Medical malpractice and negligence. Sociodemographic characteristics of claimants and nonclaimants
E. G. Doherty and C. O. Haven
We compared a sample of 200 patients who filed a claim of malpractice or
negligence against a large urban teaching hospital and its physicians, with
a randomly drawn sample of 549 patients who had never filed a claim against
the hospital. The two groups were compared on distributions by race,
religion, occupation, age, and sex. In proportion to their representation
in the control group, whites filed significantly more claims than nonwhites
(P less than .001), Jewish people filed more claims than Protestants, and
blue-collar workers brought fewer claims than white-collar or
retired/unemployed workers. Claimants were significantly older than
nonclaimants (P less than .05). Women filed a statistically nonsignificant
greater number of claims than men did (P greater than .20).