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WASHINGTON (AP) - Surgical gaffes like amputating the wrong foot or a deadly
chemotherapy overdose make headlines. But patients may never hear of the more
subtle errors, like a delay in diagnosis or testing that costs precious time to
fight off disease.
Medical mistakes are a stunningly huge problem, says a new report by the
Institute of Medicine. It quoted studies estimating that at least 44,000 and
perhaps as many as 98,000 hospitalized Americans die every year from errors.
``To err is human'' is the report's title, but it stresses that ways exist to
prevent many mistakes by anticipating health workers' weaknesses and designing
safeguards.
The report recommends major changes to the nation's health care system to set
as a minimum goal a 50 percent reduction in medical mistakes within five years.
``Errors can be prevented by designing systems that make it hard for people
to do the wrong thing and easy for people to do the right thing,'' said William
Richardson, president of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, who co-authored the
report.
There are constant places for doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other health
workers to trip.
Doctors' notoriously poor handwriting too often leaves pharmacists squinting
to decipher a dose - was it 10 milligrams or 10 micrograms? - or even the name
of the prescribed drug.
Too many drug names sound confusingly alike. Consider the painkiller Celebrex
and the anti-seizure drug Cerebyx; or Narcan, which treats morphine overdoses,
and Norcuron, which can paralyze breathing muscles.
Medical knowledge grows so rapidly that it is difficult to stay abreast of
the latest treatment or newly discovered danger. Technology poses hazards when
device models change from year to year, leaving doctors fumbling for the right
switch.
And most health professionals do not have their competence regularly retested
after receiving their license to practice, the report said.
In fact, health care is a decade behind other high-risk industries in
improving safety, the report said. It pointed to the transportation industry as
a model: Just as engineers design cars so they cannot start in reverse, and
airlines limit pilots' flying time to keep them rested, so can health care be
improved.
Some fixes already are under way: Some hospitals have computerized
prescriptions. The Food and Drug Administration is hunting ways to catch
sound-a-like drugs. Anesthesiologists persuaded many manufacturers to standardize
equipment and thus decreased technology-caused errors. Many doctors now
literally mark the spot of surgical incisions before patients are put to sleep,
so everyone agrees on what will be cut.
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But the Institute of Medicine said reducing medical mistakes requires a
bigger commitment. It recommended:
Congress should establish a federal Center for Patient Safety. It would
require $35 million to start and should eventually spend $100 million a year in
safety research. Still, that represents just a fraction of an estimated $8.8
billion spent yearly as a result of medical mistakes, the report calculated.
The government should require that hospitals, and eventually other health
organizations, report all serious mistakes to state agencies so experts can
detect patterns of problems and take action. About 20 states now require error
reporting, but how much and what penalties they impose varies widely.
State licensing boards and medical accreditors should periodically re-examine
health practitioners for competence, stressing safety practices. Standardized
medical equipment and treatment guidelines can help doctors keep up.
Change the ``culture of secrecy'' that surrounds medical mistakes,
encouraging doctors to discuss errors as well as near-misses so problems are
fixed.
The Institute of Medicine is part of the National Academy of Sciences, a
private organization chartered by Congress to advise the government on
scientific matters. Congress just passed legislation ordering the Agency for
Health Care Policy and Research to hunt strategies to reduce medical mistakes.
The bill will even change the name to the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality to reflect the emphasis. President Clinton is expected to sign the bill
soon.
``Any error that causes harm to a patient is one error too many,'' said Dr.
Nancy Dickey, past president of the American Medical Association, which already
has started a National Patient Safety Foundation to address some of the
problems.
But she cautioned that some changes will be difficult because doctors are
liable for any mistake. ``We may know to talk about a culture of safety, but we
still live in an environment of blame,'' she said. |