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Medicolegal characteristics of cardiac tamponade litigation: A review of the LexisNexis academic database.

OBJECTIVE: To review, describe, and analyze medicolegal literature involving cases of cardiac tamponade.

BACKGROUND: Currently, there are no studies known to these authors assessing the outcome patterns of medicolegal cases involving patients with cardiac tamponade. This potentially lethal condition may have serious consequences on both patients and clinicians. Thus, the literature was reviewed for patterns of liability and medical outcomes in patients who developed cardiac tamponade.

METHODS: Legal case opinions were reviewed from LexisNexis Academic that contained the search term "tamponade"; case characteristics, litigation outcomes, and medical outcomes were identified.

RESULTS: 230 case opinions were reviewed. 143 involved cardiac tamponade. Of these cases, 77 were medical malpractice cases, 30 were criminal cases, 11 were insurance claims, and the rest were other types. In malpractice cases, 35 (45%) patients were male, 69 (90%) formally named at least one doctor as a defendant, 54 (70%) claimed iatrogenicity as a cause of tamponade, and surgeons were the most commonly named defendants at 36 cases (47%). Open surgical drainage was the most common treatment at 28 (36%) cases and death was the outcome in 60 (78%) cases. Judgements were in favor of at least one doctor in 29 (42%) cases, against at least one doctor in 13 (19%) cases, and 12 (17%) cases involved a settlement by a physician.

CONCLUSIONS: This study describes previously unknown medicolegal characteristics of cardiac tamponade cases.

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