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Medical responsibility lawsuits have become a fact of life in every
physician s medical practice. However, there is evidence that
physicians are increasingly practising defensive medicine, ordering
more tests than may be necessary and avoiding patients with
complicated conditions. The modern practice of medicine is
increasingly complicated by factors beyond the traditional realm of
patient care, including novel technologies, loss of physician
autonomy, and economic pressures. A continuing and significant
issue affecting physicians and the healthcare system is
malpractice. In the latter half of the 20th century, there was a
major change in the attitude of the public towards the medical
profession. People were made aware of the huge advances in medical
technology, because health problems increasingly tended to attract
media interest and wide publicity. Medicine is a victim of its own
success in this respect, and people are now led to expect the
latest techniques and perfect outcomes on all occasions. This burst
of technology and hyper-specialization in many fields of medicine
means that each malpractice claim is transformed into a scientific
challenge, requiring specific preparation in analysis and judgment
of the clinical case in question. The role of legal medicine
becomes more and more peculiar in this judicial setting, often
giving rise to erroneous interpretations and hasty scientific
verdicts, but guidelines on the methodology of ascertainments and
criteria of evaluation are lacking all over the world.The aim of
this volume is to clarify the steps required for sequential
in-depth analysis of events and consequences of medical actions, in
order to verify whether, in the presence of damage, errors or
non-observance of rules of conduct by health personnel exist, and
which causal values and links of their hypothetical misconduct are
involved. "
This volume serves to provide an international overview of personal
injury compensation in different geographical areas (15 countries
already included), with a special focus on the methods used to
ascertain the injury and the related damages. It also goes on to
clarify the logical and methodological steps required for a
sequential, in-depth ascertainment of any traumatic event and the
related personal damage, both pecuniary and non-pecuniary. Personal
injury is a legal term for an injury to the body, mind or emotions
suffered by the plaintiff under tort and/or civil law regulations.
Damages related to the injury can be pecuniary or non-pecuniary in
nature. Although several comparative studies and research projects
on tort and civil law and personal injury claims aimed at
developing new tools for promoting harmonization of private law
have been performed at an international level, heterogeneity and
divergences still exist in the definition and compensation of
personal injury and damage across different national legislative
systems. The starting point for any awarding procedure should be a
medical, or rather a medico-legal, assessment to gain evidence on
the trauma or event causing the injury, the mechanism of injury,
the pre-existing health status of the injured party, and the health
consequences of the injury (temporary and permanent impairment,
work incapacity, etc.). In order to pursue the ultimate goal of an
international harmonization of personal injury compensation, it is
of upmost importance to define the quality requirements for the
medico-legal ascertainment methodology, which are essential for
guaranteeing the objectivity, rigor, and reproducibility of the
data and the evidence collection procedure. Currently, there are no
supra-national medico-legal guidelines dealing with the
ascertainment methodology of personal injury and damage under tort
and civil law.
This volume serves to provide an international overview of personal
injury compensation in different geographical areas (15 countries
already included), with a special focus on the methods used to
ascertain the injury and the related damages. It also goes on to
clarify the logical and methodological steps required for a
sequential, in-depth ascertainment of any traumatic event and the
related personal damage, both pecuniary and non-pecuniary. Personal
injury is a legal term for an injury to the body, mind or emotions
suffered by the plaintiff under tort and/or civil law regulations.
Damages related to the injury can be pecuniary or non-pecuniary in
nature. Although several comparative studies and research projects
on tort and civil law and personal injury claims aimed at
developing new tools for promoting harmonization of private law
have been performed at an international level, heterogeneity and
divergences still exist in the definition and compensation of
personal injury and damage across different national legislative
systems. The starting point for any awarding procedure should be a
medical, or rather a medico-legal, assessment to gain evidence on
the trauma or event causing the injury, the mechanism of injury,
the pre-existing health status of the injured party, and the health
consequences of the injury (temporary and permanent impairment,
work incapacity, etc.). In order to pursue the ultimate goal of an
international harmonization of personal injury compensation, it is
of upmost importance to define the quality requirements for the
medico-legal ascertainment methodology, which are essential for
guaranteeing the objectivity, rigor, and reproducibility of the
data and the evidence collection procedure. Currently, there are no
supra-national medico-legal guidelines dealing with the
ascertainment methodology of personal injury and damage under tort
and civil law.
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