Hospital Deaths
Hospital deaths by medical errors are killing tens
of thousands of Americans each year and harming countless more,
so it has been a trend that many medical, academic and business groups
have been developing ways to reduce the dangers. But now a survey of
practicing physicians has revealed disheartening evidence that the doctors
themselves may be the biggest obstacle to effective reform.
Three years ago the Institute of Medicine estimated that 44,000 to
98,000 patients die each year because of medical mistakes - more
than are killed annually by automobile accidents. The numbers seemed
so staggering that many medical practitioners thought them inflated.
But the survey of physicians, published in The New England Journal of
Medicine last week, has offered corroborating evidence that, whatever
the number of deaths might be, there are an awful lot of medical mistakes
causing an enormous amount of damage.
The survey, conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health and the
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, examined the views of more than 800
American doctors and 1,200 other adults. Fully 35 percent of the
doctors said that either they or members of their families had experienced
medical errors in the course of being treated, and most said the errors
had "serious health consequences," such as death, long-term
disability or severe pain. Three in ten had seen an error that caused
serious harm to patients outside their families in the past year.
Hospital Death Attorneys
The critical issue, of course, is how to prevent harm,
and here the survey found troubling attitudes. Although studies have
demonstrated that various technological and procedural changes can cut
the error rates in hospitals, the practicing physicians were lukewarm
toward many reforms. Only a third of the physicians, for example, consider
that reducing the work hours of young doctors in training to avoid fatigue
is a "very effective" strategy to cut errors.
Less than a quarter of the doctors think it would be very effective
to use computers instead of paper forms to order drugs or to include
pharmacists on hospital rounds, two approaches that have been shown
to reduce medication errors in hospitals. Nor were they enthusiastic
about using only specially trained physicians on intensive care wards,
or about limiting high-risk medical procedures to hospitals that do
a lot of them, despite evidence that expertise and frequent practice
are key ingredients in successful medicine.
With the evidence growing ever stronger that medical errors are a danger
to many patients, it is disturbing to find such retrograde attitudes
among physicians. Reform can succeed only if the medical profession
gets behind changes that expert groups and plain common sense suggest
could significantly reduce the harm caused by medical errors.
New York Times, 12/18/02
see our Medical
Error Links
Find
a Lawyer in your State
