Wrongful Death

Doctors Confess Their Fatal Mistakes

by Jerry Meyers on October 19, 2010

Joe Kika writes at readersdigest.com a remarkable set of interviews of physicians and nurses confessing medical mistakes for the record which either could have or did lead to wrongful death.  Among those interviewed was Peter Pronovost, a professor at John’s Hopkins University School of Medicine, who has received considerable notoriety as a patient safety advocate.

Pronovost and his work at Hopkins was the subject of one of my prior posts.  In Pronovost’s interview he provides us considerable insight as to how his views concerning patient safety evolved.  We learn for example, that his father died because of medical errors at age 50.  Also, during his training in critical care medicine, he prematurely removed a breathing tube in a patient recovering from esophageal surgery performed earlier the same day. The patient arrested and though successfully resuscitated, remained unconscious for a time.  Pronovost admits that his shame at having made a very serious error prevented him from candidly explaining to the patient’s wife the reason for the arrest.

The medical culture of Pronovost’s early years remains today as a true impediment to patient safety.  The widespread refusals of physicians and other health care providers to admit their errors allows the errors to be repeated by others.

Ironically, today as I was writing this post, I visited Kevin MD.com and found a very interesting and compelling article authored by Brian Goldman (an emergency physician) addressing the issue of the culture of patient safety.  Goldman agrees that medical errors must be confessed in order for change to occur. He appears to reject the view shared by many advocates of tort reform the Dr.’s will not confess except in secret.

Confession is good for the soul and indispensable if a culture of patient safety is to be established.

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Healthcare: Crisis in Quality-Not Cost

by Jerry Meyers on August 4, 2009

I believe the public at large has for decades laboured under the impression that here we enjoy the best medical care available (Untrue. By most measures both Germany and France do better).   Perhaps this is the reason that despite the real problems Americans have faced because of the increasing cost of health care the debate to day is chiefly focused on how to pay for it and how to maintain the choices we now have.

The cost of health care has increased because health care is a business and at some level those with the power to decide where the money flows have no more interest in the wellfare of patients than Ford motor company had in the safety of auto passengers when designing the Pinto (inexpensive part would have prevented death by fire but the Ford board decided that they would rather pay off victims and their families who filed claims than prevent the fires).

According to the Institute of Medicine, 100,000 deaths due to medical care are preventable.
Medicare has recently floated an interesting concept. They will not pay for the care resulting from preventable incidents.
We should be addressing the quality of care. The cost of care will then take care of itself.
Tue Aug 04 2009 13:02:30 GMT-0400 (Eastern Daylight Time) Comment to NPR http://bit.ly/sFhSs

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Failure to Understand Allergy Leads to Woman's Death

May 27, 2008

Communication is essential between health care providers but sometimes communication fails because of the arrogance or carelessness of the persons involved in the needed medical communication. Several years ago, a female client about to enjoy an important anniversary was admitted to a University affiliated hospital for the purpose of having a colostomy wound debrided (cleaned [...]

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Death Due To Anesthesia

May 15, 2008

According to the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists1 mortality rates for conditions studied were from 0.11% to 1.2%. While these percentages may seem small when one considers the hundreds of thousands of surgical cases performed annually under anesthesia an ominous picture emerges. The average for all patients is 0.38%. This means that out of every [...]

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