Hospital Hazards 12 Medical Mistakes Health
Hospital Hazards - 12 Medical Mistakes - Health
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“The numbers of deaths are probably smaller because patients in ambulatory settings are generally healthier and more resistant to the effects of error,” Wachter says. But at minimum, outpatient quality control isn’t likely to be better.
Resistance to change is partly cultural. When Pronovost instituted a system for reducing infections from catheters, he authorized nurses to prevent doctors from inserting the tubes incorrectly. “That caused a revolt,” Pronovost says. “Nobody was debating whether it was the right thing to do; they were debating power and politics.” Eventually, the project reduced the infections by more than 80 percent.
12 Medical Mistakes That Can Harm You
The health care system has tried to battle medical errors but mistakes still happen
A Wakeup Call for Safety
providers seek to heal the sick, not harm them. Yet, the Journal of Patient Safety found in 2013 that preventable safety failures in hospitals kill 210,000 to 400,000 each year. That represented a sobering increase from the 1999 Institute of Medicine estimate that up to 98,000 hospitalized people die each year from preventable errors. Here’s a dirty dozen key sources of harm.1 Wrong diagnosis
Doctors don’t just miss weird, rare conditions. They often fail to catch common problems like pneumonia, congestive heart failure and , according to a recent analysis. Autopsy and medical-record reviews suggest that diagnostic errors contribute to about 10 percent of deaths; thus, misdiagnosis is the top cause of medical malpractice payouts, according to a 2015 Institute of Medicine report. Mistakes can spring from poor collaboration or misunderstandings among clinicians and patients and a variety of biases — for example, assuming that if five patients just came in with the flu, the sixth probably has it, too.Make your care safer
First, understand what your doctor thinks you have. Ask for the medical terminology and look it up at home. Does the condition sound like yours? If not, ask your doctor what he ruled out and why? If the answers don’t sound right, get a second opinion. If you get a test, ask about results. Don’t assume that no news is good news. If results don’t add up, consider taking the test again: They’re not always 100 percent accurate.2 Sloppy practices
Certain practices that are now standard, such as surgical teams huddling before a procedure to agree on what they’re doing, have helped reduce head-slapping blunders. “But errors can still happen at higher levels of complexity or subtlety,” says Robert Wachter, professor and interim chair of the Department of Medicine at the University of California, . Is the treatment plan is right in the first place? One study of people in 12 U.S. cities found that about 45 percent of patients didn’t receive recommended care for their conditions.Make your care safer
to give you details on the guidelines that he’s following for your treatment. “If he looks at you funny, it might be time for a second opinion,” says John T. James, founder of the advocacy group Patient Safety America.3 Drug blunders
Adverse drug events (in medical parlance) are still among the most common types of preventable harm. Each time a drug is prescribed or administered, errors can sneak in: ordering the right drug in the right amount, filling the order correctly, and giving it in the right dose at the right time. Missteps contribute to 700,000 emergency-room visits and 120,000 hospitalizations a year. A 2015 study found that half of drug administrations during or around the time of surgeries involved a snafu of some kind. Almost 80 percent were preventable.Make your care safer
Make sure all your doctors know about each medication you take, including supplements. Bring them to your doctor. In the hospital, get to know what your meds look and taste like, and if a nurse brings you something different, ask why. And ask whether you need all the drugs you’re taking. “One-third of adults take five or more medications, and the more you take, the more likely you are to have an issue,” says Paul McGann, M.D., chief medical officer for quality improvement for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.4 Dangerous doctors
Truly terrible doctors are few and far between — but they’re out there. When Consumer Reports recently filed a public records request for California’s entire database of doctors on probation, analysts found several hundred doctors in that state alone had been disciplined (but often not barred from practice) for problems like blatant negligence, practicing under the influence, dealing narcotics and engaging in sexual misconduct with patients. The few bad apples have an outsize impact: About 1 percent of doctors account for about a third of malpractice claims paid.Make your care safer
Choose a surgeon who has done your procedure many times. Research finds volume strongly relates to skill — more so than years in practice or fellowship training. Look up doctors on Surgeon Scorecard, a searchable database from the investigative reporting center ProPublica () that shows complication rates for physicians based on Medicare data.5 Knowledge gaps
Doctors aren’t stupid. They just don’t know what they don’t know. New information routinely revises previous understanding. Thousands more clinical studies are published each month. “It’s challenging for any doctor to keep up,” Wachter says. Doctors especially can’t know what hasn’t been discovered. Drug companies are supposed to follow up on what happens when people start using their products beyond clinical trials. Lax attention to this step prompted a 2007 law requiring drugmakers to do post-market safety studies. Four years later, more than 40 percent of the required studies hadn’t even been started.Make your care safer
Ask your doctor, “Is my care based on the latest evidence?” If you suspect that she’s not keeping up on guidelines that reflect the most recent studies, search for your condition (and any other conditions that you have, which may complicate your care) at the National Guideline Clearinghouse () and ask your doctor to explain any discrepancies between professional recommendations and her own.6 Buried information
The has a long history of locking down data about safety, or not tracking that data using easy-to-compare measures. “One of the biggest indictments is that after 16 years it’s still incredibly difficult to find basic information like how often harms occur or even how many surgeries a surgeon does,” says Peter Pronovost, M.D., senior vice president and director of the Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. When information is known, there has traditionally been a culture of deny-and-defend.Make your care safer
If possible, choose a hospital that has converted to electronic medical records, which have been shown to improve patient safety, in part by making it easier to track and analyze safety metrics. It has also been shown that patients with easier access to their own records (which digitizing allows) tend to have better outcomes.AARP Offer Healthy Living Tips and News
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7 An outpatient black hole
Almost all of what’s known about . By comparison, experts know little about adverse events in places like private practices, outpatient surgical suites, nursing homes, diagnostic centers and rehab clinics.“The numbers of deaths are probably smaller because patients in ambulatory settings are generally healthier and more resistant to the effects of error,” Wachter says. But at minimum, outpatient quality control isn’t likely to be better.
Make your care safer
Choose clinics that are affiliated with a bigger hospital or medical center. “Whether it translates to improved safety is hard to say, but I do think that if you go to a large organization with ambulatory care as part of it, you’re more likely to see data systems and specialized staff geared toward improving safety,” Wachter says.8 Small thinking
Hospitals recognize that safety must be built into systems, but efforts tend to be piecemeal. What’s needed is a top-to-bottom safety priority.Resistance to change is partly cultural. When Pronovost instituted a system for reducing infections from catheters, he authorized nurses to prevent doctors from inserting the tubes incorrectly. “That caused a revolt,” Pronovost says. “Nobody was debating whether it was the right thing to do; they were debating power and politics.” Eventually, the project reduced the infections by more than 80 percent.