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AnteayerInternational Wound Journal

Pressure Injury Malpractice Litigation: A Retrospective Medicolegal Study

ABSTRACT

Medical malpractice imposes a substantial clinical and economic burden worldwide. Pressure injuries (PIs) are amongst the most frequently litigated adverse events and represent a major source of preventable patient harm. To characterise the medicolegal landscape of PI-related malpractice, the Westlaw legal database was queried for cases litigated between 1990 and 2024. A total of 590 cases met inclusion criteria, with data extracted from court documents. The mean patient age was 71 years; 53.4% were female and 46.6% male. Nursing homes were the most commonly named defendants (59.8%), followed by hospitals and outpatient surgical practices (37.3%) and individual physicians (14.1%). The mean settlement was $383 099, compared with a mean jury award of $2 100 787. Adverse legal outcomes were strongly associated with allegations of inadequate care, poor clinical outcomes and gross provider negligence. When prevention and timely management fail, the consequences extend beyond patient harm to substantial legal and financial liability. Targeted interventions such as standardised risk assessment, rigorous documentation, staff education, appropriate staffing ratios and institutional accountability may mitigate both PI incidence and litigation risk. Strengthening these measures represents a critical opportunity to improve patient safety whilst reducing medicolegal exposure.

Predictors of Complications and Recurrence After Pressure Injury Reconstruction in Spinal Cord Injury: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis

ABSTRACT

Spinal cord injury (SCI) predisposes patients to pressure injuries (PIs) often requiring surgery. Multiple factors influence postoperative complications and recurrence, though their associations remain unclear. We performed a PRISMA-guided systematic review and meta-analysis to assess predictors of acute postoperative complications and PI recurrence in SCI patients undergoing surgery. PubMed, Scopus and Embase were searched. Studies with ≥ 15 participants were eligible; 24 (n = 2566 subjects) were included, with 15 (n = 1976 subjects) quantitatively synthesized. Risk of bias was assessed with the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. A random-effects model meta-analysis was performed, and odds ratios (OR) were pooled when > 2 studies were available; otherwise, findings were narratively synthesized. Moderate-quality evidence showed prior flap reconstruction increased complication risk (aOR = 4.98). Low-quality evidence linked diabetes (OR = 1.39) and smoking (OR = 1.35) with complications. Higher recurrence risk was associated with prior flap reconstruction (OR = 1.80) and thoracic injury (OR = 2.21), while cervical injury was protective (OR = 0.37). Prior flap reconstruction resulted as the strongest predictor of complications and significantly increased the odds of recurrence. These findings underscore the importance of a multidisciplinary approach for preventing the first occurrence of flap reconstruction and subsequent procedures.

Epidemiology, Management, and Alarmingly High Mortality of Burn Patients: A Retrospective Analysis From a Resource‐Limited Tertiary Centre in Syria

ABSTRACT

Burn injuries pose a significant challenge in resource-limited settings, particularly during humanitarian crises. This study examines the epidemiology, management, and outcomes of burn patients at a tertiary hospital in Damascus, Syria, from 2021 to 2024. A single-centre retrospective cohort study was conducted on 500 admitted burn patients. Data on demographics, injury characteristics, management, complications and mortality were analysed using descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, Mann–Whitney U tests and binary logistic regression. The lethal area 50% (LA50) was estimated using the logistic regression equation: LA50=−constant+∑bixibTBSA$$ LA50=-\frac{constant+\sum \left({b}_i{x}_i\right)}{b_{TBSA}} $$. The mean patient age was 20.5 ± 17.9 years, with a male predominance (55%). Flame burns (72.4%) at home (87.6%) were most common. The mean total body surface area burned was 30.99% ± 21.31%, with 68.6% being full-thickness injuries. The complication rate was 91%, with infection being most prevalent. The overall mortality rate was 39%, with sepsis (56.4%) as the leading cause. Logistic regression identified larger burn area (OR = 1.152, p < 0.001), full-thickness depth (ref. partial thickness, OR = 0.281, p < 0.001), older age and female gender as independent predictors of increased mortality. Deceased patients had significantly shorter hospital stays. LA50 was 42.63% for a 40-year-old male with a partial-thickness flame burn and a 10-day hospital stay; for a female with a full-thickness flame burn under the same conditions, it was 27.43%. This study reveals an alarmingly high burden of burn injuries in a crisis-affected setting, with extreme complication and mortality rates. The findings highlight the critical impact of extensive burns and sepsis, underscoring severe systemic constraints on care. Urgent context-specific interventions to strengthen acute burn management, infection control, and prevention strategies are imperative.

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