Pulmonary Embolism – Textbook of Failures

Dr. Thomas Falasca, May 28, 1019

Kristen Lee Currier died at the age of 45 from a pulmonary embolism. The “care” provided to her was abominable. It reveals a textbook of failures.

In outline, a first nurse practitioner saw the patient for routine examination and prescription of oral contraceptives.

A first and then second family practitioner subsequently saw the patient for her complaint of persistent cough but failed to include pulmonary embolus, the “diagnosis you can’t afford to miss,” in the differential.

The second FP ordered a chest x-ray, with sensitivity for pneumonia and hiatal hernia, but no sensitivity for PE. There was apparently no contingency plan for CTA or other PE-sensitive testing.

Husband James Currier’s concerns about his wife’s worsening coughing and breathlessness were inappropriately acted upon when the patient was assigned a second nurse practitioner, who maintained the failed diagnosis, did not order PE-sensitive testing, treated the patient only symptomatically, and did not seek consultation.

The patient was then seen again by the first nurse practitioner, who also maintained the failed diagnosis, did not order PE-sensitive testing, treated the patient only symptomatically, and failed to seek consultation. Further, PE should have been in the foreground of diagnosis since this practitioner had ordered the oral contraceptives.

In short, continuity of care was sorely deficient. Additionally, the combination of availability bias and confirmation bias referred to by Groopman as “diagnosis momentum” pervaded the entire process.

Despite the catalog of mistakes leading to Kristen Lee Currier’s death, the involved corporation, LRGHealthcare, strangely contends, “Reasonable judgment was exercised.” The decision errors that took her life were both corporate and human. All were avoidable. The tort law system can address the corporate contribution. Greater attention to critical thinking in medicine will be needed to address the human contribution.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/912942_3?fbclid=IwAR37vNqBKSDiDXkdx84JpiyOH-Wuu3v_iuwlr6iN0zcDgUWO2UqPFc6BwmY

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