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  • SWOT Analysis of Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

    Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly transforming clinical workflows, especially by reducing documentation time and after-hours work, and improving work-life balance, with studies showing substantial drops in burnout within weeks of implementation. As AI systems continue to demonstrate strong medical knowledge and performance, they offer clinicians a powerful way to elevate accuracy, streamline tasks, and improve patient understanding without replacing clinical judgment.

  • Patient Photos in Marketing Materials Pose HIPAA Risks

    The Office of Civil Rights (OCR) recently announced a settlement with five healthcare providers in a case that illustrates the dangers of using patient photos in marketing materials. HIPAA violations are possible even when the patient photos seem innocuous and do not reveal medical information.

  • Virginia Appeals Court Vacates $2.5 Million Verdict Over Omitted Jury Instruction

    A Virginia appellate court has overturned a $2.5 million medical malpractice verdict after finding that the trial judge erred by refusing to instruct the jury on the doctrine of superseding cause. The opinion underscores how critical jury instructions are in shaping negligence cases and highlights the continuing importance of foreseeability in determining legal causation.

  • NJ Appeals Court Affirms Full Liability for Surgeon Despite Shared Fault

    A New Jersey appellate court has affirmed a trial court’s ruling that a surgeon found 60% at fault in a patient’s death must pay the entire $1.6 million verdict. The decision underscores how the state’s Comparative Negligence Act imposes full responsibility on defendants whose share of fault meets or exceeds 60%, even when other medical professionals are partly to blame.

  • Data Breaches on the Rise

    Data breaches continue to increase in number, and healthcare organizations still are a top target. The attacks are becoming more sophisticated as they focus on healthcare employees’ private devices used away from work.

  • Nurse Fraud Crackdown Shows Risk to Hospitals

    The latest federal crackdown on fraudulent nursing degrees shows the risk posed to patient safety by employees who were hired without the proper credentials. Healthcare organizations employing them face substantial liability risk.

  • Secret Recordings Pose Risk to Clinicians and the Facility

    Secret recordings in a healthcare setting can pose a number of liability risks, so healthcare organizations should have clear policies that control various types of recording. The problem of secret recordings has grown exponentially now that nearly everyone has a smart phone and is comfortable recording all aspects of their lives.

  • Nursing Elevated to Patient Safety Goal by Joint Commission

    The Joint Commission is adding nurse staffing to its national performance goals, which means that, as of Jan. 1, 2026, hospitals seeking accreditation will have to meet specified standards for nurse staffing and management.

  • Inadequate, Missing, or Inaccessible Goals of Care Documentation Is Ethical Concern

    Goals-of-care documentation remains inconsistent and incomplete, limiting goal-concordant care. Research reveals disparities across patient groups and delayed documentation near death, emphasizing the role of ethicists in promoting early, equitable, artificial intelligence-assisted, and standardized documentation of patient preferences and end-of-life wishes.

  • Clinicians Fail to Address Risks of Medical Interventions for Patients with Dementia

    Clinicians often overlook dementia-specific risks when recommending interventions, leading to uninformed consent and decisional regret among caregivers. Supported and shared decision-making frameworks can promote autonomy, respect, and ethical care tailored to patients’ cognitive capacity and evolving goals.