State high court rules for patient safety in liability case

| 1 Min Read

The recent decision of a state supreme court upholds a state law requiring the confidentiality of peer review, a process intended to keep patients from harm and ensure continued quality improvement in the care provided.

In Allred v. Saunders, the Utah Supreme Court weighed in on an earlier court ruling that required a physician’s peer review files to be produced as evidence in determining medical liability, contrary to a law passed in 2012 that explicitly protects that information in order to preserve the integrity of peer review proceedings.

“Peer and care review panels, as well as committees that evaluate physicians’ credentials, work only because participants are assured that anything they say will be kept confidential,” an amicus brief filed by the Litigation Center of the AMA and State Medical Societies and the Utah Medical Association states.

“The goal of these review meetings has always been to improve patient care and to improve quality care processes,” the brief states. “These reviews reduce the chance that adverse outcomes will recur, and help all to learn from challenges that others have experienced.”

Read more about this case and other recent cases regarding peer review.

FEATURED STORIES

Columns of the U.S. Supreme Court at top of steps

8 wins for doctors, patients in latest federal budget deal

| 4 Min Read
Wooden blocks and figures accompany an up arrow

Do physicians need to switch jobs to climb the career ladder?

| 5 Min Read
Physician walking down a hallway

Women physicians face heavier burdens and higher burnout risk

| 9 Min Read
Adhesive bandage applied to upper arm of smiling young patient

Pediatric vaccines: Questions parents will ask—and how to answer

| 8 Min Read