Medical Errors Kill 24,000 A Year In
Canada Brad
Evenson National Post
5-22-4
- As many as 24,000 patients die in Canadian hospitals
each year, while tens of thousands more are crippled, injured or
poisoned in association with medical errors that could have been
prevented.
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- A new landmark study of 20 hospitals in five provinces
found one in 13 patients suffers an adverse event, more than double the
rate found in studies of U.S. hospitals.
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- "I think this is pretty explosive data," said Alan
Forster, a health services researcher at the Ottawa Hospital Research
Institute.
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- "When you start looking at these numbers, you really
see the problem in a graphic way."
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- The study, to be published in the Canadian Medical
Association Journal, found 185,000 patients a year suffer adverse
events.
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- Such events cost taxpayers billions of dollars,
usually in longer hospital stays.
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- They included drug overdoses, botched diagnoses,
patients whose spines were sliced by errant scalpels and one woman whose
ovaries were removed without her consent.
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- Researchers say 37% of events could have been
prevented, noting Canada lags behind the United States and other
countries in confronting medical errors.
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- "We think there is a huge opportunity to reduce that
number," said study co-author Peter Norton, a professor of family
medicine at the University of Calgary.
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- But while the study is aimed at improving safety,
legal experts fear it will open hospitals up to lawsuits, prompting them
to stifle doctors and nurses from reporting mishaps.
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- "What has been happening in the States in the past
five years ... is there's a medical malpractices crisis," said John
Morris, a lawyer for Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences
Centre in Toronto, which is being sued by a group of former
patients.
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- "They're attributing part of that to this whole
movement for patient safety and medical error recognition and
disclosure."
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- In recent years, hospitals have struggled to change
the "blame-and-shame" culture that traditionally has made doctors and
nurses reluctant to report mistakes and mishaps.
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- "People talk about the shunning, and the 'how could
you let this happen?' sort of thing," says study co-author Ross Baker, a
professor of health policy, management and evaluation at the University
of Toronto.
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- "People are frankly afraid that they're going to get
beaten up. They're worried that they're going to get sued or that action
will be taken to discipline them in the health care
organization."
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- In 1999, the U.S. Institute of Medicine published its
report on medical errors, "To Err is Human," an effort to bolster
patient safety. It cited studies in Colorado and New York that found
adverse events ranged from 2.9.% to 3.7% of hospital admissions.
-
- By contrast, the new study found 7.5% of the 2.5
million patients admitted to Canadian hospitals each year suffer adverse
events. Dr. Baker says the American studies were focused mainly on major
events that could attract lawsuits, not minor problems.
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- When compared to similar studies in the United
Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia, Canada fared well, especially when
preventable errors were considered. For example, a study of 28
Australian hospitals in 1992 found 51% of adverse events could have been
avoided. A study of two teaching hospitals in the U.K. found 48% were
preventable. The Canadian figure of 36.9% was virtually identical to a
New Zealand study in 1998.
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- "Canada pretty much falls in the middle of the pack,"
said Alan Bernstein, president of the Canadian Institutes of Health
Research, which funded the study.
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- Dr. Bernstein said health care systems need to copy
the experience of the airline industry, which reduced its error rate by
improving its systems.
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- "We need to encourage a culture where people aren't
afraid to come forward and report problems," he said.
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- In the study, researchers looked at 3,745 patient
charts, chosen at random from 20 hospitals in five provinces, including
Ontario and Quebec.
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- They found the greatest number of adverse events
occurred at teaching hospitals.
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- "This is probably due to the complexity of care," said
Dr. Baker, noting the most complicated cases are usually referred to
teaching hospitals.
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- Not all adverse events are preventable. Some things,
like an allergic reaction to a drug, often cannot be anticipated. The
study found that preventable errors were about the same at small, large
and teaching hospitals.
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- "If we think about preventable errors as a mark of
quality, then smaller hospitals do as well as teaching hospitals," said
Dr. Norton. "I think some of our smaller hospitals have thought of
themselves as second-class citizens. This study shows it's not so. They
may do less complex procedures, but they don't commit more
errors."
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- The researchers found older patients were the ones
most likely to suffer an adverse event. This is because seniors tend to
have more complex illnesses, so they undergo more procedures and tests
and stay in hospital longer.
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- The researchers say a move to electronic medical
records and hiring more nurses would be a good start at reducing
errors.
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- Dr. Norton says it would be worth the added expense,
noting each adverse event resulted in an average hospital stay of six
extra days.
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- "Multiply 70,000 preventable events by six days in
hospital," he said. "That's a lot of money. And if we can prevent that,
we're going to empty beds sooner, which improves access to beds. Access
is a huge issue for us."
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- ��National Post 2004
http://www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/news/s
tory.html?id=06bc161f-3dd8-4e89-bd5b-a96459f6a041
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