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Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer (Read 2153 times)
bobbythefap1
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Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:29pm
 
Preventable Medical Errors – The Sixth Biggest Killer in America
http://www.justice.org/cps/rde/justice/hs.xsl/8677.htm
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Quote:
Preventable medical errors kill and seriously injure hundreds of thousands of Americans every year. Any discussion of medical negligence that does not involve preventable medical errors ignores this fundamental problem. And while some interested parties would prefer to focus on doctors’ insurance premiums, health care costs, or alternative compensation systems—anything other than the negligence itself—reducing medical errors is the best way to address all the related problems. Preventing medical errors will lower health care costs, reduce doctors’ insurance premiums, and protect the health and well-being of patients.

The Institute of Medicine’s (IOM) seminal study of preventable medical errors estimated as many as 98,000 people die every year at a cost of $29 billion.1 If the Centers for Disease Control were to include preventable medical errors as a category, these conclusions would make it the sixth leading cause of death in America. 2

Further research has confirmed the extent of medical errors. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) found that there were 181,000 severe injuries attributable to medical negligence in 2003.3  The Institute for Healthcare Improvement estimates there are 15 million incidents of medical harm each year.4 HealthGrades, the nation’s leading healthcare rating organization, found that Medicare patients who experienced a patient-safety incident had a one-in-five chance of dying as a result.5

In the decade since the IOM first shined a light on the dismal state of patient safety in American hospitals, many proposals for improvement have been discussed and implemented. But recent research indicates that there is still much that needs to be done. Researchers at the Harvard School of Medicine have found that even today, about 18 percent of patients in hospitals are injured during the course of their care and that many of those injuries are life-threatening, or even fatal.6 The Office of the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found that one in seven Medicare patients are injured during hospital stays and that adverse events during the course of care contribute to the deaths of 180,000 patients every year.7

Even errors that the government and private health insurers have classified as “never events,” events that should never happen in a hospital, are occurring at alarming rates. Recently the Joint Commission Center on Transforming Healthcare reported that as many as 40 wrong site, wrong side and wrong patient procedures happen every week in the U.S.8 Similarly, researchers in Colorado recently found that surgical “never” events, such as operating on the wrong patient or wrong site or performing the wrong procedure, are occurring all too frequently.9

Yet despite these numbers, the American public remains unaware of just how pervasive the problem is. Even though one in three Americans say that they or a family member has experienced a medical error, and one in five say that a medical error has caused either themselves or a family member serious health problems or death, surveys show that Americans vastly underestimate the extent of medical errors.10 About half of respondents believe the annual death total from medical errors to be 5,000 or less—nearly 20 times lower than the IOM’s estimate.

People have been led to believe that there are hundreds of thousands of medical negligence lawsuits every year and only a handful of genuine medical errors. In reality, the reverse is true. There are very few medical negligence lawsuits, and hundreds of thousands dying from preventable medical errors. As University of Pennsylvania law professor Tom Baker puts it, “We have an epidemic of medical malpractice, not of malpractice lawsuits.”11

Much of the discussion surrounding medical negligence revolves around costs, whether it be the cost of physicians’ insurance or the cost to health care. While these are the subject of much debate and acrimony, the potential savings from the elimination of medical errors are undeniable.
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JC Denton
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #1 - Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:44pm
 
affirmative action could have something to do with it.
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bobbythefap1
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #2 - Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:47pm
 
JC Denton wrote on Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:44pm:
affirmative action could have something to do with it.

Could, but doesn't.
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gold_medal
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #3 - Dec 15th, 2012 at 6:28pm
 
feminism IS the reason. That along with foreign aid. get rid of both and problem solved!
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Sir Spot of Borg
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #4 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 5:15am
 
What?

Anyone know the stats for australia?

there are women working in the medical profession here too .  . . .

SOB
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #5 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 5:22am
 
gold_medal wrote on Dec 15th, 2012 at 6:28pm:
feminism IS the reason. That along with foreign aid. get rid of both and problem solved!



Jesus cried again  Cry Cry Cry
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bobbythefap1
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #6 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 11:26am
 
Guess this issue scares people a little?
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bobbythefap1
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #7 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 11:31am
 
Sir Spot of Borg wrote on Dec 16th, 2012 at 5:15am:
Anyone know the stats for australia?


http://www.medicalerroraustralia.com/issues/needless_deaths.php

Quote:
18,000 needless deaths a year

To our great distress, it is currently IMPOSSIBLE to accurately count the deaths caused by medical error.

This infamous figure of 18,000 deaths per year was released in Federal Parliament by Minister for Health the Honorable Carmen Lawrence then published in the Medical Journal of Australia in 1995. The figure is actually extrapolated from a statistically valid sample of 14,179 hospital admissions.

We believe it underestimates the horrifying magnitude of medical error. All these years later, we are still waiting for a standardised, accurate, centralised, compulsory system for recording the death toll. When this exists, it will expose hospital managements to public scrutiny. Even more important, it will give the medical system the opportunity to learn from its mistakes - and prevent them.

If you think we are being alarmist, consider this: Medical Error is totally ignored as a cause of death by the Australia Bureau of Statistics. It should be at least second from the top.

14,000 admissions surveyed

16.6% associated with an "adverse event"

51% of the adverse events considered preventable

4.9% the patient died
LATEST ESTIMATES

At this rate there would be nearly 20,000 iatrogenic deaths in the latest year for which 'hospital separation' figures are available from the ABS, 2008. Our calculation is:

7,900,000 admissions

4.9% deaths = 387,100

51% preventable =
19,742 preventable deaths by medical
'Adverse Events'
The following quotes are direct from
'The Quality in Australian Health Care Study'

This study reports a major retrospective clinical review of 14,179 admissions to a representative sample of Australian hospitals in 1992; 16.6% (2353) were associated with an AE, of which 51% had high preventability.

Australia-wide estimates The number of patients dying or incurring permanent disability each year in Australian hospitals as a result of AEs is estimated to be: 18 000 deaths (95% CI, 12 000–23 000); 17 000 (95% CI, 12 000–22 000) cases with permanent disability (> 50%); and 33 000 (95% CI, 27 000–37 000) cases with permanent disability (< 50%). There are estimated to be 280 000 (95% CI, 260 000–310 000) AEs resulting in temporary disability.

See page 8 of the full report at: http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/misc/wilson.pdf
A MORE RECENT VICTORIAN STUDY GIVES MORE CAUSE FOR ALARM.

At this rate, the national tally of medical adverse events would be over 54,000 leading to 13,500 preventable deaths.

18,000 dead? 13,500 dead? Nobody knows for sure. But every study shows that the suffering and death caused by hospitals far exceed the road toll* - a national, shameful scandal.


See:
http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/184_11_050606/ehs11107_fm.html

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JC Denton
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #8 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 11:44am
 
bobbythefap1 wrote on Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:47pm:
JC Denton wrote on Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:44pm:
affirmative action could have something to do with it.

Could, but doesn't.

must be good to be so unequivocal about everything in spite of having no evidence
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bobbythefap1
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #9 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 12:05pm
 
JC Denton wrote on Dec 16th, 2012 at 11:44am:
bobbythefap1 wrote on Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:47pm:
JC Denton wrote on Dec 15th, 2012 at 5:44pm:
affirmative action could have something to do with it.

Could, but doesn't.

must be good to be so unequivocal about everything in spite of having no evidence

I know you have no evidence.
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muso
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #10 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 12:10pm
 
Doctors make errors? I guess they are human like everybody else.

So, given that it's quite predictable that all human beings make errors, what are we going to do about it? Have a hissy outrage fit or live with it and be thankful for all the lives they do save?
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bobbythefap1
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #11 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 12:12pm
 
muso wrote on Dec 16th, 2012 at 12:10pm:
Doctors make errors? I guess they are human like everybody else.

So, given that it's quite predictable that all human beings make errors, what are we going to do about it? Have a hissy outrage fit or live with it and be thankful for all the lives they do save?

You heard it here first, the second biggest killer in Australia is a non issue.
Are you responding to the issue at hand or are you responding to me?
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muso
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #12 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 1:09pm
 
I must have missed the bit where I said it was a non issue, and where are your stats for Australia?

The US is vastly different from Australia when it comes to Medical care. How exactly do you define a death due to a medical error? For example, if a terminally ill cancer patient was given access to self dosing, and they died from morphine overdose, would that be an example?
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bobbythefap1
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #13 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 1:11pm
 
muso wrote on Dec 16th, 2012 at 1:09pm:
I must have missed the bit where I said it was a non issue, and where are your stats for Australia?

The US is vastly different from Australia when it comes to Medical care. How do you define a death due to a medical error?

Read the other thread:
http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1355622994
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muso
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Re: Preventable Medical Errors – Sixth Biggest Killer
Reply #14 - Dec 16th, 2012 at 3:02pm
 
The point that I was making is that terminally ill patients are often permitted to self medicate. I'd like to see how such an over medication would be classified.
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