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Medical Keywords - Everything you need to know about health.

Psychiatric Malpractice and Standard of Care

The definition of malpractice is "the omission by a professional while acting out his/her professional duties that causes or aggravates an injury which is the direct result of the failure of the professional to exercise reasonable care, diligence, knowledge, or skill". The psychiatrist must either do something that he/she should not do, or fail to do something that he/she should have done, and that, that professional act or omission of an act is clearly below the standard level of care expected in the field of psychiatry that any average psychiatrist in similar circumstances would have been expected to do or not do, which ever the case may be.

Psychiatrists are generally not sued as often as physicians in medical practice tend to be. Those psychiatrist that work in primarily hospital-based care or that participate in medication managed care of psychiatric patients tend to have more law suits filed against them then those in general psychiatric practices do. Psychiatric malpractice claims are less likely to be won due to the fact that liability and negligence are much more difficult to prove in psychiatric cases than they are in medical cases.

Standard of Care:

A person practicing psychiatry must exercise reasonable care when evaluating, diagnosing, treating, monitoring, or discharging a patient. There must be a reasonable degree of clinical knowledge, skill and performance of care that is expected of a member of the psychiatric profession.

A psychiatrist that fails to obtain an adequate amount of information such as the patient's prior psychiatric records or previous laboratory test can be grounds for a claim of negligence.

There are "Four Ds" or elements that make up an alleged negligence charge. The "Four Ds", are:

Duty - it must be evident that, that particular psychiatrist had a duty to the patient.

Dereliction of Duty - the psychiatrist breached that duty.

Direct Causation - the dereliction of duty, directly caused the alleged damage to the patient.

Damages - there must be actual damages present.

There must be an expert testimony to establish that there was negligence that is below the s"tandard of care" in most malpractice cases.

The most common reasons cited for cases of psychiatric malpractice are for:

Incorrect Treatment

Negligent usage of psychiatric medications, which also may include the failure to obtain informed consent

Attempted and/or completed suicide

Incorrect diagnosis

Improper supervision and or improper commitment

Informed Consent:

The simple principle that all patients have a right to make treatment decisions on their own without being coerced in any way and with knowledge of any information that is available through their physicians is known as the concept of informed consent. It is evident that this concept was practiced as far back as 1914, when Justice Benjamin Cardozo wrote in the case files of Schloendorff v. Society of New York Hospital, "every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body". The actual term of "Informed Consent", was not coined until 1957, when it was introduced in the case of Saglo v. Leland Stanford Jr., University Board of Trustees.

There are three elements of informed consent:

Disclosure of information

The patient's decision must have been made on a voluntary basis without any type of coercion

Competency and although adults are assumed to be competent there must be no evidence of incompetency.

Competency assessments are based on four abilities. These are: understanding, appreciating, reasoning, and choosing.

A Psychiatrist and Mental Illness

Common Illnesses That Psychiatrist Treat

Forensic Psychiatry

A Step toward Substance Abuse Can Lead to a Deep Hole of Addiction

A World Full of Phobias

All Children are Different, but What Differences are Normal? (Information About Mental Retardation)

Antisocial Personality Disorder

Avoidant Personality Disorder

Being Anxious Over Everything and Nothing

Being Well Adjusted to Life May Involve some Struggles

Bipolar Disorders are Difficult to Diagnose

Borderline Personality Disorder

Cognitive Loss

Coping with Physical Illness

Defining the Science of Psychiatry

Dependent Personality Disorder

Depressed Spirits and Major Depressive Disorder

Fear and the Physical

Fearing Fear Itself

First Psychiatric Medications and Treatments

Food and Thoughts: Does one Control the Other?

Gratifying Impulses

Has Psychiatry Gone too Far? Has it Gone Far Enough?

Histrionic Personality Disorder

How Psychiatry Methods Evolved Over Time From Force to Healing

Important Facts Regarding Psychiatry and Mental Illness

Money Matters in Psychiatry

Narcissistic Personality Disorder

Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder

Paranoid Personality Disorder

Playing the School Game When it's Hard

Preparing a Life for Autism

Psychiatric Malpractice and Standard of Care

Psychiatric Organizations and Their Contributions

Psychiatric Treatments and Support

Psychoanalysis and the Need for More Scientific Psychiatry

Reason Behind the Madness

Schizoid and Schizotypal Personality Disorders

Self-Diagnosis and Treatment of Psychiatric Conditions

The Aftermath of Trauma

The Beauty of Sleeping

The Beginnings of Psychiatry

The Controversy in the Classroom: ADHD Diagnosis

The Importance of Recognizing Psychiatric Issues

The Majors and ‘Minors- of Depression

The Need for Psychiatrists in the Military

The Onset of Dementia

The Psychological Interacting with the Physical

The Top Schools in Psychiatry

The Truth about Obsessions and Compulsions

Top Ten Misconceptions about Psychiatric Disorders

Treatable Depression

Treating Bipolar Disorder

What is Cognition?

What is Psychiatry?

When Acting Out is Serious

When Personality isn-t Personal

When Reality Isn-t Real

When Sleep Goes Wrong

Who is “I”?

Who Was Freud?

5 Things You Must Know About Psychiatry