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The Advocate Archives > Legal Update: Medical Doctor Sues Hospital for Medical Negligence and Changes Law on Access to its Quality Assurance Data Legal Update: Medical Doctor Sues Hospital for Medical Negligence and Changes Law on Access to its Quality Assurance Data
What happens when a medical doctor, who received an IV transfusion at a hospital operating in Washington, claims that there was negligence when the procedure went awry resulting in permanent neurological damage to the left arm and that she can no longer practice her specialty of obstetrics and gynecology? Information and documents, including complaints and incident reports, created specifically for, and collected and maintained by a hospital’s quality improvement committee, are not subject to review, disclosure, discovery or introduction into evidence in any civil action.
In Lowy vs. Peacehealth, Leasa Lowy, formerly a staff physician at St. Joseph's Hospital in Bellingham, stayed at the hospital as a patient for six days in January 2007. Lowy alleged that, during her stay, she sustained permanent neurological injury to her left arm as a result of negligence when she had an intravenous infusion. According to her physician, Lowy will no longer be able to practice her specialties of obstetrics and gynecology due to the injury sustained at the hospital.1 Lowy filed a medical negligence lawsuit against the hospital and certain involved hospital employees. The hospital will not be required to disclose who participated in the review process concerning IV injuries, which incidents the hospital found relevant or important, or how it sorted, grouped, or otherwise organized those incidents. The hospital will not disclose any analysis, discussions, or communications that occurred during the proceedings of the quality assurance committee. The response to the discovery request will reveal no more than if the hospital had produced the medical records through a burdensome page-by-page search. . . The hospital must deny review of its quality assurance records by outside persons, thereby preserving confidentiality of those records. But the statute may not serve as an artificial shield for information contained in ordinary medical records. We conclude that the hospital may review its quality assurance records for the limited purpose of identifying and producing these medical charts.4
The holding in Lowy makes it clear that the data compiled by a hospital's quality assurance committee is now subject to internal review by a hospital staffer to determine if it will lead to records which themselves will be discoverable to third parties seeking the disclosure of records. Keywords |
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