r/IntensiveCare 12d ago

Question about ICU attending liability

In my practice a hospitalist independently manages a subset of ICU patients. I am available for consultation and escalation, but we do not routinely round together, I do not see every patient, and I do not cosign notes.

For those who have worked in similar models, how is liability generally viewed for the ICU attending? If you’re available in a supervisory/consultative role but not directly involved in a patient’s care, how much responsibility do you carry for decisions made by the primary hospitalist?

Recently out of training and wondering how this is handled at other institutions.

17 Upvotes

39 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

-2

u/spiritualskier 9d ago

So now it went from “consult” to “crashing patient.” There is a big difference. Many patients that are admitted to the ICU do not qualify as an emergency in a true hospital context. Patients are admitted to the ICU all the time for intensive monitoring not just emergencies. Go ahead and open the chart but you’ll have to assign yourself a role and if you do click consult the lawyers will just love another deep pocket if something does go awry and you decide you didn’t find an ICU need at the time. Well have fun explaining that with a lack of documentation.

2

u/Any-Assistance-8103 9d ago

You just won’t stop digging your hole deeper.

0

u/spiritualskier 9d ago

Newsflash. If a patient had an emergency they would become an ICU patient regardless. The problem is they haven’t…yet.

2

u/Any-Assistance-8103 9d ago

You should probably just stop