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September 2, 2020THE LEGAL SIDE OF SECOND OPINIONS
Doctors are human and, therefore, fallible. This leads to an environment in which many ethical healthcare providers refer complex cases to their colleagues. Occasionally, patients seek additional doctors themselves.
Regardless of the impetus for the second opinion, simply getting a new perspective does not necessarily increase the chance of a successful diagnosis. Two doctors could be wrong just as easily as one could. This situation often leads to complicated medical malpractice claims.
A complex situation
The complexity of this type of situation is difficult to overstate. For example, Health News Review reported on the media handling of a Mayo Clinic study of second opinions, revealing widespread dissemination of misinformation.
Many media outlets sensationalized or misunderstood the limitations of the Mayo publication. Few of the news articles covered the fact that the authors of the study did not provide for:
- Whether the second opinion was correct, in addition to being different
- When the patients decided to get the second opinion
- The level of experience or specialization of the referring healthcare provider
- How providers handle referrals in non-specialized settings