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by Scoundreller 2559 days ago
I dunno how independently NPs can practise in MN. Sometimes they’re always under an MD and anything that happens is that MD’s responsibility. This can be relatively more true if they’re an employee vs. a contractor (at least where I live, dunno about MN).

The NP settled their case out-of-court. So they were held liable, and we don’t know how much.

The consulted MD felt like fighting it in court, and lost.

That’s what makes this case a bit unusual because something bad happened and one person involved thought they weren’t accountable.

2 comments

It depends on how many hours they've practiced. Initially, under a physician. Eventually, completely independent. The article describes the second doc as a "collaborating physician," but I went to the underlying court documents and, no, they were just a second informal consult - this NP was practicing independently.

The case isn't that unusual. Malpractice lawyers name everyone even tangentially related to a case, because malpractice insurance has a cap on payouts and you'll never go to court and win more than that cap, so you want to pull in as many people's policies as possible. Everyone that wasn't directly involved in the care of the patient gets their names dropped from the suit pretty quickly. Normally.

So, it's not unusual that the person that actually fucked up (the NP) settled, and someone not part of the patient's care said screw that (the MD).

Docs also don't choose for themselves whether they fight it in court. The malpractice insurer does. If you go against the insurer's wishes, you basically give up your malpractice coverage. In this case, I'm guessing that the fact that this is a slam-dunk "get thrown out of court" situation is why they didn't settle, as they do the vast majority of the time, regardless of the underlying merits of the case. Usually settling is cheaper than litigating, but a single "get this thrown out" motion is cheaper than settling.

The unusual thing here is just that MN is somewhat unique as one of the few states that doesn't explicitly require a doctor-patient relationship for its malpractice suits, so instead of getting thrown out, the case is going ahead.

Umm, he hasn't lost, at least not yet.

What he lost was the appeal of the dismissal of the case. The MN Supreme Court ruling merely means the case will go to trial. He may yet prevail, but from what I read in the article, seems to me that it's unlikely he will prevail.

Edit: spelling