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Winnipeg inquest recommendation could leave young MDs in lurch, expert warns
A long-awaited report into the deaths of 12 infant cardiac patients in Winnipeg recommends new standards for disclosure for informed consent that could set a legal precedent. The 516-page report found that in most of the cases parents had not been given enough information particularly about the surgeon's relative inexperience to provide fully informed consent. As a result, Manitoba's Ministry of Health is now considering an inquest recommendation that all hospitals provide patients with information about physicians' experience. However, 2 medicolegal experts say the recommendation flies in the face of a long-standing Supreme Court of Canada ruling (Hopp v. Lepp) and is simply impractical.
Since patients will want an experienced surgeon, argues University of Toronto law professor Bernard Dickens, "how would [trainees] get that first case? Eventually, you'd just have old, experienced doctors and experience could mean a lifetime of repeating the same mistake."
Lawyer Margaret Ross, general counsel for the Canadian Medical Protective Association, points to another potential problem. "We have a physician shortage already and this will back up the experienced ones even more," she says. "The number of cases will grind the system to a complete halt. It's unworkable."
The inquest report could be used in court, and Manitoba could legislate the disclosure requirement. "I'll be interested to see where they take this," says Dickens.
The inquest stemmed from events during 1994 when the Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Program at Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre was relaunched. High hopes were pinned on a new surgeon, American Jonah Odim, who was assuming his first staff appointment, but nursing staff were soon alarmed by incidents in the OR and the program was temporarily slowed by the reluctance of concerned anesthetists to participate in Odim's procedures. By year's end 12 babies had died a mortality rate of 29%; in Toronto, the normal rate was 11% (CMAJ 1998;159:1285-7).
Associate Chief Judge Murray Sinclair, who led the 3-year inquest from 1995 to 1998, issued 36 recommendations in December. He found that:
Sinclair ruled that 5 of the deaths at the Winnipeg Health Sciences Centre in 1994 involved some form of mismanagement, surgical error or misadventure, and were at least possibly preventable. He also ruled that another 3 infants might have lived had they been referred to a larger hospital for treatment, that 3 deaths could not be explained and that only 1 death had an acceptable explanation.
Sinclair said the program continually undertook cases that were beyond the skill and experience of Odim and his team. "Neither Dr. Odim nor [referring cardiologist] Dr. [Niels] Giddins carried out their responsibilities to monitor and respond suitably to the poor surgical results in the program," Sinclair concluded.
The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba is considering disciplinary action against 17 physicians named in the report, including Odim, who now has a fellowship at the University of California in Los Angeles.
Crown Attorney Don Slough told CMAJ that the inquest report contains "no basis for criminal charges" but added: "The report is fairly strong for something not commenting on culpability." Five civil suits are pending.
Winnipeg's Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Program was terminated in February 1995. Manitoba infants requiring cardiac surgery are now referred to Vancouver or Edmonton for treatment. Barbara Sibbald, CMAJ
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