Sir Spot of Borg wrote on Dec 16
th, 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