Resource Library
The Resource Library is a compendium of consent forms, risk management recommendations, sample documents, articles, and other risk management materials to promote ophthalmic patient safety and reduce liability. Contact riskmanagement@omic.com with questions.
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Oct 8, 2024
| Article
OMIC's claims management process typically cuts through the red tape and streamlines what could otherwise be a frustrating and stressful adversarial process. The result is a more responsive, personalized experience designed not just to provide competent legal defense, but to reduce the anxiety and alienation that accompany a malpractice action.
Oct 8, 2024
| Article
By Kimberly Wittchow, JD OMIC Staff Attorney
Ophthalmologists inquiring about professional liability insurance often ask how OMIC selects defense counsel when a claim or lawsuit arises. They want to know which attorneys OMIC uses in their city, how OMIC chooses the attorneys it appoints, and if insureds can select their own counsel.
Aug 12, 2023
| Article
OMIC has published two reports of endophthalmitis claims studies, one in 2006 and another in 2017. This issue of the Digest updates those studies with data from OMIC’s endophthalmitis claims closed between January 2018 and December 2022, thereby creating a complete analysis of endophthalmitis claims experience from the time of OMIC’s founding in 1987 through 2022.
Oct 3, 2023
| Article
By Ryan Bucsi, OMIC Senior Litigation Analyst
You would never attempt to represent yourself in a medical malpractice lawsuit. You know that if you are faced with a malpractice complaint, your first course of action should be to call OMIC’s claims department. What you may not know is that OMIC is also here to defend you if you receive a letter of investigation from your state medical board regarding patient care you have rendered.
Sep 22, 2015
| Article
By Kimberly Wynkoop, OMIC Senior Legal Counsel
When OMIC settles a claim or pays a judgment against an insured, policyholders often wonder if the payment will be reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB). This article will describe under what circumstances federal law requires such reporting.