Abstract
Claims for clinical negligence are increasing annually. Limb reconstructive surgery recognises ‘problems, obstacles, and complications’ as part of the treatment process, but this does not prevent a claim for an alleged poor result or a complication.
We analysed claims for clinical negligence in the National Health Service in England and Wales for issues following limb reconstructive surgery.
A database of all 10,456 claims related to Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery from 1995–2010 was obtained from the NHS Litigation Authority. A Search Function for keywords “Ilizarov, limb reconstruction, external fixation, and pin-site” was used for subset analysis. Data was analysed for type of complaint, whether defended or not, and for costs.
52 claims fitted our filters - 48 were closed, and 4 ongoing. The claims included damage to local structures (n=3), missed compartment syndrome (n=2), premature frame removal (n=5), infection (n=13), wrong-site-surgery (n=1), poor outcome (n=16) and technical error (n=10). Seven patients underwent amputation. The total cost of litigation was £4,444,344, with a mean of £90,700 per settled claim. 40% were successfully defended, with defence cost of £15,322. The mean pay-out for confirmed negligence/liability was £90,056 (£1,500-£419,999, median £45,000) per case.
We believe this is the first study looking at complications following limb reconstruction from this perspective.
Analysis reveals a spectrum of claims for negligence. Perceived technical errors and poor outcome predominate. Whilst the limitations of the database preclude against identification of whether the procedures were carried out in specialist units, claims for technical errors are a cause for concern. These will be discussed in detail. Outcomes following limb reconstruction are difficult to quantify, and the settling of claims for a perceived poor outcome makes the case for pre-operative counselling and the need for robust outcome measures in our specialty.