Peer-influenced content. Sources you trust. No registration required. This is HCN.

Clinical AdvisorPatient Dies After NP Accepts Self-Diagnosis

An NP discharged a 49-year-old Black man from the ED with lorazepam after accepting his panic attack self-diagnosis, skipping ECG, troponin, and protocol-mandated aspirin. He died of an MI hours later; an appellate court reversed dismissal and sent the wrongful death case to trial.


Clinical Failures

  • No cardiac workup was ordered despite chest pain, diaphoresis, obesity, and a prior cardiac risk profile.
  • The NP interpreted lorazepam-induced symptom relief as diagnostic confirmation, a textbook anchoring bias error.
  • No physician reviewed the chart or evaluated the patient at any point during the ED visit.
  • The NP violated multiple hospital protocols, including mandatory aspirin and chest pain diagnostic testing for patients over 30.

Legal Takeaways

  • Appellate court held that prior negative workup does not eliminate duty to repeat testing on a new presentation.
  • Fatigue from a 24-hour shift carries no legal weight as mitigation for protocol violations.
  • Accepting patient self-diagnosis without independent evaluation constitutes breach of standard of care, per the ruling.

Protective Practice

  • Treat each presentation independently: prior negative results do not substitute for current workup.
  • Symptom resolution after treatment confirms response, not diagnosis.
  • When psychiatric and cardiac presentations overlap in high-risk patients, follow the cardiac protocol first.

Related Summaries

The Healthcare Communications Network is owned and operated by IQVIA Inc.

Click below to leave this site and continue to IQVIA’s Privacy Choices form