New Tracking Tool Suggests Medical Errors May Occur in One-Third of Hospital Admissions
By Denise Mann
WebMD Health News
"April 7, 2011 -- Medication errors, infections, and other hospital-related errors may be 10 times more common than previously estimated, according to a study involving a new tracking tool.
Medical errors may actually occur in as many of one-third of hospital admissions, according to a new study in the April issue of Health Affairs.
“It’s a little scary,” admits study author David C. Classen, MD, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.
Whether the problem is getting worse or error tracking methods are improving is not known. “We have gotten better tools to detect medical errors which give us a better yardstick to determine if we are improving,” he says.
Researchers used the Institute for Healthcare Improvements’ Global Trigger Tool. With this method, two or three trained nurses or pharmacists review medical charts for certain triggers such as a stop-medication order, an abnormal lab test result, or the use of a known antidote, and then follow up with a physician review of the medical chart to see if these triggers led to any medical mistakes.
Study results show the new tool may be more sensitive than other tracking methods, including voluntary reporting and other measures.
Protect Yourself From Hospital Errors
Common hospital errors included medication-related issues, procedure-related mistakes, and hospital-acquired infections. The most severe mistakes were related to a surgery or procedure, the new study showed.
Classen says that asking questions and demanding answers can help reduce the risk of medical errors when you are hospitalized.
If someone tries to give you medication, “stop and say ‘I want to hear all about it before I take it,’” he suggests.
Before surgery, “insist that your surgeon comes and sees you before starting the procedure to review the steps,” Classen says. . . " Read More
Its correct.. Protect ourself from hospital errors.. I agree this one.. It depends on us only..
Posted by: 505 b 2 | May 02, 2011 at 06:12 AM
It would be interesting to learn this same statistic in countries with other health care systems...
Posted by: John Valenty | June 16, 2011 at 03:37 PM