Malpractice attorneys shouldn’t rely on clinical guidelines

The Institute of Medicine has been an advocate for clinical guidelines for many years.

Although the value of guidelines has never really been established, both clinicians and medical malpractice attorneys often want to ascribe greater credibility to them than they deserve. The issue was raised again in the past few months and I review it briefly here.

A few years ago Dr. Robert Ewart discussed the ethics of using guidelines to screen patients for medical conditions in a review entitled “Primum Non Nocere and the Quality of Evidence: Rethinking the Ethics of Screening.” Dr. Ewart concluded that many of the “guidelines” in use at that time had insufficient evidence to be used as a standard for clinical practice. He pointed out that there is a marked difference between “investigation” (seeking to better define a known problem) and “screening” (seeking to find if there is a problem) in terms of four ethical principles: beneficence, nonmaleficence, autonomy, and distributive justice.

Since the healthy bear the harms of screening, nonmaleficence takes ethical precedence over beneficence in individual cases. Both the cost of and the consent for such screening programs for both the individual and society have ethical implications and differ for screening vs. investigation. This review/essay is worth the consideration of attorneys, especially, for example, those who may be involved in situations where “loss of chance” is an issue.

Dr. Pierluigi Tricoci et al. have revisited the value of clinical practice guidelines in an article in JAMA. While guidelines published by the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association have become important benchmarks for quality of care, the vast majority are based on inadequate evidence or biased expert opinion. They find that the evidence from which clinical practice guidelines are derived as well as the process of writing guidelines needs improvement.  A variety of print and online media provide more comprehensive analysis. Check out the articles in the Wall Street JournalBloomberg News, and USA Today.

In an accompanying editorial titled Reassessment of Clinical Practice Guidelines: Go Gently Into That Good Night, Dr. Terrence Shayneyfelt and Robert Centor find that:

  • Guidelines have become marketing and opinion-based pieces with a widely recognized financial bias.
  • Guidelines are being developed and used as “marketing tools for device and pharmaceutical manufacturers.”
  • As many as “87% of guideline authors had some form of industry tie.”
  • Guidelines need greater individualization for specific patient situations.
  • The guideline development process needs major changes to prevent conflicts of interest, reduce bias, improve flexibility and decrease redundancy.

In summary, they state that “clinical guidelines are supposed to be guides, not rules.” Because one size does not fit all patients, the authors suggest that “perhaps guidelines should be avoided completely,” and add that, given the present state of guidelines, “clinicians and policy makers must reject calls for adherence to guidelines. Physicians would be better off making clinical decisions based on valid primary data.”

They conclude that, because of the disarray found in guidelines, many clinicians (appropriately) do not use them.

Nor, in this author’s opinion, should malpractice attorneys for either plaintiff or defense use them as a place to hang one’s hat.

Charles A. Pilcher is an emergency physician who has helped both plaintiff and defense attorneys with malpractice litigation for over 25 years. He can be reached at his self-titled site, Charles A. Pilcher, MD.

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  • paul

    malpractice attorneys should use whatever they have at their disposal, clinical guidelines and otherwise, to make their self-interested side of the story appear to be the correct one whether it is or not. because that is the ultimate goal of the legal system (as opposed to, say, seeking the truth).

  • Matt

    Many people, including Paul apparently, consider their take on an event to be an objective, irrefutable truth. They think that everyone else is biased and tainted by “self interest”, while they could not possibly be. So they can say things like the legal system is not interest in truth, without seriously appreciating what they’re saying.

  • Marc Gorayeb, MD

    I’m sure Paul seriously does appreciate what he is saying. A search for the truth typically involves fact-finding, either through evaluation of physical evidence or evaluation of the credibility of witness testimony. It is a more important issue in criminal law than in civil law, because civil liability more often hinges on the opinions of experts rather than on the facts of a case.

    Those experts are paid handsomely for giving the ‘right’ opinion in a convincing way. Thus there is an inherent conflict of interest that actually does obscure the objective truth on one or both sides. The fact-finder is just as likely to decide liability based on the lawyer’s ability to persuade than on any discovery of what the standard of care actually is in clinical practice. We have all seen or experienced this. And I agree that clinical practice guidelines are as likely to be harmful as helpful in the search for the truth as to a defendant’s deviation from a standard of care.

    And by the way, one should never assume that a prosecutor in a criminal case is only interested in the truth. There are many cases of vindictive prosecution, inappropriate up-charging to induce a plea deal more favorable to the prosecution, and charges being brought when prosecutors themselves are not convinced of a defendant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt. Our system happens to work reasonably well because of the Bill of Rights, not because it depends on the rectitude of all persons in authority.

  • Matt

    Criminal law depends on a large number of experts – fingerprint, handwriting, etc.

    As to inherent conflicts, they exist no matter what. Which is why we let each side examine all the witnesses, and put their best case forward. To say the fact finder is just as likely to decide liability based on the lawyer’s ability to persuade than the standard of care is pure conjecture, nothing more. “We have all seen or experienced this”? How so? At trial, physicians win the vast majority of the time. But if you physicians want to establish guidelines for the standard of care, by all means do so. Nothing is stopping you.

    I agree that the Bill of Rights is key. Which is why tort reform, which seeks to undercut one of those rights, is so anti-American.

  • Marc Gorayeb, MD

    I don’t believe that most people are in favor of eliminating trial by jury in medmal cases, or that a jury’s factual findings should be subject to new levels of review. Medmal cases turn on far more than factual findings by a jury. Although factual findings may help a jury determine whether a breach of duty has occurred, determination of the duty owed is not necessarily a question for the jury, if the issue is outside common experience. Most tort reform proposals focus on the amount of damages, or on establishing an objective way to provide a judge some guidance on determining the standard of care. These can be questions for the legislatures or the courts (judges) and are not per se violative of the 7th amendment.

  • Matt

    Most tort reform proposals focus on limiting a plaintiff’s right to recover the full measure of their damages, or some other way of making it difficult for them to access the courts. Nothing more, nothing less. That’s because they’re sponsored by insurers primarily.

    If one removes things that are “outside common experience” (however you define it), what IS the jury qualified to do?

  • Cam Brown

    Guidelines are also used WIDELY to deny care by insurance companies, especially for Lyme Disease. They are also used to take away medical licenses from doctors who are treating Lyme Disease outside of the IDSA guidelines. Screw the guidelines.

  • Thomas Reid MD PhD FACP

    What’s missing here is the Art of Medicine – a very major component of our practice. Guidelines are a good starting position, but many of our patients may fall short of the mark for medical reasons.

    This especially true in oncology.

    Thomas Reid III MD PhD FACP
    Hematology-medical Oncology

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