Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?

Recent High Court and Supreme Court judgments have awarded large compensations for complications arising out of intravenous treatment. Extravasation of fluids and drugs is the most common complication of any medical procedure worldwide. Extravasation injury leading to gangrene occurs rarely and is d...

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Published in:Indian Journal of Health Sciences and Biomedical Research KLEU
Main Authors: Neeraj Nagpal, Nimisha Nagpal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2016-01-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijournalhs.org/article.asp?issn=2542-6214;year=2016;volume=9;issue=3;spage=247;epage=250;aulast=Nagpal
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author Neeraj Nagpal
Nimisha Nagpal
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Nimisha Nagpal
author_sort Neeraj Nagpal
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container_title Indian Journal of Health Sciences and Biomedical Research KLEU
description Recent High Court and Supreme Court judgments have awarded large compensations for complications arising out of intravenous treatment. Extravasation of fluids and drugs is the most common complication of any medical procedure worldwide. Extravasation injury leading to gangrene occurs rarely and is due to factors related to patient characteristics, underlying disease, and the type of drug which is being injected. Human error rarely may be contributory to development of the extravasations and injury resultant thereof, but to label all of these complications as negligence by the application of “res ipsa loquitur” has serious consequences. High compensation risk for a complication which is faced universally by all doctors has the potential to raise the cost of this simple procedure.
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spelling doaj-art-8ca5ee8cd2f746cfbdd11015c2efe0df2025-08-19T20:39:21ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Health Sciences and Biomedical Research KLEU2542-62142542-62222016-01-019324725010.4103/2349-5006.196335Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?Neeraj NagpalNimisha NagpalRecent High Court and Supreme Court judgments have awarded large compensations for complications arising out of intravenous treatment. Extravasation of fluids and drugs is the most common complication of any medical procedure worldwide. Extravasation injury leading to gangrene occurs rarely and is due to factors related to patient characteristics, underlying disease, and the type of drug which is being injected. Human error rarely may be contributory to development of the extravasations and injury resultant thereof, but to label all of these complications as negligence by the application of “res ipsa loquitur” has serious consequences. High compensation risk for a complication which is faced universally by all doctors has the potential to raise the cost of this simple procedure.http://www.ijournalhs.org/article.asp?issn=2542-6214;year=2016;volume=9;issue=3;spage=247;epage=250;aulast=NagpalCompensationextravasationgangreneintravenous
spellingShingle Neeraj Nagpal
Nimisha Nagpal
Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?
Compensation
extravasation
gangrene
intravenous
title Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?
title_full Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?
title_fullStr Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?
title_full_unstemmed Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?
title_short Are extravasation injuries “Negligence”?
title_sort are extravasation injuries negligence
topic Compensation
extravasation
gangrene
intravenous
url http://www.ijournalhs.org/article.asp?issn=2542-6214;year=2016;volume=9;issue=3;spage=247;epage=250;aulast=Nagpal
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