In the US, head injury is the leading cause of traumatic pediatric death, resulting in roughly 7,400 fatalities, 60,000 hospitalizations, and more than 600,000 ER visits annually, so it follows that all this talk about concussion is a big deal, right? As an emergency physician and the parent of athletic kids who have been very active in soccer and gymnastics, I can’t begin to recall the number of times I have listened to a parent tell of rushing his/her child to the ER for a CT scan after some well-meaning health professional deemed the injury a “concussion.” The term conjures up a host of scary images. After all, everybody knows that Muhammad Ali’s Parkinson’s didn’t come from a bad-luck roll of the genetic dice; it came from getting his brain bashed in. Continue reading
Month: August 2015
I’m skeptical about … malpractice reform (part 2).
In my last post, I noted that malpractice reform enacted in Texas in 2003 making it almost impossible to sue physicians failed to save money or decrease defensive medical testing. We now have ER data from South Carolina and Georgia demonstrating the same thing. Doctors in those states continued ordering tests up the yin-yang despite legislation substantially reducing the likelihood of a lawsuit. Why? Continue reading