Medical Errors Cited in Institute of
Medicine Report 11/29/99
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Press
Release: Washington, D.C., November 29, 1999
- Reducing one of the nation's leading causes of death and injury
- medical errors - will require rigorous changes throughout the
health care system, including mandatory reporting requirements,
says a new report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the
National Academies. The report lays out a comprehensive strategy
for government, industry, consumers, and health providers to
reduce medical errors, and it calls on Congress to create a
national patient safety center to develop new tools and systems
needed to address persistent problems.
The human cost of medical errors is high. Based on the findings
of one major study, medical errors kill some 44,000 people in
U.S. hospitals each year. Another study puts the number much
higher, at 98,000. Even using the lower estimate, more people die
from medical mistakes each year than from highway accidents,
breast cancer, or AIDS.
Moreover, while errors may be more easily detected in hospitals,
they afflict every health care setting: day-surgery and
outpatient clinics, retail pharmacies, nursing homes, as well as
home care. Deaths from medication errors that take place both in
and out of hospitals - more than 7,000 annually - exceed those
from workplace injuries.
"These stunningly high rates of medical errors - resulting
in deaths, permanent disability, and unnecessary suffering - are
simply unacceptable in a medical system that promises first to
'do no harm,'" says William Richardson, chair of the
committee that wrote the report and president and chief executive
officer of the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Battle Creek, Mich.
"Our recommendations are intended to encourage the health
care system to take the actions necessary to improve safety. We
must have a health care system that makes it easy to do things
right and hard to do them wrong."
The know-how exists to prevent many of these mistakes, and so the
committee sets as a minimum goal a 50 percent reduction in errors
over the next five years. "We believe that with adequate
leadership, attention, and resources, improvements can be
made," says Richardson. "As we say in the report, 'It
may be part of human nature to err, but it is also part of human
nature to create solutions, find better alternatives, and meet
the challenges ahead.'"
The majority of medical errors do not result from individual
recklessness, the report says, but from basic flaws in the way
the health system is organized. Stocking patient-care units in
hospitals, for example, with certain full-strength drugs - even
though they are toxic unless diluted - has resulted in deadly
mistakes. And illegible writing in medical records has resulted
in administration of a drug for which the patient has a known
allergy. Medical knowledge and technology grow so rapidly that it
is difficult for practitioners to keep up. And the health care
system itself is evolving so quickly that it often lacks
coordination. For example, when a patient is treated by several
practitioners, they often do not have complete information about
the medicines prescribed or the patient's illnesses.
To achieve a better safety record, the committee recommends a
four-part plan designed to create both financial and regulatory
incentives that will lead to a safer health care system. Taken
together, these recommendations and findings represent a
systematic way to design safety into the process of care. They
should be evaluated after five years to assess progress in making
the health system safer.
A National Center for Patient Safety
Health care is a decade or more behind other high-risk industries
in its attention to ensuring basic safety. The chance of dying in
a domestic airline flight or at the workplace has declined
dramatically in recent decades, in part because of the creation
of federal agencies that focus on safety. Using that model,
Congress should create a center for patient safety within the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the committee
said. This center would set national safety goals, track progress
in meeting them, and invest in research to learn more about
preventing mistakes.
The center also would act as a clearinghouse, an objective source
of the latest information on patient safety for the nation. For
example, if a health care organization improves safety, its
practices should be shared with a broad audience, and the center,
working with others, would help provide the needed channel.
Administratively, the home for the center should be in the HHS
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research; Congress would need
to spend $30 million to $35 million to set it up, the committee
says. This estimate is based on the kind of work the center would
perform and on investments in issues of similar magnitude, as
well as safety research by the public and private sectors.
Funding would need to grow to at least $100 million, a little
more than 1 percent of the $8.8 billion spent each year as a
result of medical errors that cause serious harm.
Mandatory and Voluntary Reporting Systems
The committee defines "error" as the failure to
complete a planned action as intended or the use of a wrong plan
to achieve an aim, and notes that not all errors result in harm.
To learn about medical treatments that lead to serious injury or
death and to prevent future occurrences, the committee recommends
establishing a nationwide, mandatory public reporting system.
Hospitals first, and eventually other places where patients get
care, would be responsible for reporting such events to state
governments. Currently, about a third of the states have their
own mandatory reporting requirements.
While the committee believes that the public has a right to know
about errors resulting in serious harm, it nevertheless
recommends federal legislation to protect the confidentiality of
certain information. Specifically, data should be protected on
medical mistakes that have no serious consequences, where the
information is collected and analyzed solely for the purpose of
improving safety and quality. This would encourage the growth of
voluntary, confidential reporting systems so that practitioners
and health care organizations can correct problems before serious
harm occurs. Without such legislation, fears that reported
information might ultimately be subpoenaed and used in lawsuits
could discourage participation by health care organizations and
providers.
Role of Consumers, Professionals, and Accreditation Groups
A top-down system won't be enough to bring about the kind of
fundamental changes needed to improve patient safety, the report
says. Pressure from all directions will be necessary. Public and
private purchasers of health care insurance - such as businesses
buying coverage for their workers - must make safety a prime
concern in their contracting decisions. Doing so will create
financial incentives for health care organizations and providers
to make needed changes.
One reason consumers do not push harder for patient safety is
that they assume accrediting and certifying organizations, as
well as local and state regulators, do it for them. But
regulators and accreditors should make patient safety a key
component of their evaluations, the committee says. For most
health care professionals, there is no assessment of clinical
performance once they get their licenses to practice, for
example. Licensing and certifying bodies should implement
periodic re-examinations of doctors, nurses, and other key
providers, based on both competence and knowledge of safety
practices.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which regulates
prescription and over-the-counter drugs and medical devices,
should increase its attention to public safety. Efforts should be
made to eliminate similar-sounding drug names as well as
confusing labels and packaging that foster mistakes. Numerous
studies have documented errors in prescribing medications and
dispensing by pharmacists and unintentional mistakes on the part
of the patient.
Building a Culture of Safety
Health care organizations must create an environment in which
safety will become a top priority. This culture of safety means
designing systems geared to preventing, detecting, and minimizing
hazards and the likelihood of error - not attaching blame to
individuals. The report stresses the need for leadership by
executives and clinicians, and for accountability for patient
safety by boards of trustees. That means creating and adequately
funding systems to monitor safety. Well-understood safety
principles should be adopted, such as designing jobs and working
conditions for safety; standardizing and simplifying equipment,
supplies, and processes; and avoiding reliance on memory.
All hospitals and health care organizations should implement
proven medication safety practices, the committee says, such as
using automated drug-ordering systems. Medication errors occur
frequently in hospitals, yet many are not making use of known
methods for improving safety. Patients themselves could provide a
major safety check in most hospitals, clinics, and practices.
They need to know which medications they are taking, the
appearance, and the side effects. They also should be responsible
for notifying their doctors of medication discrepancies and the
occurrence of side effects.
There are no "magic bullets," the report emphasizes; no
one part of this plan will be sufficient to bring about the
degree of change needed. And responsibility for taking action
should not be borne by any single group of providers, but must be
addressed by all parts of the health care enterprise.
This report is the first in a series expected to be released
through an IOM initiative to develop a strategy for improving the
quality of health care in America. The study was funded by the
National Research Council and the Commonwealth Fund. The
Institute of Medicine is a private, nonprofit institution that
provides health policy advice under a congressional charter
granted to the National Academy of Sciences.
Copies of "To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health
System" are available from the National Academy Press at
http://books.nap.edu/catalog/9728.html; tel. (202) 334-3313 or
1-800-624-6242. The cost of the pre-publication report is $45.00
(prepaid) plus shipping charges of $4.50 for the first copy and
$.95 for each additional copy.
SOURCE: INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE
Division of Health Care Services
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