(6):622.e1-7.

8. Proctor SJ, Taylor PR. A practical guide to continuous population-based data collection (PACE): a process facilitating uniformity of care and research into practice. 2000;93(2):67-73.

9. Cohen W, Friedman EA. Management of Labor. Baltimore, MD: University Park Press; 1983.

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CASE: Is TOLAC feasible?

Your patient is a 33-year-old gravida 3, para 2002, with a previous cesarean delivery who was admitted to labor and delivery with premature ruptured membranes at term. She is not contracting. Fetal status is reassuring.

Her obstetric history is of one normal, spontaneous delivery followed by one cesarean delivery, both occurring at term.

She wants to know if she can safely undergo a trial of labor, or if she must have a repeat cesarean delivery. How should you counsel her?

At the start of any discussion about how to reduce your risk of being sued for malpractice because of your work as an obstetrician, in particular during labor and delivery, two distinct, underlying avenues of concern need to be addressed. Before moving on to discuss strategy, then, let’s consider what they are and how they arise: Allegation (perception). You are at risk of an allegation of malpractice (or of a perception of malpractice) because of an unexpected event or outcome for mother or baby. Allegation and perception can arise apart from any specific clinical action you undertook, or did not undertake. An example? Counseling about options for care that falls short of full understanding by the patient.

Allegation and perception are the subjects of this first installment of our two-part article on strategies for avoiding claims of malpractice in L & D that begin with the first prenatal visit.

Causation. Your actions—what you do in the course of providing prenatal care and delivering a baby—put you at risk of a charge of malpractice when you have provided medical care that 1) is inconsistent with current medical practice and thus 2) harmed the mother or newborn.

For a medical malpractice case to go forward, it must meet a well-defined paradigm that teases apart components of causation, beginning with your duty to the patient (TABLE 1).

TABLE 1 Signposts in the medical malpractice paradigm

When the clinical issue at hand is …… Then the legal term is …
A health-care professional’s obligation to provide care“Duty”
A deviation in the care that was provided“Standard of care”
An allegation that a breach in the standard of care resulted in injury“Proximate cause”
An assertion or finding that an injury is “compensable”“Damages”
Source: Yale New Haven Medical Center, 1997.5

Allegation of malpractice arises from a range of sources, as we’ll discuss, but it is causation that reflects the actual, hands-on practice of medicine. We’ll examine strategies for avoiding charges of causation in the second part of this article.

(For now, we’ll just note that a recent excellent review of intrapartum interventions and their basis in evidence1 offers a model for evaluating a number of widely utilized practices in obstetrics. The goal, of course, is to minimize bad outcomes that follow from causation. Regrettably, that evidence-based approach is a limited one, because of a paucity of adequately controlled studies about OB practice.)

CASE: Continued

You consider your patient’s comment that she would like to avoid a repeat cesarean delivery, and advise her that she may safely attempt vaginal birth.

When spontaneous labor does not occur in 6 hours, oxytocin is administered. She dilates to 9 cm and begins to push spontaneously.

The fetal heart rate then drops to 70/min; fetal station, which had been +2, is now -1. A Stat cesarean delivery is performed. Uterine rupture with partial fetal expulsion is found. Apgar scores are 1, 3, and 5 at 1, 5, and 10 minutes.

Your patient requires a hysterectomy to control bleeding.

Some broad considerations for the physician arising from this CASE

  • The counseling that you provide to a patient should be nondirective; it should include your opinion, however, about the best option available to her. Insert yourself into this hypothetical case, for discussion’s sake: Did you provide that important opinion to her?
  • You must make certain that she clearly understands the risks and benefits of a procedure or other action, and the available alternatives. Did you undertake a check of her comprehension, given the anxiety and confusion of the moment?
  • When an adverse outcome ensues—however unlikely it was to occur—it is necessary for you to review the circumstances with the patient as soon as clinically possible. Did you “debrief” and counsel her before and after the hysterectomy?
 

 

No more “perfect outcomes”: Our role changed, so did our risk

From the moment an OB patient enters triage, until her arrival home with her infant, this crucial period of her life is colored by concern, curiosity, myth, and fear.

Every woman anticipates the birth of a healthy infant. In an earlier era, the patient and her family relied on the sage advice of their physician to ensure this outcome. To an extent, physicians themselves reinforced this reliance, embracing the notion that they were, in fact, able to provide such a perfect outcome.

With advances that have been made in reproductive medicine, pregnancy has become more readily available to women with increasingly advanced disease; this has made labor and delivery more challenging to them and to their physicians. Realistically, our role as physicians is now better expressed as providing advice to help a woman achieve the best possible outcome, recognizing her individual clinical circumstances, instead of ensuring a perfect outcome.


Every woman anticipates the birth of a healthy baby. But the role of the OB is better expressed as helping her achieve the best possible outcome, not a perfect outcome. ABOVE: Shoulder dystocia is one of the most treacherous and frightening—and litigated—complications of childbirth, yet it is, for the most part, unpredictable and unpreventable in the course of even routine delivery.

Key concept #1
COMMUNICATION

Communication is central to patients’ comprehension about the care that you provide to them. But to enter a genuine dialogue with a patient under your care, and with her family, can challenge your communication skills.

First, you need written and verbal skills. Second, you need to know how to read visual cues.

Third, the messages that you deliver to the patient are influenced by:

  • your style of communication
  • your cultural background
  • the setting in which you’re providing care (office, hospital).

Where are such skills developed? For one, biopsychosocial models that are employed in medical student education and resident training aid the physician in developing appropriate communication skills.

But training alone cannot overcome the fact that communication is a double-sided activity: Patients bring many of their own variables to a dialogue. How patients understand and interact with you—and with other providers and the health-care system—is not, therefore, directly or strictly within your sphere of influence.

Yet your sensitivity to a patient’s issues can go a long way toward ameliorating her misconceptions and prejudices. Here are several suggestions, developed by others, to optimize patients’ understanding of their care2,3:

  • Apply what’s known as flip default. Assume the patient does not understand the information that you’re providing. Ask her to repeat your instructions back to you (as is done with a verbal order in the hospital).
  • Manage face-to-face time effectively. Don’t attempt to teach a patient everything about her care at once. Focus on the critical aspects of her case and on providing understanding; use a strategy of sequential learning.
  • Reduce the “overwhelm” factor. Periodically, stop and ask the patient if she has questions. Don’t wait until the end of the appointment to do this.
  • Eliminate jargon. When you notify a patient about the results of testing, for example, clarify what the results say about her health and mean for her care. Do so in plain language.
  • Recognize her preconceptions. Discuss any psychosocial issues head on with the patient. Use an interpreter or a social worker, or counselors from other fields, as appropriate.

Remember: All health-care personnel need to understand the importance of making the patient comfortable in the often foreign, and sometimes sterile, milieu of the medical office and hospital.

Key concept #2
TRUST

Trust between patient and clinician is, we believe, the most basic necessity for ameliorating allegations of malpractice—secondary only, perhaps, to your knowledge of medicine.

Trust can be enhanced by interactions that demonstrate to both parties the advisability of working together to resolve a problem. Any aspect of the physician-patient interaction that is potentially adversarial does not serve the interests of either.

How do you build trust?

We encourage you to construct a communication bridge, so to speak, with your patient. Begin by:

  • introducing yourself to her and explaining your role in her care
  • making appropriate eye contact with her
  • maintaining a positive attitude
  • dressing appropriately
  • making her feel that she is your No. 1 priority.

There is more.

Recognize the duality of respect

  • Ask the patient how she wishes to be addressed
  • Ask about her belief system
  • Explain the specifics of her care without arrogance.

Engender trust

  • Be honest with her
  • Be on her side
  • Take time with her
  • Allow her the right that she has to select from the options or to refuse treatment
  • Disclose to the patient your status as a student or resident, if that is your rank.
 

 

Recognize the benefits of partnership

Forging a partnership with the patient:

  • improves the accuracy of information
  • eases ongoing communication
  • facilitates informed consent
  • provides an opportunity for you to educate her.

TABLE 2 When building trust, both patient and physician
are charged with responsibilities

In regard to …The patient’s responsibility is to …The physician’s responsibility is to …
Gathering an honest and complete medical historyKnow and reportQuestion completely
Being adherent to prescribed careFollow throughMake reasonable demands
Making decisions about careAsk questions and actively participate in choices Make realistic requestsBe knowledgeable about available alternatives Individualize options

Key concept #3
SHARED RESPONSIBILITY

Patient and physician both have responsibilities that are important to achieving an optimal outcome; so does the hospital (TABLE 2 and TABLE 3). Both patient and physician should practice full disclosure throughout the course of care; this will benefit both of you.4 Here are a few select examples.

TABLE 3 Relative degrees of responsibility for a good outcome
vary across interested parties, but none are exempt

Area of emphasisHospital’s responsibilityPhysician’s responsibilityPatient’s responsibility
Creating a positive environment for care3+2+1+
Providing clear communication3+3+3+
Obtaining informed consent3+3+3+
Making reasonable requests1+1+3+
Compliance3+3+3+
Key to the relative scale: 1+: at the least, minimally responsible; 2+: at the least, somewhat responsible; 3+, responsible to the greatest degree.

The importance of the intake form

At the outset of OB care, in most practices, the patient provides the initial detailed medical history by completing a form in the waiting room. In reviewing and completing this survey with her during the appointment, pay particular attention to those questions for which the response has been left blank.

Patients need to understand that key recommendations about their care, and a proper analysis of their concerns, are based on the information that they provide on this survey. In our practices, we find that patients answer most of these early questions without difficulty—even inquiries of a personal nature, such as the number of prior pregnancies, or drug, alcohol, and smoking habits—as long as they understand why it’s in their best interests for you to have this information. If they leave a question blank and you do not follow up verbally, you may have lost invaluable information that can affect the outcome of her pregnancy.

What should you do when, occasionally, a patient refuses to answer one of your questions? We recommend that you record her refusal on the form itself, where the note remains part of the record.

Keep in mind that all necessary and useful information about a patient may not be available, or may not be appropriate to consider, at the initial prenatal visit. In that case, you have an ongoing opportunity—at subsequent visits during the pregnancy—to develop her full medical profile and algorithm.

The necessity of adherence

It almost goes without saying: To provide the care that our patients need, we sometimes require the unpleasant of them—to undergo evaluations, or testing, or to take medications that may be inconvenient or costly.

After you explain the specific course of care to a patient—whether you’re ordering a test or writing a prescription—your follow-up must include notation in the record of adherence. The fact is that both of you share responsibility for having her understand the importance of adherence to your instructions and the consequences of limited adherence or nonadherence.

Recall one of the lessons from the case that introduced this article: For the patient to make an informed decision about her care, the clinician must have thorough knowledge of 1) the risks and benefits of whatever intervention is being proposed in the particular clinical scenario and 2) the available alternatives. It is key that you communicate your risk-benefit assessment accurately to the patient.

Follow-up

Sometimes, new medical problems arise during subsequent prenatal visits. Follow-up appointments also provide an opportunity for you to expand your attention to problems identified earlier. Regardless of what the patient reported about her history and current health at the initial prenatal visit, listen for her to bring new issues to light for resolution later in the pregnancy that will have an impact on L & D. Again, it goes without saying but needs to be said: The OB clinician needs to have whatever skills are necessary to 1) fully evaluate the progress of a pregnancy and 2) make recommendations for care in light of changes in the status of mother and fetus along the way.

TABLE 4 Examples of the cardinal rule of “Be specific”
when you document care

Instead of noting …… Use alternative wording
“Mild vaginal bleeding”“Vaginal bleeding requiring two pads an hour”
“Gentle traction”“The shoulders were rotated before assisting the patient’s expulsive efforts”
“Patient refuses…” [or “declines…”]“Patient voiced the nature of the problem and the alternatives that i have explained to her”
“Expedited cesarean section”“The time from decision to incision was 35 minutes”
 

 

Basic principles of documentation

The medical record is the best witness to interactions between a physician and a patient. In the record, we’re required to write a “5-C” description of events—namely, one that is:

  • correct
  • comprehensive
  • conscientious
  • clear
  • contemporaneous.

Avoid medical jargon in the record. Be careful not to use vague terminology or descriptions, such as “mild vaginal bleeding,” “gentle traction,” or “patient refuses and accepts the consequences.” Specificity is the key to accuracy with respect to documentation (TABLE 4).

Editor’s note: Part 2 of this article will appear in the January 2011 issue of OBG Management. The authors’ analysis of L & D malpractice claims moves to a discussion of causation—by way of 4 troubling cases.

READ MORE ABOUT LIABILITY

You’ll find a rich, useful archive of expert analysis of your professional liability and malpractice risk, at www.obgmanagement.com

10 keys to defending (or, better, keeping clear of) a shoulder dystocia suit
Andrew K. Worek, Esq (March 2008)

After a patient’s unexpected death, First Aid for the emotionally wounded
Ronald A. Chez, MD, and Wayne Fortin, MS (April 2010)

Afraid of getting sued? A plaintiff attorney offers counsel (but no sympathy)
Janelle Yates, Senior Editor, with Lewis Laska, JD, PhD (October 2009)

Can a change in practice patterns reduce the number of OB malpractice claims?
Jason K. Baxter, MD, MSCP, and Louis Weinstein, MD (April 2009)

Strategies for breaking bad news to patients
Barry Bub, MD (September 2008)

Stuff of nightmares: Criminal prosecution for malpractice
Gary Steinman, MD, PhD (August 2008)

Deposition Dos and Don’ts: How to answer 8 tricky questions
James L. Knoll, IV, MD, and Phillip J. Resnick, MD (May 2008)

Playing high-stakes poker: Do you fight—or settle—that malpractice lawsuit?
Jeffrey Segal, MD (April 2008)

We want to hear from you! Tell us what you think.

References

1. Berghella V, Baxter JK, Chauhan SP. Evidence-based labor and delivery management. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;199(5):445-454.

2. Paasche-Orlow MK, Riekert KA, Bilderback A, et al. Tailored education may reduce health literacy disparities in asthma self-management. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005;172:980-986.

3. Huvane K. Health literacy: reading is just the beginning. Focus on multicultural healthcare. 2007;3(4):16-19.

4. Giordano K. Legal Principles. In: O’Grady JP, Gimovsky ML, Bayer-Zwirello L, Giordano K, eds. Operative Obstetrics. 2nd ed. New York: Cambridge University Press; 2008.

5. The Four Elements of Medical Malpractice Yale New Haven Medical Center: Issues in Risk Management. 1997.

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Martin L. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Martin Gimovsky is Vice Chair and Program, Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, NJ, and Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.

Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Alexis Gimovsky is a house officer in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

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Dr. Martin Gimovsky is Vice Chair and Program, Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, NJ, and Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.

Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Alexis Gimovsky is a house officer in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

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Martin L. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Martin Gimovsky is Vice Chair and Program, Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, Newark, NJ, and Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.

Alexis C. Gimovsky, MD
Dr. Alexis Gimovsky is a house officer in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, DC.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

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CASE: Is TOLAC feasible?

Your patient is a 33-year-old gravida 3, para 2002, with a previous cesarean delivery who was admitted to labor and delivery with premature ruptured membranes at term. She is not contracting. Fetal status is reassuring.

Her obstetric history is of one normal, spontaneous delivery followed by one cesarean delivery, both occurring at term.

She wants to know if she can safely undergo a trial of labor, or if she must have a repeat cesarean delivery. How should you counsel her?

At the start of any discussion about how to reduce your risk of being sued for malpractice because of your work as an obstetrician, in particular during labor and delivery, two distinct, underlying avenues of concern need to be addressed. Before moving on to discuss strategy, then, let’s consider what they are and how they arise: Allegation (perception). You are at risk of an allegation of malpractice (or of a perception of malpractice) because of an unexpected event or outcome for mother or baby. Allegation and perception can arise apart from any specific clinical action you undertook, or did not undertake. An example? Counseling about options for care that falls short of full understanding by the patient.

Allegation and perception are the subjects of this first installment of our two-part article on strategies for avoiding claims of malpractice in L & D that begin with the first prenatal visit.

Causation. Your actions—what you do in the course of providing prenatal care and delivering a baby—put you at risk of a charge of malpractice when you have provided medical care that 1) is inconsistent with current medical practice and thus 2) harmed the mother or newborn.

For a medical malpractice case to go forward, it must meet a well-defined paradigm that teases apart components of causation, beginning with your duty to the patient (TABLE 1).

TABLE 1 Signposts in the medical malpractice paradigm

When the clinical issue at hand is …… Then the legal term is …
A health-care professional’s obligation to provide care“Duty”
A deviation in the care that was provided“Standard of care”
An allegation that a breach in the standard of care resulted in injury“Proximate cause”
An assertion or finding that an injury is “compensable”“Damages”
Source: Yale New Haven Medical Center, 1997.5

Allegation of malpractice arises from a range of sources, as we’ll discuss, but it is causation that reflects the actual, hands-on practice of medicine. We’ll examine strategies for avoiding charges of causation in the second part of this article.

(For now, we’ll just note that a recent excellent review of intrapartum interventions and their basis in evidence1 offers a model for evaluating a number of widely utilized practices in obstetrics. The goal, of course, is to minimize bad outcomes that follow from causation. Regrettably, that evidence-based approach is a limited one, because of a paucity of adequately controlled studies about OB practice.)

CASE: Continued

You consider your patient’s comment that she would like to avoid a repeat cesarean delivery, and advise her that she may safely attempt vaginal birth.

When spontaneous labor does not occur in 6 hours, oxytocin is administered. She dilates to 9 cm and begins to push spontaneously.

The fetal heart rate then drops to 70/min; fetal station, which had been +2, is now -1. A Stat cesarean delivery is performed. Uterine rupture with partial fetal expulsion is found. Apgar scores are 1, 3, and 5 at 1, 5, and 10 minutes.

Your patient requires a hysterectomy to control bleeding.

Some broad considerations for the physician arising from this CASE

  • The counseling that you provide to a patient should be nondirective; it should include your opinion, however, about the best option available to her. Insert yourself into this hypothetical case, for discussion’s sake: Did you provide that important opinion to her?
  • You must make certain that she clearly understands the risks and benefits of a procedure or other action, and the available alternatives. Did you undertake a check of her comprehension, given the anxiety and confusion of the moment?
  • When an adverse outcome ensues—however unlikely it was to occur—it is necessary for you to review the circumstances with the patient as soon as clinically possible. Did you “debrief” and counsel her before and after the hysterectomy?
 

 

No more “perfect outcomes”: Our role changed, so did our risk

From the moment an OB patient enters triage, until her arrival home with her infant, this crucial period of her life is colored by concern, curiosity, myth, and fear.

Every woman anticipates the birth of a healthy infant. In an earlier era, the patient and her family relied on the sage advice of their physician to ensure this outcome. To an extent, physicians themselves reinforced this reliance, embracing the notion that they were, in fact, able to provide such a perfect outcome.

With advances that have been made in reproductive medicine, pregnancy has become more readily available to women with increasingly advanced disease; this has made labor and delivery more challenging to them and to their physicians. Realistically, our role as physicians is now better expressed as providing advice to help a woman achieve the best possible outcome, recognizing her individual clinical circumstances, instead of ensuring a perfect outcome.


Every woman anticipates the birth of a healthy baby. But the role of the OB is better expressed as helping her achieve the best possible outcome, not a perfect outcome. ABOVE: Shoulder dystocia is one of the most treacherous and frightening—and litigated—complications of childbirth, yet it is, for the most part, unpredictable and unpreventable in the course of even routine delivery.

Key concept #1
COMMUNICATION

Communication is central to patients’ comprehension about the care that you provide to them. But to enter a genuine dialogue with a patient under your care, and with her family, can challenge your communication skills.

First, you need written and verbal skills. Second, you need to know how to read visual cues.

Third, the messages that you deliver to the patient are influenced by:

  • your style of communication
  • your cultural background
  • the setting in which you’re providing care (office, hospital).

Where are such skills developed? For one, biopsychosocial models that are employed in medical student education and resident training aid the physician in developing appropriate communication skills.

But training alone cannot overcome the fact that communication is a double-sided activity: Patients bring many of their own variables to a dialogue. How patients understand and interact with you—and with other providers and the health-care system—is not, therefore, directly or strictly within your sphere of influence.

Yet your sensitivity to a patient’s issues can go a long way toward ameliorating her misconceptions and prejudices. Here are several suggestions, developed by others, to optimize patients’ understanding of their care2,3:

  • Apply what’s known as flip default. Assume the patient does not understand the information that you’re providing. Ask her to repeat your instructions back to you (as is done with a verbal order in the hospital).
  • Manage face-to-face time effectively. Don’t attempt to teach a patient everything about her care at once. Focus on the critical aspects of her case and on providing understanding; use a strategy of sequential learning.
  • Reduce the “overwhelm” factor. Periodically, stop and ask the patient if she has questions. Don’t wait until the end of the appointment to do this.
  • Eliminate jargon. When you notify a patient about the results of testing, for example, clarify what the results say about her health and mean for her care. Do so in plain language.
  • Recognize her preconceptions. Discuss any psychosocial issues head on with the patient. Use an interpreter or a social worker, or counselors from other fields, as appropriate.

Remember: All health-care personnel need to understand the importance of making the patient comfortable in the often foreign, and sometimes sterile, milieu of the medical office and hospital.

Key concept #2
TRUST

Trust between patient and clinician is, we believe, the most basic necessity for ameliorating allegations of malpractice—secondary only, perhaps, to your knowledge of medicine.

Trust can be enhanced by interactions that demonstrate to both parties the advisability of working together to resolve a problem. Any aspect of the physician-patient interaction that is potentially adversarial does not serve the interests of either.

How do you build trust?

We encourage you to construct a communication bridge, so to speak, with your patient. Begin by:

  • introducing yourself to her and explaining your role in her care
  • making appropriate eye contact with her
  • maintaining a positive attitude
  • dressing appropriately
  • making her feel that she is your No. 1 priority.

There is more.

Recognize the duality of respect

  • Ask the patient how she wishes to be addressed
  • Ask about her belief system
  • Explain the specifics of her care without arrogance.

Engender trust

  • Be honest with her
  • Be on her side
  • Take time with her
  • Allow her the right that she has to select from the options or to refuse treatment
  • Disclose to the patient your status as a student or resident, if that is your rank.
 

 

Recognize the benefits of partnership

Forging a partnership with the patient:

  • improves the accuracy of information
  • eases ongoing communication
  • facilitates informed consent
  • provides an opportunity for you to educate her.

TABLE 2 When building trust, both patient and physician
are charged with responsibilities

In regard to …The patient’s responsibility is to …The physician’s responsibility is to …
Gathering an honest and complete medical historyKnow and reportQuestion completely
Being adherent to prescribed careFollow throughMake reasonable demands
Making decisions about careAsk questions and actively participate in choices Make realistic requestsBe knowledgeable about available alternatives Individualize options

Key concept #3
SHARED RESPONSIBILITY

Patient and physician both have responsibilities that are important to achieving an optimal outcome; so does the hospital (TABLE 2 and TABLE 3). Both patient and physician should practice full disclosure throughout the course of care; this will benefit both of you.4 Here are a few select examples.

TABLE 3 Relative degrees of responsibility for a good outcome
vary across interested parties, but none are exempt

Area of emphasisHospital’s responsibilityPhysician’s responsibilityPatient’s responsibility
Creating a positive environment for care3+2+1+
Providing clear communication3+3+3+
Obtaining informed consent3+3+3+
Making reasonable requests1+1+3+
Compliance3+3+3+
Key to the relative scale: 1+: at the least, minimally responsible; 2+: at the least, somewhat responsible; 3+, responsible to the greatest degree.

The importance of the intake form

At the outset of OB care, in most practices, the patient provides the initial detailed medical history by completing a form in the waiting room. In reviewing and completing this survey with her during the appointment, pay particular attention to those questions for which the response has been left blank.

Patients need to understand that key recommendations about their care, and a proper analysis of their concerns, are based on the information that they provide on this survey. In our practices, we find that patients answer most of these early questions without difficulty—even inquiries of a personal nature, such as the number of prior pregnancies, or drug, alcohol, and smoking habits—as long as they understand why it’s in their best interests for you to have this information. If they leave a question blank and you do not follow up verbally, you may have lost invaluable information that can affect the outcome of her pregnancy.

What should you do when, occasionally, a patient refuses to answer one of your questions? We recommend that you record her refusal on the form itself, where the note remains part of the record.

Keep in mind that all necessary and useful information about a patient may not be available, or may not be appropriate to consider, at the initial prenatal visit. In that case, you have an ongoing opportunity—at subsequent visits during the pregnancy—to develop her full medical profile and algorithm.

The necessity of adherence

It almost goes without saying: To provide the care that our patients need, we sometimes require the unpleasant of them—to undergo evaluations, or testing, or to take medications that may be inconvenient or costly.

After you explain the specific course of care to a patient—whether you’re ordering a test or writing a prescription—your follow-up must include notation in the record of adherence. The fact is that both of you share responsibility for having her understand the importance of adherence to your instructions and the consequences of limited adherence or nonadherence.

Recall one of the lessons from the case that introduced this article: For the patient to make an informed decision about her care, the clinician must have thorough knowledge of 1) the risks and benefits of whatever intervention is being proposed in the particular clinical scenario and 2) the available alternatives. It is key that you communicate your risk-benefit assessment accurately to the patient.

Follow-up

Sometimes, new medical problems arise during subsequent prenatal visits. Follow-up appointments also provide an opportunity for you to expand your attention to problems identified earlier. Regardless of what the patient reported about her history and current health at the initial prenatal visit, listen for her to bring new issues to light for resolution later in the pregnancy that will have an impact on L & D. Again, it goes without saying but needs to be said: The OB clinician needs to have whatever skills are necessary to 1) fully evaluate the progress of a pregnancy and 2) make recommendations for care in light of changes in the status of mother and fetus along the way.

TABLE 4 Examples of the cardinal rule of “Be specific”
when you document care

Instead of noting …… Use alternative wording
“Mild vaginal bleeding”“Vaginal bleeding requiring two pads an hour”
“Gentle traction”“The shoulders were rotated before assisting the patient’s expulsive efforts”
“Patient refuses…” [or “declines…”]“Patient voiced the nature of the problem and the alternatives that i have explained to her”
“Expedited cesarean section”“The time from decision to incision was 35 minutes”
 

 

Basic principles of documentation

The medical record is the best witness to interactions between a physician and a patient. In the record, we’re required to write a “5-C” description of events—namely, one that is:

  • correct
  • comprehensive
  • conscientious
  • clear
  • contemporaneous.

Avoid medical jargon in the record. Be careful not to use vague terminology or descriptions, such as “mild vaginal bleeding,” “gentle traction,” or “patient refuses and accepts the consequences.” Specificity is the key to accuracy with respect to documentation (TABLE 4).

Editor’s note: Part 2 of this article will appear in the January 2011 issue of OBG Management. The authors’ analysis of L & D malpractice claims moves to a discussion of causation—by way of 4 troubling cases.

READ MORE ABOUT LIABILITY

You’ll find a rich, useful archive of expert analysis of your professional liability and malpractice risk, at www.obgmanagement.com

10 keys to defending (or, better, keeping clear of) a shoulder dystocia suit
Andrew K. Worek, Esq (March 2008)

After a patient’s unexpected death, First Aid for the emotionally wounded
Ronald A. Chez, MD, and Wayne Fortin, MS (April 2010)

Afraid of getting sued? A plaintiff attorney offers counsel (but no sympathy)
Janelle Yates, Senior Editor, with Lewis Laska, JD, PhD (October 2009)

Can a change in practice patterns reduce the number of OB malpractice claims?
Jason K. Baxter, MD, MSCP, and Louis Weinstein, MD (April 2009)

Strategies for breaking bad news to patients
Barry Bub, MD (September 2008)

Stuff of nightmares: Criminal prosecution for malpractice
Gary Steinman, MD, PhD (August 2008)

Deposition Dos and Don’ts: How to answer 8 tricky questions
James L. Knoll, IV, MD, and Phillip J. Resnick, MD (May 2008)

Playing high-stakes poker: Do you fight—or settle—that malpractice lawsuit?
Jeffrey Segal, MD (April 2008)

We want to hear from you! Tell us what you think.

CASE: Is TOLAC feasible?

Your patient is a 33-year-old gravida 3, para 2002, with a previous cesarean delivery who was admitted to labor and delivery with premature ruptured membranes at term. She is not contracting. Fetal status is reassuring.

Her obstetric history is of one normal, spontaneous delivery followed by one cesarean delivery, both occurring at term.

She wants to know if she can safely undergo a trial of labor, or if she must have a repeat cesarean delivery. How should you counsel her?

At the start of any discussion about how to reduce your risk of being sued for malpractice because of your work as an obstetrician, in particular during labor and delivery, two distinct, underlying avenues of concern need to be addressed. Before moving on to discuss strategy, then, let’s consider what they are and how they arise: Allegation (perception). You are at risk of an allegation of malpractice (or of a perception of malpractice) because of an unexpected event or outcome for mother or baby. Allegation and perception can arise apart from any specific clinical action you undertook, or did not undertake. An example? Counseling about options for care that falls short of full understanding by the patient.

Allegation and perception are the subjects of this first installment of our two-part article on strategies for avoiding claims of malpractice in L & D that begin with the first prenatal visit.

Causation. Your actions—what you do in the course of providing prenatal care and delivering a baby—put you at risk of a charge of malpractice when you have provided medical care that 1) is inconsistent with current medical practice and thus 2) harmed the mother or newborn.

For a medical malpractice case to go forward, it must meet a well-defined paradigm that teases apart components of causation, beginning with your duty to the patient (TABLE 1).

TABLE 1 Signposts in the medical malpractice paradigm

When the clinical issue at hand is …… Then the legal term is …
A health-care professional’s obligation to provide care“Duty”
A deviation in the care that was provided“Standard of care”
An allegation that a breach in the standard of care resulted in injury“Proximate cause”
An assertion or finding that an injury is “compensable”“Damages”
Source: Yale New Haven Medical Center, 1997.5

Allegation of malpractice arises from a range of sources, as we’ll discuss, but it is causation that reflects the actual, hands-on practice of medicine. We’ll examine strategies for avoiding charges of causation in the second part of this article.

(For now, we’ll just note that a recent excellent review of intrapartum interventions and their basis in evidence1 offers a model for evaluating a number of widely utilized practices in obstetrics. The goal, of course, is to minimize bad outcomes that follow from causation. Regrettably, that evidence-based approach is a limited one, because of a paucity of adequately controlled studies about OB practice.)

CASE: Continued

You consider your patient’s comment that she would like to avoid a repeat cesarean delivery, and advise her that she may safely attempt vaginal birth.

When spontaneous labor does not occur in 6 hours, oxytocin is administered. She dilates to 9 cm and begins to push spontaneously.

The fetal heart rate then drops to 70/min; fetal station, which had been +2, is now -1. A Stat cesarean delivery is performed. Uterine rupture with partial fetal expulsion is found. Apgar scores are 1, 3, and 5 at 1, 5, and 10 minutes.

Your patient requires a hysterectomy to control bleeding.

Some broad considerations for the physician arising from this CASE

  • The counseling that you provide to a patient should be nondirective; it should include your opinion, however, about the best option available to her. Insert yourself into this hypothetical case, for discussion’s sake: Did you provide that important opinion to her?
  • You must make certain that she clearly understands the risks and benefits of a procedure or other action, and the available alternatives. Did you undertake a check of her comprehension, given the anxiety and confusion of the moment?
  • When an adverse outcome ensues—however unlikely it was to occur—it is necessary for you to review the circumstances with the patient as soon as clinically possible. Did you “debrief” and counsel her before and after the hysterectomy?
 

 

No more “perfect outcomes”: Our role changed, so did our risk

From the moment an OB patient enters triage, until her arrival home with her infant, this crucial period of her life is colored by concern, curiosity, myth, and fear.

Every woman anticipates the birth of a healthy infant. In an earlier era, the patient and her family relied on the sage advice of their physician to ensure this outcome. To an extent, physicians themselves reinforced this reliance, embracing the notion that they were, in fact, able to provide such a perfect outcome.

With advances that have been made in reproductive medicine, pregnancy has become more readily available to women with increasingly advanced disease; this has made labor and delivery more challenging to them and to their physicians. Realistically, our role as physicians is now better expressed as providing advice to help a woman achieve the best possible outcome, recognizing her individual clinical circumstances, instead of ensuring a perfect outcome.


Every woman anticipates the birth of a healthy baby. But the role of the OB is better expressed as helping her achieve the best possible outcome, not a perfect outcome. ABOVE: Shoulder dystocia is one of the most treacherous and frightening—and litigated—complications of childbirth, yet it is, for the most part, unpredictable and unpreventable in the course of even routine delivery.

Key concept #1
COMMUNICATION

Communication is central to patients’ comprehension about the care that you provide to them. But to enter a genuine dialogue with a patient under your care, and with her family, can challenge your communication skills.

First, you need written and verbal skills. Second, you need to know how to read visual cues.

Third, the messages that you deliver to the patient are influenced by:

  • your style of communication
  • your cultural background
  • the setting in which you’re providing care (office, hospital).

Where are such skills developed? For one, biopsychosocial models that are employed in medical student education and resident training aid the physician in developing appropriate communication skills.

But training alone cannot overcome the fact that communication is a double-sided activity: Patients bring many of their own variables to a dialogue. How patients understand and interact with you—and with other providers and the health-care system—is not, therefore, directly or strictly within your sphere of influence.

Yet your sensitivity to a patient’s issues can go a long way toward ameliorating her misconceptions and prejudices. Here are several suggestions, developed by others, to optimize patients’ understanding of their care2,3:

  • Apply what’s known as flip default. Assume the patient does not understand the information that you’re providing. Ask her to repeat your instructions back to you (as is done with a verbal order in the hospital).
  • Manage face-to-face time effectively. Don’t attempt to teach a patient everything about her care at once. Focus on the critical aspects of her case and on providing understanding; use a strategy of sequential learning.
  • Reduce the “overwhelm” factor. Periodically, stop and ask the patient if she has questions. Don’t wait until the end of the appointment to do this.
  • Eliminate jargon. When you notify a patient about the results of testing, for example, clarify what the results say about her health and mean for her care. Do so in plain language.
  • Recognize her preconceptions. Discuss any psychosocial issues head on with the patient. Use an interpreter or a social worker, or counselors from other fields, as appropriate.

Remember: All health-care personnel need to understand the importance of making the patient comfortable in the often foreign, and sometimes sterile, milieu of the medical office and hospital.

Key concept #2
TRUST

Trust between patient and clinician is, we believe, the most basic necessity for ameliorating allegations of malpractice—secondary only, perhaps, to your knowledge of medicine.

Trust can be enhanced by interactions that demonstrate to both parties the advisability of working together to resolve a problem. Any aspect of the physician-patient interaction that is potentially adversarial does not serve the interests of either.

How do you build trust?

We encourage you to construct a communication bridge, so to speak, with your patient. Begin by:

  • introducing yourself to her and explaining your role in her care
  • making appropriate eye contact with her
  • maintaining a positive attitude
  • dressing appropriately
  • making her feel that she is your No. 1 priority.

There is more.

Recognize the duality of respect

  • Ask the patient how she wishes to be addressed
  • Ask about her belief system
  • Explain the specifics of her care without arrogance.

Engender trust

  • Be honest with her
  • Be on her side
  • Take time with her
  • Allow her the right that she has to select from the options or to refuse treatment
  • Disclose to the patient your status as a student or resident, if that is your rank.
 

 

Recognize the benefits of partnership

Forging a partnership with the patient:

  • improves the accuracy of information
  • eases ongoing communication
  • facilitates informed consent
  • provides an opportunity for you to educate her.

TABLE 2 When building trust, both patient and physician
are charged with responsibilities

In regard to …The patient’s responsibility is to …The physician’s responsibility is to …
Gathering an honest and complete medical historyKnow and reportQuestion completely
Being adherent to prescribed careFollow throughMake reasonable demands
Making decisions about careAsk questions and actively participate in choices Make realistic requestsBe knowledgeable about available alternatives Individualize options

Key concept #3
SHARED RESPONSIBILITY

Patient and physician both have responsibilities that are important to achieving an optimal outcome; so does the hospital (TABLE 2 and TABLE 3). Both patient and physician should practice full disclosure throughout the course of care; this will benefit both of you.4 Here are a few select examples.

TABLE 3 Relative degrees of responsibility for a good outcome
vary across interested parties, but none are exempt

Area of emphasisHospital’s responsibilityPhysician’s responsibilityPatient’s responsibility
Creating a positive environment for care3+2+1+
Providing clear communication3+3+3+
Obtaining informed consent3+3+3+
Making reasonable requests1+1+3+
Compliance3+3+3+
Key to the relative scale: 1+: at the least, minimally responsible; 2+: at the least, somewhat responsible; 3+, responsible to the greatest degree.

The importance of the intake form

At the outset of OB care, in most practices, the patient provides the initial detailed medical history by completing a form in the waiting room. In reviewing and completing this survey with her during the appointment, pay particular attention to those questions for which the response has been left blank.

Patients need to understand that key recommendations about their care, and a proper analysis of their concerns, are based on the information that they provide on this survey. In our practices, we find that patients answer most of these early questions without difficulty—even inquiries of a personal nature, such as the number of prior pregnancies, or drug, alcohol, and smoking habits—as long as they understand why it’s in their best interests for you to have this information. If they leave a question blank and you do not follow up verbally, you may have lost invaluable information that can affect the outcome of her pregnancy.

What should you do when, occasionally, a patient refuses to answer one of your questions? We recommend that you record her refusal on the form itself, where the note remains part of the record.

Keep in mind that all necessary and useful information about a patient may not be available, or may not be appropriate to consider, at the initial prenatal visit. In that case, you have an ongoing opportunity—at subsequent visits during the pregnancy—to develop her full medical profile and algorithm.

The necessity of adherence

It almost goes without saying: To provide the care that our patients need, we sometimes require the unpleasant of them—to undergo evaluations, or testing, or to take medications that may be inconvenient or costly.

After you explain the specific course of care to a patient—whether you’re ordering a test or writing a prescription—your follow-up must include notation in the record of adherence. The fact is that both of you share responsibility for having her understand the importance of adherence to your instructions and the consequences of limited adherence or nonadherence.

Recall one of the lessons from the case that introduced this article: For the patient to make an informed decision about her care, the clinician must have thorough knowledge of 1) the risks and benefits of whatever intervention is being proposed in the particular clinical scenario and 2) the available alternatives. It is key that you communicate your risk-benefit assessment accurately to the patient.

Follow-up

Sometimes, new medical problems arise during subsequent prenatal visits. Follow-up appointments also provide an opportunity for you to expand your attention to problems identified earlier. Regardless of what the patient reported about her history and current health at the initial prenatal visit, listen for her to bring new issues to light for resolution later in the pregnancy that will have an impact on L & D. Again, it goes without saying but needs to be said: The OB clinician needs to have whatever skills are necessary to 1) fully evaluate the progress of a pregnancy and 2) make recommendations for care in light of changes in the status of mother and fetus along the way.

TABLE 4 Examples of the cardinal rule of “Be specific”
when you document care

Instead of noting …… Use alternative wording
“Mild vaginal bleeding”“Vaginal bleeding requiring two pads an hour”
“Gentle traction”“The shoulders were rotated before assisting the patient’s expulsive efforts”
“Patient refuses…” [or “declines…”]“Patient voiced the nature of the problem and the alternatives that i have explained to her”
“Expedited cesarean section”“The time from decision to incision was 35 minutes”
 

 

Basic principles of documentation

The medical record is the best witness to interactions between a physician and a patient. In the record, we’re required to write a “5-C” description of events—namely, one that is:

  • correct
  • comprehensive
  • conscientious
  • clear
  • contemporaneous.

Avoid medical jargon in the record. Be careful not to use vague terminology or descriptions, such as “mild vaginal bleeding,” “gentle traction,” or “patient refuses and accepts the consequences.” Specificity is the key to accuracy with respect to documentation (TABLE 4).

Editor’s note: Part 2 of this article will appear in the January 2011 issue of OBG Management. The authors’ analysis of L & D malpractice claims moves to a discussion of causation—by way of 4 troubling cases.

READ MORE ABOUT LIABILITY

You’ll find a rich, useful archive of expert analysis of your professional liability and malpractice risk, at www.obgmanagement.com

10 keys to defending (or, better, keeping clear of) a shoulder dystocia suit
Andrew K. Worek, Esq (March 2008)

After a patient’s unexpected death, First Aid for the emotionally wounded
Ronald A. Chez, MD, and Wayne Fortin, MS (April 2010)

Afraid of getting sued? A plaintiff attorney offers counsel (but no sympathy)
Janelle Yates, Senior Editor, with Lewis Laska, JD, PhD (October 2009)

Can a change in practice patterns reduce the number of OB malpractice claims?
Jason K. Baxter, MD, MSCP, and Louis Weinstein, MD (April 2009)

Strategies for breaking bad news to patients
Barry Bub, MD (September 2008)

Stuff of nightmares: Criminal prosecution for malpractice
Gary Steinman, MD, PhD (August 2008)

Deposition Dos and Don’ts: How to answer 8 tricky questions
James L. Knoll, IV, MD, and Phillip J. Resnick, MD (May 2008)

Playing high-stakes poker: Do you fight—or settle—that malpractice lawsuit?
Jeffrey Segal, MD (April 2008)

We want to hear from you! Tell us what you think.

References

1. Berghella V, Baxter JK, Chauhan SP. Evidence-based labor and delivery management. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;199(5):445-454.

2. Paasche-Orlow MK, Riekert KA, Bilderback A, et al. Tailored education may reduce health literacy disparities in asthma self-management. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005;172:980-986.

3. Huvane K. Health literacy: reading is just the beginning. Focus on multicultural healthcare. 2007;3(4):16-19.

4. Giordano K. Legal Principles. In: O’Grady JP, Gimovsky ML, Bayer-Zwirello L, Giordano K, eds. Operative Obstetrics. 2nd ed. New York: Cambridge University Press; 2008.

5. The Four Elements of Medical Malpractice Yale New Haven Medical Center: Issues in Risk Management. 1997.

References

1. Berghella V, Baxter JK, Chauhan SP. Evidence-based labor and delivery management. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2008;199(5):445-454.

2. Paasche-Orlow MK, Riekert KA, Bilderback A, et al. Tailored education may reduce health literacy disparities in asthma self-management. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005;172:980-986.

3. Huvane K. Health literacy: reading is just the beginning. Focus on multicultural healthcare. 2007;3(4):16-19.

4. Giordano K. Legal Principles. In: O’Grady JP, Gimovsky ML, Bayer-Zwirello L, Giordano K, eds. Operative Obstetrics. 2nd ed. New York: Cambridge University Press; 2008.

5. The Four Elements of Medical Malpractice Yale New Haven Medical Center: Issues in Risk Management. 1997.

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