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Latest News
June 24, 2008
Research Finds More Electronic Interference in Hospitals
June 19, 2008
Study: Electronic Medical Records Improve Care But Docs Don't Want to Spend the Money
June 16, 2008
Medical Litter: Device Debris Poses Serious Risk
June 2, 2008
Children's Hospitals Make Too Many Mistakes, Report Says
May 30, 2008
Bill Requires Hospitals to Report Infections
May 30, 2008
More Health Care May Not Always Be Better
April 29, 2008
Are Your Medical Records at Risk?
April 20, 2008
Physicians Fixate On Diagnosis, Neglect Treatment
April 20, 2008
Military Medical Malpractice: Seeking Recourse
April 14, 2008
Health Insurers Quit Covering Hospitals' Medical Screw-Ups
April 1, 2008
Study: Tool to Identify Medication-Related Harm in US Children's Hospitals
March 29, 2008
Study Finds Many Patients Dissatisfied With Hospitals
March 17, 2008
Making Hospitals Pay for Own Mistakes
March 16, 2008
Dennis Quaid Recounts Twins' Drug Ordeal
February 29, 2008
Patients Still Stuck With Bill for Medical Errors
January 15, 2008
Study Finds Not Reporting Medical Mistakes
December 6, 2007
Doctors Unlikely to Report Peers Who Make Mistakes
November 14, 2007
Organ Patients Spread of HIV Probed
November 13, 2007
Doctor Who Reportedly Operated on West Had Previous Malpractice Suits
November, 2007
A Framework for Health Care Organizations to Develop and Evaluate a Safety Scorecard
October 23, 2007
Mistakes Hospitals Don't Want You to See
Some of these common hospital errors are:
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality issued a list of 20 "Patient Safety Indicators (PSI's)." 16 of these PSI's were used as the basis for the HealthGrades study on medical errors. The following list consists of these indicators, all of which highlight the most common areas for hospital and medical errors to occur. The full 'Guide to Patient Safety Indicators' can be viewed here.
1 - Complications
of Anesthesia
Complication or reaction to anesthetic
generally used during surgery. Complications from
insertion or removal of airways may cause respiratory problems
such as coughing; gagging; or muscle spasms in the voice
box, or larynx, or in the bronchial tubes in the lungs.
Insertion of airways also may cause an increase in blood
pressure (hypertension) and heart rate (tachycardia). Other
complications may include damage to teeth and lips, swelling
in the larynx, sore throat, and hoarseness caused by injury
or irritation of the larynx. Other serious risks of general
anesthesia include changes in blood pressure or heart rate
or rhythm, heart attack, or stroke.
#2 - Death in Low-Mortality
This indicator is intended to identify in-hospital deaths
in patients unlikely to die during hospitalization. The underlying
assumption is that when patients admitted for an extremely
low-mortality condition or procedure die, a health care error
is more likely to be responsible. Patients experiencing trauma
or who have an immune disease such as HIV or cancer are excluded,
as these patients have higher non-preventable mortality.
#3 - Decubitus Ulcer (Bed Sores)
Bed sores result from
pressure on the skin, typically in patients during hospital
recovery or whose mobility is limited in bed (e.g. paraplegics).
They are also called "pressure sores" or
the medical term "decubitus ulcer". Symptoms include
redness and swelling of the skin, sometimes with skin breakage
if left untreated.
#4 - Failure to Rescue
When a patient dies following the development of a complication.
The underlying assumption is that good hospitals identify these
complications quickly and treat them aggressively.
Failure to Rescue may be fundamentally different than other indicators reviewed in this report, as it may reflect different aspects of quality of care (effectiveness in rescuing a patient from a complication versus preventing a complication). This indicator includes pediatric patients. It is important to note that children beyond the neonatal period inherently recover better from physiological stress and thus may have a higher rescue rate.
#5 - Foreign Body Left During Procedure
These cases
occur when a foreign body accidentally left in a patient during
a procedure. For example, if someone is having surgery and
an instrument is left in their body after the surgery is complete. Sometimes
the patient will feel pressure, or they do not get better,
or different symptoms occur due to the foreign object in their
body.
#6 - Iatrogenic Pneumothorax (Breathing Problems)
An
adverse condition caused by treatment by any health professional
where a leak in the lung causes air to accumulate in the space
around the lung (pleural cavity). This prevents the lung from
expanding fully and hence a partial lung collapse occurs. For
example, a doctor may accidentally puncture the lung during
a surgical operation. Symptoms: chest pain, difficulty
breathing, shortness of breath, decreased or slowing of the
heartbeat to less than 60 beats per minute; poor circulation
such as the numbness in hands and fingers.
#7 - Selected Infections Due to Medical Care, Provider
Level
Cases of infection due to medical care, primarily
those related to intravenous (IV) lines and catheters. Patients
with potential immunocompromised states (e.g., AIDS, cancer,
transplant) are excluded, as they may be more susceptible
to such infection.
This indicator includes children and neonates. It should be noted that high-risk neonates are at particularly high risk for catheter-related infections.
#8 - Postoperative Hip Fracture
These cases involve in-hospital fracture - specifically, hip fractures. It excludes patients in MDC 8 (musculoskeletal disorders) and patients with indications for trauma or cancer, or principal diagnoses of seizure, syncope, stroke, coma, cardiac arrest, or poisoning, as these patients may have a fracture present on admission.
#9 - Postoperative Hemorrhage (Bleeding) or Hematoma (Blood
Clots)
This indicator is intended to capture cases of hemorrhage
(Bleeding) or hematoma (blood clots) following a surgical procedure
when it is unexpected.
#10 - Postoperative Physiologic and Metabolic Derangement
Cases of postoperative metabolic or physiologic complications after elective surgery.
#11 - Postoperative Respiratory Failure
Respiratory failure can occur after any surgical procedure. Respiratory failure is where the respiratory system becomes incapable of oxygenating the blood or removing the carbon dioxide. Respiratory failure is a serious and potentially fatal condition. Symptoms include coughing, tightness in the chest, and wheezing.
#12 - Postoperative Pulmonary Embolism or Deep Vein Thrombosis
A
blood clot that occurs in the lung after any surgical procedure.
A pulmonary embolism is a blood clot that forms in another
part of the body and then travels to the lung and causes a
blockage. A pulmonary embolism can cause permanent lung damage
due to lack of blood flow and insufficient oxygen supply. A
deep vein thrombosis is a blood clot that occurs in deeper
veins in the thigh or calf that can be very painful.
#13 - Postoperative Sepsis
Commonly called a blood stream
infection" The presence
of bacteria or other infectious organisms or their toxins in
the blood or in other tissue of the body. Sepsis may be associated
with clinical symptoms of illness, such as fever, chills, malaise,
low blood pressure, and mental status changes. Sepsis can be
a serious situation, a life threatening disease calling for
urgent and comprehensive care
#14 - Postoperative Wound Healing
Poor wound healing after abdominal surgery resulting in the
wound splitting open. The wound breaks down and healing can
be very lengthy and difficult and the risk of infection is
high. Risk factors for the condition include diabetes, increased
age, obesity, wound infection, poor wound closing and injury
to the wound following the operation. Symptoms include abdominal
pain, vomiting, diarrhea, and wound discharge.
#15 - Accidental Puncture or Laceration
When an unexpected
puncture or laceration occurs during surgery. If
it is not corrected it could be life threatening due to loss
of blood and decreased function from lacerated part.
#16 - Transfusion Reaction
When a person has an allergic reaction to the transfusion
of blood products.Symptoms include anxiety, chest and/or
back pain, jaundice, fever and chills.
#17 - Birth Trauma - Injury to Neonate
Birth trauma for infants born alive in a hospital. This excludes
patients born pre-term, as birth trauma in these patients may
be less preventable than for full-term infants. Some examples
of trauma for infants are jaundice, asphyxia, brain damage
and infection.
#18 - Obstetric Trauma - Vaginal Delivery with Instrument
Potentially preventable trauma during vaginal delivery with
instrument. Some examples of trauma for infants are jaundice,
asphyxia, brain damage and infection.
#19 - Obstetric Trauma - Vaginal Delivery without Instrument
Potnetially preventable trauma during a vaginal delivery.
Some examples of trauma for infants are jaundice, asphyxia,
brain damage and infection.
#20 - Obstetric Trauma - Cesarean Delivery
Potentially preventable trauma during Cesarean delivery. Some
examples of trauma for infants are jaundice, asphyxia, brain
damage and infection.