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Malpractice News
The Best Offense Is a Good Defense Against Medical Errors
Let's face it, we all make mistakes. Mistakes happen in hospitals, they happen in outpatient clinics, they happen in nursing homes and home care, and they happen in self-care. We as clinicians need to acknowledge that they happen. The challenge is to avoid them, and when mistakes do occur, to prevent them from causing harm to our patients. More people die from errors than from auto accidents (which cause 43,000 deaths a year). More people die from errors than breast cancer (that's 42,000). More people die from errors than from AIDS (that's 16,000). But if you think about the investment that we're making in research to understand why these errors are made and what we can do to prevent them, that investment pales in comparison to what we're spending on breast cancer or AIDS.
The IOM report is getting a lot of attention. Much of the attention focuses on "horror stories"—such as the amputation of the wrong leg or fatal drug overdoses. But most errors are less obvious. They may be diagnostic errors. Or they may be surgical mistakes—such as a nicked artery or nerve. Or there may be errors in drug treatment, such as a patient being prescribed two medications that interact to cause an adverse reaction, when one drug could easily have been substituted with an appropriate alternative. In fact, research suggests that half of all adverse drug reactions are preventable.
Or patients themselves can be responsible for errors, such as when patients cannot read the dosage instructions on medicine bottles. Recent research shows that 20 percent of patients are not literate enough to read, understand, and follow their prescription directions.Remember that science shows us that errors are a systems problem. The solution requires a system-wide response from everyone involved in health care. The entire health care team must meet the challenge of working to reduce errors.
Errors in hospital Emergency Rooms are a common occurrence
They are infrequently talked about and rarely reported to the media. That is why you don't hear about these types of cases on the news. Understaffed hospitals or ill-equipped emergency rooms may lead to fatal errors while dealing with patients requiring emergency treatment. When the necessary steps of treating an emergency room patient are sidestepped, then an emergency error may result.
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News about Medical Malpractice cases in Hartford and nationwide:
Medication Error Death Legal Issues Regarding Medications ErrorsApproximately 30% of all malpractice claims involve drug-related injuries. An averag... Read more >
Definition:
Pain, usually burning, that is associated with autonomic changes -- change in color of the skin, change in temperature, change in sweating, swelling. Causalgia occurs after a nerve injury.
Board-certified specialist
Definition:
A physician who has successfully completed an ACGME-approved residency program or its equivalent in an American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS)-recognized specialty and has been certified by an ABMS member board
Medical negligence
Definition:
Failure of a physician or other medical personnel to meet the standards of conduct for duties relating to the medical profession. Those standards are based on what a reasonable person with the requisite knowledge and skills would or would not do.
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