Medical errors No3 killer in USA

Medical errors are No. 3 cause of death in the U.S., after heart disease and cancer, according to a new tally by researchers at Johns Hopkins University.

Los Angeles Times

May 4, 2016, 12:00 p.m.

Heart disease, cancer … and medical errors?

A new tally of mistakes made in American hospitals suggests that medical errors are the No. 3 cause of death in the U.S. At least 250,000 deaths each year can be attributed to medical care that has gone awry, according to a report published Tuesday in the British Medical Journal.

That means deadly mistakes are responsible for more fatalities than chronic respiratory disease, which currently ranks third on the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s list of leading causes of death.

In 2014, 147,101 deaths in the U.S. were caused by chronic lower respiratory diseases, according to the CDC. Heart disease was the top killer that year with 614,348 deaths, and cancer ranked second with 591,699 deaths.

Fatal medical errors include cases in which patients received medications they were allergic to and instances in which patients died of preventable infections, among many other possibilities. Doctors and nurses are not necessarily involved, experts said — sometimes a faulty computer program may be to blame.

“Medical care has become really complex,” said Dr. David Classen, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Utah who was not involved in the study. “It’s no longer one single physician taking care of a single person at a hospital. It’s these huge groups of people now, and mistakes get made.”

The authors, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said that while human error is inevitable, medical errors don’t have to be.

The CDC currently has no good way of tracking deaths that result from medical mistakes, the authors wrote. The agency’s statistics are pulled from the International Classification of Diseases codes that appear on death certificates. These codes were instituted in 1949 and do not include any that indicate a death was the result of a mistake in the hospital.

“At that time it was under-recognized that diagnostic errors, medical mistakes and the absence of safety nets could result in someone’s death,” Dr. Martin Makary, the surgeon who led the study, said in a statement. “Because of that, medical errors were unintentionally excluded from national health statistics.”

The estimate in the new report is based on four previous studies that analyzed death rate data from 2000 to 2008. Makary and coauthor Michael Daniel, a research fellow in the Hopkins department of surgery, extrapolated those findings to the total number of hospital admissions in 2013 to arrive at the 250,000 figure.

They note, however, that this estimate is probably low. The studies they relied on considered only errors that could be documented in health records, and included only deaths of patients being cared for in hospitals, they said.

One way to get a better picture of the toll of medical errors would be to create death certificates that ask whether a preventable complication in the patient’s medical care contributed to the death, the authors wrote. That could help experts predict when and where medical errors are most likely to occur — and take steps to prevent them.

“Standardized data collection and reporting processes are needed to build up an accurate national picture of the problem,” they wrote. “Measuring the consequences of medical care on patient outcomes is an important prerequisite to creating a culture of learning from our mistakes.”

 http://touch.latimes.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-87066687/

 

Dr Sanaa Ismail – cause of another patient death

NEW SOUTH WALES: Saudi-trained anaesthetist Dr Sanaa Mohammed ISMAIL is sacked after toe surgery patient dies.

Overseas-trained doctor sanctioned over the death of a Sydney teenager after a golfball accident in 2005 at Royal North Shore Hospital, St Leonards NSW, has been sacked from country Dubbo Base Hospital, western New South Wales, after a patient died on her watch.

Anaesthetists ISMAIL, 50, was found guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct by medical authorities on 13/4/16 after a 56-year-old man died following surgery on his infected big toe at Dubbo Base Hospital.

MEAG COMMENT:  Dr ISMAIL clearly has a reading problem, note-taking problem.  Perhaps she cannot read English?  Little did country folk know she was in their hospital after an appalling track record in Sydney.

Bacchus Marsh Hospital baby toll hits 50

VICTORIA:  Infant deaths soar to 12 and 43 botched births probed at Bacchus Marsh Hospital, outer Melbourne.

Twelve babies have now been found to have died in potentially avoidable circumstances at the Bacchus Marsh and Melton Regional Hospital.

Also, a further escalation of the scandal engulfing the regional health service.

For further see http://www.heraldsun.com.au

 

 

VIC Govt refused to name Sunshine hep B hospital

MELBOURNE, VICTORIA:  Hundreds of Sunshine Hospital patients are waiting to see if they have been infected with hepatitis B as authorities refuse to disclose full details of a major public health scare.

The Herald Sun understands cases are related to the hospital’s obstetrics department but the health department and other medical authorities refuse to say where the incidents of concern took place.

MORE THAN 650 PATIENTS FACING HEPATITIS B SCARE

More than 650 Melbourne patients may have been exposed to the potentially deadly virus by an infected healthcare worker over the past three years.

The department of health has launched an investigation into patients’ exposure to the bloodborne virus after the unnamed healthcare worker was recently diagnosed.

More than 650 Melbourne patients may have been exposed to the virus.

Lorraine Long, from the Medical Error Action Group, slammed the government for keeping secret the hospital at the centre of controversy, saying Victorians had a right to know.

“It really concerns me when the government releases some parts and then keeps the rest secret, I think sometimes they don’t know what to do,” Ms Long said.

She said the numbers were “colossal” and feared at-risk patients might not have seen the letter sent to notify them.

The husband of a woman, who had undergone two C-sections within the past three years at the hospital, said his wife was disturbed after receiving a letter in the mail.

“It’s alarming because my partner is still breastfeeding our youngest child,” he said.

“They’re not giving us much information, so without knowing, we’re panicking thinking could she be harming our child?

“We can’t get in to see the GP ’til Monday.”

Victoria’s acting chief health officer, Dr Roscoe Taylor, confirmed on Wednesday the health department was contacting 654 selected ­patients as a “precautionary” measure so they could be tested for the virus.

Sunshine Hospital did not return the Herald Sun’s calls last night.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/authorities-slammed-for-refusing-to-name-hepatitis-b-hospital/news-story/95dcf62cc77471f88e8706833f2a52d2

 

 

NSW Health Minister in denial

St Vincent’s hospital cancer patient cover-up

7News Sydney

Published Thursday, April 7th, 18:56 hours

Health Minister Jillian Skinner claims she first heard about under-dosing of cancer patients at St Vincent’s Hospital in the media in February but a letter tells a different story. Bryan Seymour reports…

https://au.news.yahoo.com/video/watch/31297089/st-vincent-s-hospital-cancer-patient-cover-up/

St Vincent’s Hospital chemo cover-up

SYDNEY:  St Vincent’s Hospital, Darlinghurst, covered up the chemotherapy underdosing of up to 78 patients treated by one doctor – John GRYGIEL – according to a damning government-ordered review that has prompted a public apology from the hospital’s CEO.

The report revealed 30 of the head and neck cancer patients treated “off protocol” with the medication carboplatin by oncologist Dr John GRYGIEL had since died – 23 of them from cancer.

MEAG COMMENT:  The Coroner is required to investigate the 23 deaths, not NSW Health Department.

SA sacks pathology head over PSA test disgrace

SOUTH AUSTRALIA: State Health Minister Jack Snelling has lashed out at the state’s public health pathology provider for covering up the fact that about 100 men received PSA test results indicating false positives for prostate cancer.

SA Pathology executive director Ken BARR has been sacked and an independent review has been ordered.  The errors were uncovered when a suspicious urologist ordered new tests for about 30 patients at a different laboratory and they returned negative results.

“It is completely unacceptable for me to be being told by journalists about a problem long before I’ve had an opportunity to be appropriately briefed by the department,” Mr Snelling told ABC radio.  He also took aim at SA Pathology’s “cryptic statements” about the bungle.

One statement reads: “As part of our continuous quality improvement program, SA Pathology regularly reviews its tests.

“Whilst our PSA results have been highly accurate and reliable in the core range, we have moved to improve values below 0.15ug/L, where some patients have required repeat testing.”

Mr Snelling says this is far from the “full and frank disclosure” both he and the public expect.

“I don’t think anyone reading that would think that there’s a problem … and it’s disgraceful.

“I do think that there are a very small number of people in SA Health who don’t think they’re accountable to anyone.”

SA Health chief executive David Swan says he found out about the inaccurate test results on Saturday.

“I am very concerned that patients have been led to believe they may have prostate cancer by false readings,” he says.

SA urologist Dr Peter Sutherland, who discovered the error, says it’s possible some men have had unnecessary radiotherapy.

4 April 2016

Midwife may face birth death charges

MELBOURNE:  A Coroner recommended criminal action be considered against a midwife after finding her gross failures contributed to a mother’s death after a home birth.

Coroner Peter White said while Gaye DEMANUELE had taken steps to deregister herself, she kept practising as a midwife after Caroline Lovell, 36 died on 24 January 2012, from blood loss after the birth of her daughter.

Coroner White said Mrs Lovell begged for an ambulance to be called but was left in the birthing pool for more than an hour after delivery.  He said Mrs Lovell fell unconscious and had to be lifted out and taken to hospital, where she later died.

“I find Caroline literally begged for ambulance to be called,” Coroner White said.

Coroner White said Ms DEMANUELE failed to assess Mrs Lovell’s medical history, failed to create a safe environment for the delivery and neglected to properly gauge her blood pressure after the delivery.

“I find that this death was preventable,” he ruled in the Melbourne Coroner’s Court yesterday, recommending the DPP look into possible action against Ms DEMANUELE.

Mesh surgery investigation at last

THE state’s health watchdog has sharpened its focus on investigations relating to Australia’s unfolding women’s prolapse transvaginal mesh disaster after serious complaints, including that a doctor allegedly falsely claimed he had ethics approval to conduct a mesh device study at a major public hospital.

Medical Error Action Group founder Lorraine Long said it was appropriate to refer to the mesh device “disaster” because of the failure of regulators in Australia and overseas to adequately assess the devices, monitor problems and respond quickly.

The Therapeutic Goods Administration’s admission its assessment of the mesh devices from 2003 was not “mature” and lacked rigour was not a surprise, Ms Long said.

“That says everything, doesn’t it? It’s not good enough,” she said.

http://www.thecourier.com.au/story/3800739/watchdog-focuses-on-mesh/?cs=2452

http://www.coomaexpress.com.au/story/3800739/watchdog-focuses-on-mesh/?cs=4081.

Chemo doc is “out” of St Vincent’s Hospital

SYDNEY:  The doctor responsible for giving dozens of chemotherapy patients incorrect drug dosages at St Vincent’s Hospital, Darlinghurst, has taken immediate leave and will never return to work.

Up to 70 cancer patients were given incorrect low doses of the chemotherapy drug carboplatin over a 3-year period, with five suffering recurrences of their disease.

Oncologist John GRYGIEL gave the low doses of carboplatin – about a half to one-third of the normal amounts – to neck and head patients.  The ABC exposed the scandal.

The hospital knew about the errors since at least August 2015 but failed to tell any patients for about six months.