COMMENTARY
Who doesn’t love a good mystery, right? Well, not everyone. Years ago, I was given a gift: a “host your own murder mystery party” game. I recently gave it away when I realized I was statistically more likely to be murdered than ever to host a “murder mystery party.” Love them or hate them, I think you will agree: Mysteries belong in novels or movies or board games. They have no place in your clinical practice.
In litigation, lawyers obsess over trivial details. I’ve attended enough malpractice depositions to see physicians, NPs, PAs, and nurses, with puzzled faces, answering seemingly nonsensical questions that appear to have no bearing on clinical matters. The clinicians respond half amused and half annoyed, through a litany of telephone logs, record access logs, chain-of-custody records, transfer center logs, recorded ambulance communications, time-stamped records, and recollections of who brought a specimen to the lab or what time someone was at the nurses’ station—all peripheral to practice. I understand the quizzical looks and sympathize with providers’ annoyance at having to answer seemingly inane questions. Yet these matters, collateral to practice, can take center stage in a legal case.
These issues form part of the puzzle: the who, what, where, when, why, and how of any case. For example
Who carried a specimen from the operating room (OR)? (Because it was sent from the OR, but the lab has no record of receiving it and knowing the identity of the runner is now key.)
What time did the attending call the hospital to alert the surgical team? (Because precise timing from surgeon’s knowledge to first incision is now at issue.)
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