2006 Citations to the Institute
of Medicine Report
that 44,000 to 98,000 People Die
Annually Due to Hospital Errors
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publishers for full text.
Groups Target Medical Mistakes to Save
Lives
SCIENCE NEWS December 12, 2006 from ScientificAmerican.com
A group of health care leaders said on Tuesday they
were banding together to make U.S. hospitals less dangerous places to
get well.
The Institute For Healthcare Improvement estimates
about 15 million medical mistakes occur in hospitals each year. More
people die in U.S. hospitals from medical errors than perish from motor
vehicle accidents or breast cancer.
"No one in health care can feel comfortable with the
magnitude of infections, adverse drug events and other complications
that hospital patients endure," said Donald Berwick, president of the
Institute for Healthcare Improvement.
To do this, the coalition wants 4,000 of the 5,000 U.S.
hospitals to commit to at least one concrete improvement and report
periodic quality and mortality data to the group.
Medication-related errors alone cost the health care
system about $2 billion annually, the Institute of Medicine says.
A Dose of Prevention - Local Hospitals
Change Procedures as Part of Nationwide Effort to Save More Lives. Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee,
WI) Nov.
25, 2006
The 100,000 Lives campaign proposed reducing preventable deaths by:
1. Preventing patients who receive medications and fluids through a
central line from developing infections. The steps for stopping these
infections include: proper hand washing, selecting the best site for
the central line and cleaning the patient's skin with an antiseptic
called chlorhexidine.
2. Taking steps known to reduce the risk of heart attacks, including
giving patients aspirin and beta-blockers to prevent further damage to
heart muscle.
3. Avoiding drug errors by verifying the patient's medication history
and reviewing and updating medication lists, especially when patients
move to different units or get released.
4. Preventing patients on ventilators from getting pneumonia, through
several steps, including raising their heads to between 30 and 45
degrees to prevent a buildup of fluids, and giving breaks in sedation
that help determine the earliest point at which the ventilator can be
removed.
5. Dispatching rapid response teams to treat patients before a decline
in condition becomes a full-blown crisis.
6. Preventing surgical patients from developing infections through
several steps, including timely use of antibiotics and appropriate hair
removal.
"The classic word is preventable deaths," explained
Geoffrey C. Lamb, internal medicine physician at Froedtert. "If the
system worked in a different way, the outcome would be different."
Simply put, these deaths - tens of thousands of them
nationwide - were caused by hospital failures: medication errors;
pneumonia introduced by hospital ventilators; and infections resulting
from catheters or surgery. Lives were being lost, too, because
hospitals didn't always respond aggressively when patients experienced
abrupt changes that weren't deemed life-threatening.
From July 2005 to June 2006, mortality rate at
Froedtert Hospital dropped from 23.4 deaths per 1,000 discharges to
19.5 deaths per 1,000 discharges - an improvement of nearly 17%.
Military Health, HHS Join Forces for
Patient Safety MarineCorpstimes.comNovember 13, 2006
Twenty years of research and
lessons learned in the military health care systems will soon benefit
the civilian world.
The Military Health System is teaming up with a division of the
Department of Health and Human Services to help improve patient safety
in civilian hospitals around the country. More information
and a brief video about TeamSTEPPS are
available online.
Family Laments Daughter's Death Independent
Albuquerque, NM October 17, 2006
2 year old child with meningitis dies after
Emergency Room doctors ignore her for 22 hours.
Family Laments Daughter's Death Independent
Albuquerque, NM October 17, 2006
2 year old child with meningitis dies after
Emergency Room doctors ignore her for 22 hours.
20 Tips to Help Prevent Medical
Errors The
Clarion-Ledger Jackson, MI October 3, 2006
A recent report by the Institute of Medicine
estimates that as many as 44,000 to 98,000 people die in U.S. hospitals
each year as the result of medical errors — more than from motor
vehicle accidents, breast cancer or AIDS.
Medical errors happen when something planned as a part of medical care
doesn't work out or the wrong plan is used. They can occur in
hospitals, clinics, outpatient surgery centers, doctors' offices,
nursing homes, pharmacies and patients' homes.
They can involve medicines, surgery,
diagnosis, equipment and lab reports.
For more information:
A federal report on medical errors can be accessed online, and a
print copy (Publication No. OM 00-0004)
is available from the AHRQ Publications Clearinghouse:
call 1-800-358-9295 or e-mail: ahrqpubs@ahrq.gov.
Related links: National Guidelines
Clearinghouse. Ask your doctor if your treatment is based on
the latest evidence. 20 Tips to Help Prevent
Medical Errors. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality,
Rockville, MD.
http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/20tips.htm
Tort Reform Won't Ease Health Care
Costs South
Bend TribuneOctober 01, 2006
Medical malpractice claims do not
significantly affect the high costs of medical care in the United
States.
In 2002 the House Committee on the Judiciary
ordered the
Congressional Budget Office to evaluate the impact of a proposed bill
known as House Resolution 4600. H.R. 4600 sought to limit medical
malpractice litigation in state and federal courts by capping awards
and attorney fees. The Congressional Budget Office is impartial and
non-political.
After a detailed investigation, the
Congressional Budget Office
issued a report on Sept. 24, 2002, which found that limiting medical
malpractice claims would have virtually no effect on health care
insurance costs. The CBO found that:
"Malpractice costs account for a very small fraction of total health
care spending; even a very large reduction in malpractice costs would
have a relatively small effect on total health plan premiums."
The CBO went on to find that limiting
medical malpractice claims
would result in savings of less than 1/200th of the cost of health care
insurance premiums. In simple terms, if a person spent $1,000 per year
in health care premiums, the savings would be just $4 per
year.
Governor Daniels and New Safety Center
Hope to Limit Medical Mistakes CBS
Channel 8 News 9/19/2006 (Indianapolis, IN)
Work is
underway on two new fronts to protect patients from medical errors made
in hospitals. What happened this weekend at Methodist Hospital
illustrates a problem that happens more often than you might
think.
A mistake during surgery, a medication given in the
wrong dose, errors like these happen thousands of times across the
country each year. Medication-related errors in hospitals cost roughly
$2 billion each year and medical errors kill more people every year
than breast cancer, AIDS or motor vehicle accidents.
State officials hope requiring hospitals to own up
to their mistakes publicly could help cut the number of those mistakes.
The Indiana Department of Health will vote Wednesday on a proposed rule
to require hospitals to report some of their medical errors.
The proposed rule outlines 27 potential mistakes
hospitals would be required to report to the state. They include giving
the wrong dose of medicine. The state will make those errors public in
a report every year. Related
story: Third Newborn Dies from Heparin Overdose; Riley
Hospital Issues Statement
The baby was one of six that had been given an overdose of the drug
Heparin while in the care of doctors and nurses at Methodist Hospital.
When Deaths Are Avoidable Daily
Courier(Pittsburgh,
PA) Saturday, September 2, 2006
There were 44,000 to 98,000 deaths attributed to
avoidable medical mistakes last year. That is according to a recent
segment of a radio newscast.
An excerpt from an article in the magazine "Mother
Jones" stated, "A report from the National Academy of Sciences
Institute of Medicine (shows)
avoidable medical mistakes are the eighth leading cause of deaths
in the United States, ahead of car accidents, breast cancer and AIDS.
There are
no federal laws requiring hospitals to report deaths and injuries
to patients caused by error."
Medication Administration: One Drug,
One Error, One Life
Yahoo Finance - Wednesday August 23, 6:00 am ET
Medical Simulation Corporation (MSC) announced today the introduction
of the latest addition to the SimSuite® expanding hospital-centric
courseware: Medication Administration.
This online course is a flexible, self-paced learning module designed
to assess the user's knowledge and proficiency with medication
administration. This course is suitable for new registered
nurses, as a
competency assessment for per diem staff, or as an adjunct to ongoing
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO)
compliance for staff nurses.
A
large percentage of adverse drug events (ADEs) have serious
consequences, and many of them are preventable. The ADEs identified in
a study by Classen et al., half of which
were identified as
preventable, added 1.91 days to the mean length of hospital stays, and
resulted in increased costs per stay of $2,262.(2) Bates and colleagues
determined that an
additional 2.2 days of hospitalization were required
for patients experiencing an ADE, at an average added cost of $3,244.
For ADEs identified as preventable, patients stayed in the
hospital an
average of 4.6 extra days, at an average additional cost of $5,857.(3)
How Hospital Design Saves Lives Business
Week AUGUST 15, 2006 Design changes can cut infection rates, lower
physician errors, improve staff performance, and make all the
difference in delivering care
In 1999, the Institute of Medicine shocked the health-care industry
with its landmark report, "To Err Is Human," which highlighted the
staggering human and financial costs of medical error: an estimated
44,000 to 98,000 in the U.S. dead each year as a result of medical
errors, more than from motor vehicle accidents or breast cancer,
costing the country between $17 billion and $29 billion in health-care
costs, disability, and lost income.
But there is plenty more to be done and one of the most
promising areas to focus on is design. "Hospitals are dangerous places
because of systems, and systems are a design problem," explains Derek
Parker, co-founder of the Center for Health Design, a nonprofit
think-tank, and a director in San Francisco at Anshen + Allen
Architects, a leading health-care design firm. . . .
WRONG SIDE SURGERY. Standardizing operating rooms within a
hospital minimizes the likelihood of wrong-site, wrong-side, or wrong-patient surgery
(a not uncommon occurrence). Arranging nursing stations to
improve access to both patients and charts reduces errors and fatigue.
And perhaps most important, providing private rooms improves infection
control, allows families to help with care, and minimizes environmental
stressors such as noise and light.
PAYS FOR ITSELF. The Center for Health Design estimates
that, all told, these and Fable's other features would add $12 million
to the hospital's construction costs. But thanks to reduced patient
falls, transfers, nosocomial infections, nurse turnover, and drug
costs, as well as increased market share and philanthropy, the Center
believes those costs would be recouped within a year.
Colorado A Leader in Hospital Safety Rocky
Mountain News (Denver CO) June 27, 2006
A Harvard physician who oversees a national campaign to end lethal
errors in hospitals said Colorado's participation rate in the program
leads the U.S.
"The energy level in Colorado is not exceeded by any other state in the
nation," said Dr. Don Berwick, president of the Institute for
Healthcare Improvement. Berwick's nonprofit says it helped save 122,300
lives since it started a safety campaign in 3,100 hospitals 18 months
ago.
Berwick came to Denver on Monday to celebrate the achievement and
announce the "six by seven" campaign to encourage participating
hospitals to adopt six quality improvement measures by 2007.
Professor Criticizes Medical Court Plan Herald-Sun
(Durham, NC) Jun 22, 2006
Neil Vidmar, a Duke University law professor,
criticized a proposed medical courts program supported by Duke's
medical center at a Senate committee hearing Thursday.
Duke's School of Medicine and Health System is one of six medical
centers nationwide interested in being a test site for a proposed court
system dedicated solely to medical cases.
Vidmar said the bill eventually
would take away a person's right to a jury trial.
Enzi Wants Overhaul of Medical
Liability System KGWN -
Cheyenne,WY, Jun 22, 2006
U.S. Senator Mieke Enzi called for reforms that will deliver quick and
fair compensation to injured patients, while providing consistent and
reliable results so that doctors can eliminate defensive medicine.
We Must Change Use of Emergency System Reading
Eagle - Reading,PA Jun 22, 2006
The Issue: One report praises hospitals for cutting
down on medical errors, while another warns of the dire condition of
emergency medicine.
Our Opinion: We must change the way we use our
health-care system, just as the hospitals are changing procedures to
cut down on medical errors.
More than 3,000 hospitals across the country were
praised last week by the Institute of Health for altering procedures to
cut down on medical errors. The same day the Institute of Medicine
released a report indicating the nation’s emergency-care system is in
crisis. The facilities that were recognized for changing their
procedures included Reading Hospital and St. Joseph Medical Center,
which is good news indeed.
But the good news may have been overshadowed by the
institute report on emergency rooms, which indicated that hospitals
barely are able to handle the day-to-day emer-gencies, let alone what
would result from a bird-flu pandemic or a terrorist strike. The study
found 114 million people visited emergency rooms in 2003, an increase
of 26 percent from a decade earlier. Only about half of those were true
medical emergencies.
LI Hospitals Try to Make the Grade Newsday
(Melville, NY)
June 18, 2006
Nassau University Medical Center scored lowest among
Long Island's 24 hospitals in an annual report card, although it ranked
among the best in lower infection rates, outranking North Shore
University Hospital at Manhasset and Stony Brook University Hospital,
among others.
The 631-bed NUMC scored lower than the state average
in five measures: congestive heart failure mortality, acute stroke
deaths, hip fracture mortality, postoperative pulmonary embolism, and
postoperative sepsis, or blood infections. Last year, the hospital
scored average in all categories in which it was rated. In 2004, the
hospital scored low in three categories: stroke and pneumonia victims
as well as those with gastrointestinal hemorrhages.
Crowded ER’s Signal a System in Crisis
Rising number of visits, dwindling beds force hospitals to divert
emergency calls, new report says. But Minnesota is in better shape than
the nation.
Pioneer Press (St. Paul, MN) June 16, 2006
A national panel of medical experts predicts a
"meltdown" in the U.S. system of emergency care unless hospitals reduce
overcrowding and the federal government increases support and funding.
In a three-volume report, co-authored by a St. Paul physician, the U.S.
Institute of Medicine described a wide disconnect between what the
public expects and what it receives from emergency care, including
hospitals, first-responders and pediatric specialists.
Crowded emergency rooms are diverting ambulances to
more distant hospitals at a rate of one per minute in the U.S. They
also "board" patients in ER rooms for hours or days when no inpatient
beds are available. These are symptoms of bigger problems in health
care, according to the report by the institute, which is an independent
scientific adviser to the federal government.
Advances in Technology Are Providing
Local Hospitals New Ways to Safeguard Patients Against Medication
Errors.. Quad
Cities Online June 12, 2006 The Dispatch (Moline, IL) The Rock
Island Argus (IL); The Leader (Davenport, IA)
Last month Trinity Regional Health System introduced a bar-coding
system to check patients’ medications before they are administered.
It's a project that's been in the works for two years, said Cathy
Kearns, clinical informatics specialist for Trinity. Nurses have a
scanner and wireless computer they take to patients’ rooms. Each
medication is identified by a bar code and each patient has a bar code
on his or her wristband. Nurses scan the medication and scan the
patient's wristband before giving the medication.
Lawsuit Alleges Hospitals Billing Medicare For Mistakes The
Morning News, Springdale, AR June 8, 2006
Hospitals or their insurers should pay extra
costs of correcting medical errors they caused, not Medicare and
taxpayers, said lawyers in a federal suit against the parent company of
Northwest Health System. The suit, filed Monday by Wilkes & McHugh
law firm in U.S. District Court at Little Rock, attempts to collect
millions of dollars it claims Plano, Texas--based Triad Hospitals Inc.
billed Medicare for mistakes hospitals caused that harmed
patients.Three insurance companies also are named in the suit that uses
new Medicare laws that allow a private citizen to file a lawsuit on
behalf of Medicare. If the person filing the suit prevails, they are
entitled to a portion of damages awarded. "Insurance companies are
getting off the hook and the government is subsidizing it," said Ken
Connor, an attorney with Wilkes & McHugh.
Investigating Death of Child In addition to state,
Stony Brook hospital also says it's reviewing all aspects of case
involving 11-month-old Newsday
(Melville, NY) May 25, 2006
Following the unexpected death 12 days ago of an 11-month-old girl in
an operating room, Stony Brook University Hospital said it was
conducting its own internal review as the state proceeds with its
investigation.
In 2002, the state fined Stony Brook $54,000 and called for sweeping
changes after the death of a 6-day-old boy who was given 10 times the
prescribed dose of potassium chloride. The family of the dead infant,
Gianni Vargas of Brentwood, sued the hospital. David Raimondo, the
lawyer for the family, said the parents received $375,000 from the
hospital, one of the highest awards ever given for an infant's death in
the state.
Forget the Hippocratic Oath: Doctors, with their packed schedules,
apparently do too Jamaica
Observer May 21, 2006 (Kingston)
Those foreign press stories are something, aren't they? Just when
you think they can't get any more bizarre, along comes another that
just takes the cake. Take this gem AFP reported last week, for
instance. Somewhere in Beijing, there is a man wandering around without
an essential part of his anatomy.
The following headline appeared on page five of the Sunday Observers'
May 7, 2006 issue: 'A Majority 1,500 Doctors Practising Illegally in
Jamaica'.
Keeping Track of Medical Mistakes Hospitals Join New Commission, Agree
to Report Their Errors Portland
Tribune (Oregon) Fri, May 19, 2006
Nationally, the movement to reduce medical errors
gained traction in the late 1990s after a series of well-publicized
tragedies. In 1994 Betsy Lehman, a 39-year-old breast cancer patient
and Boston Globe health columnist, died after receiving the wrong dose
of a chemotherapy drug. In 1995 a surgeon in Tampa, Fla., amputated the
wrong leg of a patient. When the Oregon Legislature decided in 2003 to
create the Oregon Patient Safety Commission, they didn’t make it
easy for Jim Dameron, the commission’s administrator.
The Oregon program to report mistakes is voluntary.
Also, the Legislature did not give Dameron funding to run the
commission. The idea was that participating hospitals would pay a fee
to be part of the reporting system, and the money from the hospitals
would run the program.
Some national health care experts scoffed at
Dameron’s quest — getting hospitals to voluntarily join a
program to admit their mistakes, and paying for the privilege. The
experts were wrong.
As of Wednesday, Portland’s three largest hospital
systems — Legacy, Providence and Oregon Health & Science
University — had enrolled in the commission’s reporting
program. In fact, 44 of the state’s 57 hospitals have agreed to
participate.
Checklists Help Prevent Surgical
Mistakes NBC 17 -
Raleigh NC May 18, 2006
-- Medical errors are one of the nation's leading causes of death,
killing between 44,000 and 98,000 U.S. hospital patients a year,
according to a 1999 report by the National Institute of Medicine.
To eliminate such dangerous mistakes before surgery, WakeMed two years
ago adopted what hospital officials refer to as "pause for the cause,"
a mandatory patient safety checklist that is part of the preparation
routine before every surgery.
The checklist, which other area hospitals have also implemented,
prevents so-called wrong-site surgeries by rechecking to make sure
surgeons have the right patient, the right procedure and equipment --
and the correct side of the body. "It brings the whole team together so
that it's that last check," said Sharon McNamara, WakeMed's director of
surgical services. "We have in this country had patients go into the
wrong rooms and have the wrong surgeries performed. We've had the wrong
leg removed, the wrong ear operated on."
Doctors Misidentify Some Pills on Sight Forbes
USA (HealthDay News) May 1, 2006
-- Just by looking at them, doctors and pharmacists could not correctly
identify
three common pills more than one-third of the time, a new study found.
The study appears in the May 1 issue of the American Journal of
Health-System
Pharmacy.
Schiff said he envisions a standardized, international coding system
whereby
each pill would be identified by its generic, chemical makeup. The
solution
should not lie in more training for already overburdened health-care
professionals,
he said.
Aramco Releases Pharmacy System for
SAP
ITP.net
Sunday, 9 April, 2006
Saudi Aramco, the world's largest oil producer, has released a pharmacy
software
system for the SAP healthcare module, in conjunction with T-Systems,
ACN
can exclusively reveal.
One of the major risks in every health care environment deals with
prescribing
the wrong medication or the wrong dose. A 1999 study, 'To Err is Human:
Building
a Safer Health System', by the Institute of Medicine, found that
inadvertent
medical errors are responsible for 44,000 to 98,000 deaths in the
United
States each year, and 7,000 of those deaths are a result of medication
errors
- this study informed Aramco's drive to develop a new system.
Technology to the Rescue: Hospitals
Invest
in Digitizing Medical Records to Cut Deadly Errors The
Register-Guard (Eugene OR) Sunday, April 9, 2006
"In the heart of health care today, the most
important
tool a physician can have is accurate, good clinical information to
make
a good clinical decision," said Michael O'Rourke, chief information
officer
of Triad Hospitals Inc. of Plano, Texas. Triad is launching a
10-year,
$1.3 billion information technology project.
"If you want to improve the quality and safety of care,
you
have to support a physician's ability to make the best decision every
time
they make a decision."
Protecting the patientAltoona
Mirror. (PA) Saturday,
April 1, 2006
- Communication Between Medical Staff and Those Seeking Help Critical
for
Good Healthcare
Altoona Regional is among more than 3,000 hospitals that
have
joined the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s 100,000 Lives
Campaign,
‘‘an initiative to engage U.S. hospitals in a commitment to implement
changes
in care proven to improve patient care and prevent avoidable deaths,’’
according
to the IHI Web site.
The institute is a not-for-profit organization, established in 1991 and
based
in Cambridge, Mass., dedicated to improving healthcare in the United
States.
- This initiative is aimed at saving 100,000 lives from January 2005 to
July
2006 by practicing six initiatives.
Five steps to safer healthcare
1. Ask questions if you have doubts or concerns and make sure you
understand
the answers. Take a relative or friend with you to help you ask
questions
and understand the answers.
2. Keep and bring a list of all the medicines you take. Give your
doctor
and pharmacist a list of all the medicines that you take, including
nonprescription
medicines.
3. Get the results of any test or procedure. Don’t assume the results
are
fine if you do not get them, call your doctor and ask for your results.
4. Talk to your doctor about which hospital is best for your health
needs
and if you have more than one hospital to choose from.
5. Make sure you understand what will happen if you need surgery.
Source: Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research; Web site www.ahrq.gov
Protecting the patientAltoona Mirror. (PA)
Thursday, March
30, D1
People put their faith in the medical community to make them well, but
sometimes
that doesn't happen.
According to the 1999 Institute of Medicine report, "To Err is Human,''
in
1997 an estimated 44,000 to 98,000 people died in hospitals as a result
of
medical errors, said Farah Englert, spokeswoman for the Agency for
Healthcare
and Research Quality. She added that the figure is low because there is
"no
requirement for mandatory reporting [medical errors]." For more
details, see
Page D1 of the Thursday, March 30, Altoona Mirror.
Rapid Response Teams Strive to Prevent Avoidable Death Tribune
Star Terre Haute, IN
February 20, 2006
The patient had trouble breathing, but was in the hospital for another
reason.
Concerned about his well-being, a nurse on his floor phoned the
hospital
operator and asked for assistance.
Rapid response teams such as the one that responded in this case are
popping
up in hospitals across the state and nation.
Prompted by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s 100,000 Lives
Campaign,
the teams are geared at preventing avoidable deaths. The goal is to
catch
the earliest signs of complications or illnesses, long before they lead
to
a catastrophic cardiac or respiratory failure.
“Basically what you’re doing is taking the ICU to the patient,” said
Dr.
John Bolinger, who helped develop treatment guidelines for Regional’s
team,
which started last month.
State Starts Project to Track Serious Hospital Mistakes The Oregonian
(Portland)Wednesday,
February 01, 2006
Public Health - Participation Is Voluntary and the
Confidential
Information Will Be Used to Reduce Errors
The Oregon Patient Safety Commission on Tuesday launched its
effort
to get hospitals to report -- and reduce -- serious medical errors. The
Oregon
approach, unique in the nation, is a mix of voluntary and mandatory
features.
Hospitals can choose to participate, or not, but refusal to join will
be
reported on the commission's Web site.
The Oregon commission relies on voluntary reporting
because
its members believe that doctors, nurses and hospitals B1 are more
likely
to disclose errors and share data if they can do so confidentially and
without
fear of penalty. They say it's more important to look at root causes
and
prevent an error from recurring than to affix blame.
Indiana Tackles Medical Errors South
Bend Tribune - Editorial January 11. 2006
Indiana has become one of only two in the nation in
which
medical errors must be reported by hospitals and the information made
public.
Credit this major change in policy to an executive order last January
from
Gov. Mitch Daniels.
The Indiana JCAHO official figure of 36 deaths and
injuries
caused by hospital errors from 1995 through 2004 is probably low by
many
thousands. The Joint Commission acknowledges that its data probably is
just
the tip of the iceberg. This is a guesse. No one really knows. And
that's
the problem.
It is crucial for the health and well-being of
Hoosiers
that this problem be defined so that it can be addressed. Under the
rules,
which are modeled after Minnesota's (the only other state with public
disclosure),
hospitals must report any errors from a list of 27 different types.
In the past, Indiana has set an example for
misunderstanding
the extent of medical errors. Now it has become a leader in addressing
the
problem.