Defensive medicine is the idea that doctors
order unnecessary tests and medical procedures as a means to avoid medical negligence lawsuits.
Not exact matches
It's very much like a physician
ordering extra,
unnecessary diagnostic
tests.
Doctors often aren't aware if the
test they
order is FDA - approved, and inaccurate results increase the risk that patients will undergo
unnecessary treatment or be excluded from a treatment based on bad information.
Mar. 12, 2015 — A committee of physician leaders has embarked on a multi-year effort to take a close look at all types of lab work
ordered at Vanderbilt University Medical Center (VUMC), and in the process do away with
unnecessary or obsolete
tests.
We also support the idea of districts conducting thoughtful audits of their assessment practices in
order to weed out
unnecessary testing.
It's also flawed, they argue, with several questions having multiple right answers and reading portions that require the
test - taker to speed - read in
order to finish in time —
unnecessary burdens that are reflected in the low pass rate for all racial and ethnic groups.
If the
test indicates possible early warning signs of cancer, a physician's failure to follow - up with the patient by
ordering further
tests such as a breast X-ray, ultrasound, MRI or biopsy could also lead to
unnecessary delays in diagnosing breast cancer.