LOL....right....in my career I have only been sued once (and i shouldn't have been) and the times that i should have been, I wasn't.
It is essential that the surgeon sits down with the patient and or the patients relatives and explain exactly the situation and then ask for questions and i do think that that would indeed solve many problems. However the instructions that doctors get from their Defense Unions is not to admit anything and to contact them (MDU) as soon as a complaint is made. We in the UK are in a compensation mode and the "inflicted" is looking for monetary compensation in whatever way is necessary and his has been the case now for about 40 years in my opinion.
I do not think that people are at all interested in sitting face to face with the Clinician and would prefer to seek the advice of a solicitor.
People tend not to trust doctors and take the attitude that there will be a "cover up"....doctors covering their own backs .."there for the grace of God go I" In fact the opposite is true, prosecution medical expert witnesses are only too glad to "stick the knife in"
I think that consultants would like a "cup of tea chat resolution" but we all know that it wouldn't be the end.