I read with great interest the article published in the December 2010 issue of ENT Today, “Safety Net: With violence on the rise, otolaryngologists implement prevention strategies” (p. 1). Physician safety in the workplace is still largely ignored and your article serves to further awareness of the problem. I thank you for providing this forum.
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March 2011It has been well over a decade that I experienced events similar to what you address. As chief resident, I treated a patient with radioresistant oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma who subsequently underwent curative surgery. From the time of his initial presentation to when I was last involved with his treatment, he expressed anger and frustration about the failure of radiotherapy to cure his disease and the swallowing and speech disabilities that followed. Following his curative surgery, he brought legal action against the treating physicians, alleging improper and inhumane treatment.
For over the following decade in multiple court appearances and voluminous written documents, the patient threatened the judges who heard his case, the president and vice president of the United States of America, members of the United States Congress and the governor of Illinois. He invoked complex mathematical calculations about how much his disability cost him in lost wages and time and described suffering that was akin to what was experienced in Nazi concentration camps. During some of his court appearances, he became belligerent and after making a death threat to the judge, was escorted out of the court room by law enforcement officials. Particularly important, however, were the threats against myself and the other treating physicians.
Despite my repeated written warnings to our representing attorney, my grave concern for his threats was not acknowledged, and neither by the judges and lawyers who heard his case. In at least one communication to our legal representative where I expressed my concern, I was told that this type of patient would just go away and that there was nothing else that could be done. I found it difficult continue my warnings and had little other recourse, especially in light of my ongoing status as plaintiff.
Following years of multiple court appearances, the patient finally broke into the house of the last presiding judge, with the intent of murder. Instead, he found her husband and mother in law and shot and killed them both. Days afterward, following a routine traffic stop he committed suicide. In the van where he had been living not only was a suicide note (also sent to local media outlets) found, but also a “hit list”, containing the names of the physicians who had treated him. He apparently was on his way to completing this objective.
After the incident attention was turned to who was to blame. Members of the community pointed fingers at law enforcement, yet no one from the legal profession, despite my earlier warnings took responsibility for their role nor sought to provide a forum for further exploration of this case. Unfortunately, I suspect there are many other cases like it to come.
I’ve spent a number of years thinking about this experience. In similar situations, one solution might be for everyone to collectively acknowledge the problem, and provide social and mental health services and court-ordered law enforcement intervention. As physicians committed to patient health and welfare, we clearly need to take the lead in defining these matters, as it’s certain the legal profession has very little vested interest in doing so, even though their own may be at risk. As evidenced by recent and past events, we most certainly are.
—Howard S. Kotler, MD, FACS
Clinical Assistant Professor.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and
Neck Surgery University of Illinois,
Chicago College of Medicine