Medical error

Last updated

A medical error is a preventable adverse effect of care ("iatrogenesis"), whether or not it is evident or harmful to the patient. This might include an inaccurate or incomplete diagnosis or treatment of a disease, injury, syndrome, behavior, infection, or other ailments.

Contents

Definitions

A medical error occurs when a health-care provider chooses an inappropriate method of care or improperly executes an appropriate method of care. Medical errors are often described as human errors in healthcare. [1]

There are many types of medical error, from minor to major, [2] and causality is often poorly determined. [3] [ needs update ]

There are many taxonomies for classifying medical errors. [4]

Definitions of diagnostic error

There is no single definition of diagnostic error, reflecting in part the dual nature of the word diagnosis, which is both a noun (the name of the assigned disease; diagnosis is a label) and a verb (the act of arriving at a diagnosis; diagnosis is a process). At the present time, there are at least 4 definitions of diagnostic error in active use:

Graber et al. defined diagnostic error as a diagnosis that is wrong, egregiously delayed, or missed altogether. [5] This is a "label" definition, and can only be applied in retrospect, using some gold standard (for example, autopsy findings or a definitive laboratory test) to confirm the correct diagnosis. Many diagnostic errors fit several of these criteria; the categories overlap.

There are two process-related definitions: Schiff et al. defined diagnostic error as any breakdown in the diagnostic process, including both errors of omission and errors of commission. [6] Similarly, Singh et al. defined diagnostic error as a "missed opportunity" in the diagnostic process, based on retrospective review. [7]

In its landmark report, Improving Diagnosis in Health Care, The National Academy of Medicine proposed a new, hybrid definition that includes both label- and process-related aspects: "A diagnostic error is failure to establish an accurate and timely explanation of the patient's health problem(s) or to communicate that explanation to the patient." [8] This is the only definition that specifically includes the patient in the definition wording.

Definition of prescription error

A prescription or medication error, as defined by the National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention, is an event that is preventable that leads to or has led to unsuitable use of medication or has led to harm to the person during the period of time that the medicine is controlled by a clinician, the person, or the consumer. [9] Some adverse drug events can also be related to medication errors. [10]

Impact

One extrapolation suggests that 180,000 people die each year partly as a result of iatrogenic injury. [11] The World Health Organization registered 14 million new cases and 8.2 million cancer-related deaths in 2012. It estimated that the number of cases could increase by 70% through 2032. As the number of cancer patients receiving treatment increases, hospitals around the world are seeking ways to improve patient safety, to emphasize traceability and raise efficiency in their cancer treatment processes. [12] Children are often more vulnerable to a negative outcome when a medication error occurs as they have age-related differences in how their bodies absorb, metabolize, and excrete pharmaceutical agents. [13]

UK

In the UK, an estimated 850,000 medical errors occur each year, costing over £2 billion (estimated in the year 2000). [14] The accuracy of this estimate is not clear. Criticism has included the statistical handling of measurement errors in the report, [15] and significant subjectivity in determining which deaths were "avoidable" or due to medical error, and an erroneous assumption that 100% of patients would have survived if optimal care had been provided. [16]

A 2006 study found that medication errors are among the most common medical mistakes, harming at least 1.5 million people every year. According to the study, 400,000 preventable drug-related injuries occur each year in hospitals, 800,000 in long-term care settings, and roughly 530,000 among Medicare recipients in outpatient clinics. The report stated that these are likely to be conservative estimates. In 2000 alone, the extra medical costs incurred by preventable drug-related injuries approximated $887 millionand the study looked only at injuries sustained by Medicare recipients, a subset of clinic visitors. None of these figures take into account lost wages and productivity or other costs. [17]

US

According to a 2002 Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality report, about 7,000 people were estimated to die each year from medication errors – about 16 percent more deaths than the number attributable to work-related injuries (6,000 deaths).[ citation needed ] One in five Americans (22%) report that they or a family member have experienced a medical error of some kind. [18] A 2000 Institute of Medicine report estimated that medical errors result in between 44,000 and 98,000 preventable deaths and 1,000,000 excess injuries each year in U.S. hospitals. [19] [20] [21] A 2001 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association of seven Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers estimated that for roughly every 10,000 patients admitted to the select hospitals, one patient died who would have lived for three months or more in good cognitive health had "optimal" care been provided. [16] A 2001 study estimated that 1% of hospital admissions result in an adverse event due to negligence. [22] Identification or errors may be a challenge in these studies, and mistakes may be more common than reported as these studies identify only mistakes that led to measurable adverse events occurring soon after the errors. Independent review of doctors' treatment plans suggests that decision-making could be improved in 14% of admissions; many of the benefits would have delayed manifestations. [23] Even this number may be an underestimate. One study suggests that adults in the United States receive only 55% of recommended care. [24] At the same time, a second study found that 30% of care in the United States may be unnecessary. [25] For example, if a doctor fails to order a mammogram that is past due, this mistake will not show up in the first type of study. [22] In addition, because no adverse event occurred during the short follow-up of the study, the mistake also would not show up in the second type of study [23] because only the principal treatment plans were critiqued. However, the mistake would be recorded in the third type of study. If a doctor recommends an unnecessary treatment or test, it may not show in any of these types of studies.

Cause of death on United States death certificates, statistically compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), are coded in the International Classification of Disease (ICD), which does not include codes for human and system factors. [26] [27]

Causes

The research literature showed that medical errors are caused by errors of commission and errors of omission. [28] Errors of omission are made when providers did not take action when they should have, while errors of commission occur when decisions and action are delayed. [28] Commission and omission errors have also been attributed with communication failures. [29] [30]

Medical errors can be associated with inexperienced physicians and nurses, new procedures, extremes of age, and complex or urgent care. [31] Poor communication (whether in one's own language or, as may be the case for medical tourists, another language), improper documentation, illegible handwriting, spelling errors, inadequate nurse-to-patient ratios, and similarly named medications are also known to contribute to the problem. [32] [33] Misdiagnosis may be associated with individual characteristics of the patient or due to the patient multimorbidity. [34] [35] Patient actions or inactions may also contribute significantly to medical errors. [30] [29]

Healthcare complexity

Complicated technologies, [36] [37] powerful drugs, intensive care, rare and multiple diseases, [38] and prolonged hospital stay can contribute to medical errors. [39] In turn, medical errors from carelessness or improper use of medical devices often lead to severe injuries or death. Since 2015, 60 injuries and 23 deaths have been caused by misplaced feeding tubes while using the Cortrak2 EAS system. The FDA recalled Avanos Medical's Cortrak system in 2022 due to its severity and the high toll associated with the medical error. [40]

Complexity makes diagnosis especially challenging. There are less than 200 symptoms listed in Wikipedia, [41] but there are probably more than 10,000 known diseases. The World Health Organization's system for the International Classification of Disease, 9th Edition from 1979 listed over 14,000 diagnosis codes. [42] Textbooks of medicine often describe the most typical presentations of a disease, but in many conditions patients may have variable presentations instead of the classical signs and symptoms. To add complexity, the signs and symptoms of a given condition change over time; in the early stages the signs and symptoms may be absent or minimal, and then these evolve as the condition progresses. Diagnosis is often challenging in infants and children who can't clearly communicate their symptoms, and in the elderly, where signs and symptoms may be muted or absent. [43]

There are more than 7000 rare diseases alone, and in aggregate these are not uncommon: Roughly 1 in 17 patients will be diagnosed with a rare disease over their lifetime. [44] Physicians may have only learned a handful of these during their education and training.

System and process design

In 2000, The Institute of Medicine released "To Err is Human," which asserted that the problem in medical errors is not bad people in health care—it is that good people are working in bad systems that need to be made safer. [19]

Poor communication and unclear lines of authority of physicians, nurses, and other care providers are also contributing factors. [45] Disconnected reporting systems within a hospital can result in fragmented systems in which numerous hand-offs of patients results in lack of coordination and errors. [46]

Other factors include the impression that action is being taken by other groups within the institution, reliance on automated systems to prevent error., [47] and inadequate systems to share information about errors, which hampers analysis of contributory causes and improvement strategies. [48] Cost-cutting measures by hospitals in response to reimbursement cutbacks can compromise patient safety. [49] In emergencies, patient care may be rendered in areas poorly suited for safe monitoring. The American Institute of Architects has identified concerns for the safe design and construction of health care facilities. [50] Infrastructure failure is also a concern. According to the WHO, 50% of medical equipment in developing countries is only partly usable due to lack of skilled operators or parts. As a result, diagnostic procedures or treatments cannot be performed, leading to substandard treatment.

The Joint Commission's Annual Report on Quality and Safety 2007 found that inadequate communication between healthcare providers, or between providers and the patient and family members, was the root cause of over half the serious adverse events in accredited hospitals. [51] Other leading causes included inadequate assessment of the patient's condition, and poor leadership or training.

Competency, education, and training

Variations in healthcare provider training & experience [45] [52] and failure to acknowledge the prevalence and seriousness of medical errors also increase the risk. [53] [54] The so-called July effect occurs when new residents arrive at teaching hospitals, causing an increase in medication errors according to a study of data from 1979 to 2006. [55] [56]

Human factors and ergonomics

A plate written in a hospital, containing drugs that are similar in spelling or writing Okunusu,yazilisi yakin ilaclar.jpg
A plate written in a hospital, containing drugs that are similar in spelling or writing

Cognitive errors commonly encountered in medicine were initially identified by psychologists Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman in the early 1970s. Jerome Groopman, author of How Doctors Think , says these are "cognitive pitfalls", biases which cloud our logic. For example, a practitioner may overvalue the first data encountered, skewing their thinking. Another example may be where the practitioner recalls a recent or dramatic case that quickly comes to mind, coloring the practitioner's judgement. Another pitfall is where stereotypes may prejudice thinking. [57] Pat Croskerry describes clinical reasoning as an interplay between intuitive, subconscious thought (System 1) and deliberate, conscious rational consideration (System 2). In this framework, many cognitive errors reflect over-reliance on System 1 processing, although cognitive errors may also sometimes involve System 2. [58]

Sleep deprivation has also been cited as a contributing factor in medical errors. [59] One study found that being awake for over 24 hours caused medical interns to double or triple the number of preventable medical errors, including those that resulted in injury or death. [60] The risk of car crash after these shifts increased by 168%, and the risk of near miss by 460%. [61] Interns admitted falling asleep during lectures, during rounds, and even during surgeries. [61] Night shifts are associated with worse surgeon performance during laparoscopic surgeries. [59]

Practitioner risk factors include fatigue, [62] [63] [64] depression, [65] and burnout. [66] Factors related to the clinical setting include diverse patients, unfamiliar settings, time pressures, and increased patient-to-nurse staffing ratio increases. [67] Drug names that look alike or sound alike are also a problem. [68]

Errors in interpreting medical images are often perceptual instead of "fact-based"; these errors are often caused by failures of attention or vision. [69] For example, visual illusions can cause radiologists to misperceive images. [70]

A number of Information Technology (IT) systems have been developed to detect and prevent medication errors, the most common type of medical errors. [71] These systems screen data such as ICD-9 codes, pharmacy and laboratory data. Rules are used to look for changes in medication orders, and abnormal laboratory results that may be indicative of medication errors and/or adverse drug events. [72]

Examples

Errors can include misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis, administration of the wrong drug to the wrong patient or in the wrong way, giving multiple drugs that interact negatively, surgery on an incorrect site, failure to remove all surgical instruments, failure to take the correct blood type into account, or incorrect record-keeping. A 10th type of error is ones which are not watched for by researchers, such as RNs failing to program an IV pump to give a full dose of IV antibiotics or other medication.

Errors in diagnosis

According to a 2016 study from Johns Hopkins Medicine, medical errors are the third-leading cause of death in the United States. [73] The projected cost of these errors to the U.S. economy is approximately $20 billion, 87% of which are direct increases in medical costs of providing services to patient affected by medical errors. [74] Medical errors can increase average hospital costs by as much as $4,769 per patient. [75] One common type of medical error stems from x-rays and medical imaging: failing to see or notice signs of disease on an image. [69] The retrospective "miss" rate among abnormal imaging studies is reported to be as high as 30% (the real-life error rate is much lower, around 4-5%, because not all images are abnormal), [76] and up to 20% of missed findings result in long-term adverse effects. [77] [78]

A large study reported several cases where patients were wrongly told that they were HIV-negative when the physicians erroneously ordered and interpreted HTLV (a closely related virus) testing rather than HIV testing. In the same study, >90% of HTLV tests were ordered erroneously. [79] A 2008 literature review in The American Journal of Medicine estimated that between 10 and 15% of physician diagnoses are erroneous. [80]

Misdiagnosis of lower extremity cellulitis is estimated to occur in 30% of patients, leading to unnecessary hospitalizations in 85% and unnecessary antibiotic use in 92%. Collectively, these errors lead to between 50,000 and 130,000 unnecessary hospitalizations and between $195 and $515 million in avoidable health care spending annually in the United States. [81]

Misdiagnosis of psychological disorders

Female sexual desire sometimes used to be diagnosed as female hysteria.[ citation needed ]

Sensitivities to foods and food allergies risk being misdiagnosed as the anxiety disorder orthorexia.

Studies have found that bipolar disorder has often been misdiagnosed as major depression. Its early diagnosis necessitates that clinicians pay attention to the features of the patient's depression and also look for present or prior hypomanic or manic symptomatology. [82]

The misdiagnosis of schizophrenia is also a common problem. There may be long delays of patients getting a correct diagnosis of this disorder. [83]

Delayed sleep phase disorder is often confused with: psychophysiological insomnia; depression; psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, ADHD or ADD; other sleep disorders; or school refusal. Practitioners of sleep medicine point out the dismally low rate of accurate diagnosis of the disorder, and have often asked for better physician education on sleep disorders. [84]

Cluster headaches are often misdiagnosed, mismanaged, or undiagnosed for many years; they may be confused with migraine, "cluster-like" headache (or mimics), CH subtypes, other TACs ( trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias), or other types of primary or secondary headache syndrome. [85] Cluster-like head pain may be diagnosed as secondary headache rather than cluster headache. [86] Under-recognition of CH by health care professionals is reflected in consistent findings in Europe and the United States that the average time to diagnosis is around seven years. [87]

Asperger syndrome and autism tend to get undiagnosed or delayed recognition and delayed diagnosis [88] [89] or misdiagnosed. [90] Delayed or mistaken diagnosis can be traumatic for individuals and families; for example, misdiagnosis can lead to medications that worsen behavior. [91] [92]

The DSM-5 field trials included "test-retest reliability" which involved different clinicians doing independent evaluations of the same patient—a new approach to the study of diagnostic reliability. [93]

Outpatient vs. inpatient

Misdiagnosis is the leading cause of medical error in outpatient facilities. Since the National Institute of Medicine's 1999 report, "To Err is Human," found up to 98,000 hospital patients die from preventable medical errors in the U.S. each year, government and private sector efforts have focused on inpatient safety.

Medical prescriptions

While in 2000 the Committee on Quality of Health Care in America affirmed medical mistakes are an "unavoidable outcome of learning to practice medicine", [94] at 2019 the commonly accepted link between prescribing skills and clinical clerkships was not yet demonstrated by the available data [95] and in the U.S. legibility of handwritten prescriptions has been indirectly responsible for at least 7,000 deaths annually. [96]

Prescription errors concern ambiguous abbreviations, the right spelling of the full name of drugs: improper use of the nomenclature, of decimal points, unit or rate expressions; legibility and proper instructions; miscalculations of the posology (quantity, route and frequency of administration, duration of the treatment, dosage form and dosage strength); lack of information about patients (e.g. allergy, declining renal function) or reported in the medical document. [95] There were an estimated 66 million clinically significant medication errors in the British NHS in 2018. The resulting adverse drug reactions are estimated to cause around 700 deaths a year in England and to contribute to around 22,000 deaths a year. The British researchers did not find any evidence that error rates were lower in other countries, and the global cost was estimated at $42 billion per year. [97]

Medication errors in hospital include omissions, delayed dosing and incorrect medication administrations. Medication errors are not always readily identified, but can be reported using case note reviews or incident reporting systems. [98] There are pharmacist-led interventions that can reduce the incident of medication error. [99] Electronic prescribing has been shown to reduce prescribing errors by up to 30%. [100]

Mitigation (after an error)

Mistakes can have a strongly negative emotional impact on the doctors who commit them. [101] [102] [103] [104]

Recognizing that mistakes are not isolated events

Some physicians recognize that adverse outcomes from errors usually do not happen because of an isolated error and actually reflect system problems. [52] This concept is often referred to as the Swiss Cheese Model. [105] This is the concept that there are layers of protection for clinicians and patients to prevent mistakes from occurring. Therefore, even if a doctor or nurse makes a small error (e.g. incorrect dose of drug written on a drug chart by doctor), this is picked up before it actually affects patient care (e.g. pharmacist checks the drug chart and rectifies the error). [105] Such mechanisms include: Practical alterations (e.g.-medications that cannot be given through IV, are fitted with tubing which means they cannot be linked to an IV even if a clinician makes a mistake and tries to), [106] systematic safety processes (e.g. all patients must have a Waterlow score assessment and falls assessment completed on admission), [106] and training programmes/continuing professional development courses [106] are measures that may be put in place.

There may be several breakdowns in processes to allow one adverse outcome. [107] In addition, errors are more common when other demands compete for a physician's attention. [108] [109] [110] However, placing too much blame on the system may not be constructive. [52]

Placing the practice of medicine in perspective

Essayists imply that the potential to make mistakes is part of what makes being a physician rewarding and without this potential the rewards of medical practice would be diminished. Laurence states that "Everybody dies, you and all of your patients. All relationships end. Would you want it any other way? [...] Don't take it personally". [111] Seder states "[...] if I left medicine, I would mourn its loss as I've mourned the passage of my poetry. On a daily basis, it is both a privilege and a joy to have the trust of patients and their families and the camaraderie of peers. There is no challenge to make your blood race like that of a difficult case, no mind game as rigorous as the challenging differential diagnosis, and though the stakes are high, so are the rewards." [112]

Disclosing mistakes

Forgiveness, which is part of many cultural traditions, may be important in coping with medical mistakes. [113] Among other healing processes, it can be accomplished through the use of communicative disclosure guidelines. [114]

To oneself

Inability to forgive oneself may create a cycle of distress and increased likelihood of a future error. [115]

However, Wu et al. suggest "...those who coped by accepting responsibility were more likely to make constructive changes in practice, but [also] to experience more emotional distress." [116] It may be helpful to consider the much larger number of patients who are not exposed to mistakes and are helped by medical care. [112]

To patients

Gallagher et al. state that patients want "information about what happened, why the error happened, how the error's consequences will be mitigated, and how recurrences will be prevented." [117] Interviews with patients and families reported in a 2003 book by Rosemary Gibson and Janardan Prasad Singh, put forward that those who have been harmed by medical errors face a "wall of silence" and "want an acknowledgement" of the harm. [118] With honesty, "healing can begin not just for the patients and their families but also the doctors, nurses and others involved." In a line of experimental investigations, Annegret Hannawa et al. developed evidence-based disclosure guidelines under the scientific "Medical Error Disclosure Competence (MEDC)" framework. [114] [119]

A review of studies examining patients' views on investigations of medical harm found commonalities in their expectations of the process. For example, many wanted reviews to be transparent, trustworthy, and person-centred to meet their needs. People wanted to be meaningfully involved in the process and to be treated with respect and empathy. Justice-seekers wanted an honest account of what happened, the circumstances leading up to it, and measures to ensure it does not happen again. Processes that, for example, involved people independent of the organisation responsible for harm gave investigations credibility. [120] [121]

A 2005 study by Wendy Levinson of the University of Toronto showed surgeons discussing medical errors used the word "error" or "mistake" in only 57 percent of disclosure conversations and offered a verbal apology only 47 percent of the time. [122]

Patient disclosure is important in the medical error process. The current standard of practice at many hospitals is to disclose errors to patients when they occur. In the past, it was a common fear that disclosure to the patient would incite a malpractice lawsuit. Many physicians would not explain that an error had taken place, causing a lack of trust toward the healthcare community. In 2007, 34 states passed legislation that precludes any information from a physician's apology for a medical error from being used in malpractice court (even a full admission of fault). [123] This encourages physicians to acknowledge and explain mistakes to patients, keeping an open line of communication.

The American Medical Association's Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs states in its ethics code:

"Situations occasionally occur in which a patient suffers significant medical complications that may have resulted from the physician's mistake or judgment. In these situations, the physician is ethically required to inform the patient of all facts necessary to ensure understanding of what has occurred. Concern regarding legal liability which might result following truthful disclosure should not affect the physician's honesty with a patient."

From the American College of Physicians Ethics Manual: [124]

"In addition, physicians should disclose to patients information about procedural or judgment errors made in the course of care if such information is material to the patient's well-being. Errors do not necessarily constitute improper, negligent, or unethical behavior, but failure to disclose them may."

However, "there appears to be a gap between physicians' attitudes and practices regarding error disclosure. Willingness to disclose errors was associated with higher training level and a variety of patient-centered attitudes, and it was not lessened by previous exposure to malpractice litigation". [125] Hospital administrators may share these concerns. [126]

Consequently, in the United States, many states have enacted laws excluding expressions of sympathy after accidents as proof of liability.

Disclosure may actually reduce malpractice payments. [127] [128]

To non-physicians

In a study of physicians who reported having made a mistake, it was offered that disclosing to non-physician sources of support may reduce stress more than disclosing to physician colleagues. [129] This may be due to the finding that of the physicians in the same study, when presented with a hypothetical scenario of a mistake made by another colleague, only 32% of them would have unconditionally offered support. It is possible that greater benefit occurs when spouses are physicians. [130]

To other physicians

Discussing mistakes with other physicians is beneficial. [52] However, medical providers may be less forgiving of one another. [130] The reason is not clear, but one essayist has admonished, "Don't Take Too Much Joy in the Mistakes of Other Doctors." [131]

To the physician's institution

Disclosure of errors, especially "near misses", may be able to reduce subsequent errors in institutions that are capable of reviewing near misses. [132] However, doctors report that institutions may not be supportive of the doctor. [52]

Use of rationalization to cover up medical errors

Based on anecdotal and survey evidence, Banja [133] states that rationalization (making excuses) is very common among the medical profession to cover up medical errors.

By potential for harm to the patient

In a survey of more than 10,000 physicians in the United States, when asked the question, "Are there times when it's acceptable to cover up or avoid revealing a mistake if that mistake would not cause harm to the patient?", 19% answered yes, 60% answered no and 21% answered it depends. On the question, "Are there times when it is acceptable to cover up or avoid revealing a mistake if that mistake would potentially or likely harm the patient?", 2% answered yes, 95% answered no and 3% answered it depends. [134]

Standards and regulations for medical malpractice vary by country and jurisdiction within countries. Medical professionals may obtain professional liability insurances to offset the risk and costs of lawsuits based on medical malpractice.

Prevention

Medical care is frequently compared adversely to aviation; while many of the factors that lead to errors in both fields are similar, aviation's error management protocols are regarded as much more effective. [135] Safety measures include informed consent, the availability of a second practitioner's opinion, voluntary reporting of errors, root cause analysis, reminders to improve patient medication adherence, hospital accreditation, and systems to ensure review by experienced or specialist practitioners. [136]

A template has been developed for the design (both structure and operation) of hospital medication safety programmes, particularly for acute tertiary settings, [137] which emphasizes safety culture, infrastructure, data (error detection and analysis), communication and training.

Particularly to prevent the medication errors in the perspective of the intrathecal administration of local anaesthetics, there is a proposal to change the presentation and packaging of the appliances and agents used for this purpose. One spinal needle with a syringe prefilled with the local anaesthetic agents may be marketed in a single blister pack, which will be peeled open and presented before the anaesthesiologist conducting the procedure. [138]

Physician well-being has also been recommended as an indicator of healthcare quality given its association with patient safety outcomes. [139] A meta-analysis involving 21517 participants found that physicians with depressive symptoms had a 95% higher risk of reporting medical errors and that the association between physician depressive symptoms and medical errors is bidirectional [65]

Reporting requirements

In the United States, adverse medical event reporting systems were mandated in just over half (27) of the states as of 2014, a figure unchanged since 2007. [140] [141] In U.S. hospitals error reporting is a condition of payment by Medicare. [142] An investigation by the Office of Inspector General, Department of Health and Human Services released January 6, 2012 found that most errors are not reported and even in the case of errors that are reported and investigated changes are seldom made which would prevent them in the future. The investigation revealed that there was often lack of knowledge regarding which events were reportable and recommended that lists of reportable events be developed. [143]

Cause-specific preventive measures

Traditionally, errors are attributed to mistakes made by individuals, who then may be penalized. A common approach to respond to and prevent specific errors is requiring additional checks at particular points in the system, whose findings and detail of execution must be recorded. As an example, an error of free flow IV administration of heparin is approached by teaching staff how to use the IV systems and to use special care in setting the IV pump. While overall errors become less likely, the checks add to workload and may in themselves be a cause of additional errors. In some hospitals, a regular morbidity and mortality conference meeting is scheduled to discuss complications or deaths and learn from or improve the overall processes.

A newer model for improvement in medical care takes its origin from the work of W. Edwards Deming in a model of Total Quality Management.[ citation needed ] In this model, there is an attempt to identify the underlying system defect that allowed the error to occur. As an example, in such a system the error of free flow IV administration of heparin is dealt with by not using IV heparin and substituting subcutaneous administration of heparin, obviating the entire problem. However, such an approach presupposes available research showing that subcutaneous heparin is as effective as IV. Thus, most systems use a combination of approaches to the problem.[ citation needed ]

Anaesthesiology

The field of medicine that has taken the lead in systems approaches to safety is anaesthesiology. [144] Steps such as standardization of IV medications to 1 ml doses, national and international color-coding standards, and development of improved airway support devices has the field a model of systems improvement in care.

Medications

Reducing errors in prescribing, dispensing, compounding/formulating, labelling, and handling medications is a priority and has been the subject of systematic reviews and studies. Examples of areas to reduce medication errors and improve safety include: Training professionals or using databases to compare new and previous prescribed medications to prevent mistakes, also known as "medication reconciliation", [145] prescribing through an electronic medical record system and/or using decision support systems that has automatic checks in place, with computerized alerts or other novel technologies, the use of machine-readable barcodes, healthcare professional and patient training or supplementary educational programs, adding in an extra step for double checking prescriptions (both at the level of the healthcare professional and at the administrator level), using standardized protocols in the workplace that include a check-list, physical markings or writing on syringes to indicate correct doses, programmes that include the person being able to administer the medications themselves, ensuring that the workplace or environment is well-lit, monitoring and adjusting healthcare professional working hours, and the use of an interdisciplinary team. [10] There is weak evidence indicating that a number of these suggested interventions may be helpful in reducing errors or improving patient safety, however, in general, evidence supporting the best or most effective intervention for reducing errors not strong. [10] [146] Evidence supporting improvements aimed at reducing medical errors in medications for pediatric hospitalized patients is also very weak. [13]

Historically

As far back as the 1930s, pharmacists worked with physicians to select, from many options, the safest and most effective drugs available for use in hospitals. [147] The process is known as the Formulary System and the list of drugs is known as the Formulary. In the 1960s, hospitals implemented unit dose packaging and unit dose drug distribution systems to reduce the risk of wrong drug and wrong dose errors in hospitalized patients; [148] centralized sterile admixture services were shown to decrease the risks of contaminated and infected intravenous medications; [149] [150] and pharmacists provided drug information and clinical decision support directly to physicians to improve the safe and effective use of medications. [151] Pharmacists are recognized experts in medication safety and have made many contributions that reduce error and improve patient care over the last 50 years. More recently, governments have attempted to address issues like patient-pharmacist communication and consumer knowledge through measures like the Australian Government's Quality Use of Medicines policy.[ citation needed ]

Misconceptions

Some common misconceptions about medical error include:

See also

Related Research Articles

Internal medicine, also known as general internal medicine in Commonwealth nations, is a medical specialty for medical doctors focused on the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of internal diseases in adults. Medical practitioners of internal medicine are referred to as internists, or physicians in Commonwealth nations. Internists possess specialized skills in managing patients with undifferentiated or multi-system disease processes. They provide care to both hospitalized (inpatient) and ambulatory (outpatient) patients and often contribute significantly to teaching and research. Internists are qualified physicians who have undergone postgraduate training in internal medicine, and should not be confused with "interns", a term commonly used for a medical doctor who has obtained a medical degree but does not yet have a license to practice medicine unsupervised.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ambulatory care</span> Medical care provided for outpatients

Ambulatory care or outpatient care is medical care provided on an outpatient basis, including diagnosis, observation, consultation, treatment, intervention, and rehabilitation services. This care can include advanced medical technology and procedures even when provided outside of hospitals.

A patient is any recipient of health care services that are performed by healthcare professionals. The patient is most often ill or injured and in need of treatment by a physician, nurse, optometrist, dentist, veterinarian, or other health care provider.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polypharmacy</span> Use of five or more medications daily

Polypharmacy (polypragmasia) is an umbrella term to describe the simultaneous use of multiple medicines by a patient for their conditions. The term polypharmacy is often defined as regularly taking five or more medicines but there is no standard definition and the term has also been used in the context of when a person is prescribed 2 or more medications at the same time. Polypharmacy may be the consequence of having multiple long-term conditions, also known as multimorbidity and is more common in people who are older. In some cases, an excessive number of medications at the same time is worrisome, especially for people who are older with many chronic health conditions, because this increases the risk of an adverse event in that population. In many cases, polypharmacy cannot be avoided, but 'appropriate polypharmacy' practices are encouraged to decrease the risk of adverse effects. Appropriate polypharmacy is defined as the practice of prescribing for a person who has multiple conditions or complex health needs by ensuring that medications prescribed are optimized and follow 'best evidence' practices.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adverse drug reaction</span> Harmful, unintended result of medication

An adverse drug reaction (ADR) is a harmful, unintended result caused by taking medication. ADRs may occur following a single dose or prolonged administration of a drug or may result from the combination of two or more drugs. The meaning of this term differs from the term "side effect" because side effects can be beneficial as well as detrimental. The study of ADRs is the concern of the field known as pharmacovigilance. An adverse event (AE) refers to any unexpected and inappropriate occurrence at the time a drug is used, whether or not the event is associated with the administration of the drug. An ADR is a special type of AE in which a causative relationship can be shown. ADRs are only one type of medication-related harm. Another type of medication-related harm type includes not taking prescribed medications, known as non-adherence. Non-adherence to medications can lead to death and other negative outcomes. Adverse drug reactions require the use of a medication.

An adverse effect is an undesired harmful effect resulting from a medication or other intervention, such as surgery. An adverse effect may be termed a "side effect", when judged to be secondary to a main or therapeutic effect. The term complication is similar to adverse effect, but the latter is typically used in pharmacological contexts, or when the negative effect is expected or common. If the negative effect results from an unsuitable or incorrect dosage or procedure, this is called a medical error and not an adverse effect. Adverse effects are sometimes referred to as "iatrogenic" because they are generated by a physician/treatment. Some adverse effects occur only when starting, increasing or discontinuing a treatment. Using a drug or other medical intervention which is contraindicated may increase the risk of adverse effects. Adverse effects may cause complications of a disease or procedure and negatively affect its prognosis. They may also lead to non-compliance with a treatment regimen. Adverse effects of medical treatment resulted in 142,000 deaths in 2013 up from 94,000 deaths in 1990 globally.

Computerized physician order entry (CPOE), sometimes referred to as computerized provider order entry or computerized provider order management (CPOM), is a process of electronic entry of medical practitioner instructions for the treatment of patients under his or her care.

In pharmaceuticals, an adverse event (AE) is any untoward medical occurrence in a patient or clinical investigation subject administered a pharmaceutical product and which does not necessarily have a causal relationship with this treatment. An adverse event can therefore be any unfavourable and unintended symptom or sign or disease temporally associated with the use of a medicinal (investigational) product, whether or not related to the medicinal (investigational) product.

A clinical decision support system (CDSS) is a health information technology that provides clinicians, staff, patients, and other individuals with knowledge and person-specific information to help health and health care. CDSS encompasses a variety of tools to enhance decision-making in the clinical workflow. These tools include computerized alerts and reminders to care providers and patients, clinical guidelines, condition-specific order sets, focused patient data reports and summaries, documentation templates, diagnostic support, and contextually relevant reference information, among other tools. CDSSs constitute a major topic in artificial intelligence in medicine.

In the healthcare industry, pay for performance (P4P), also known as "value-based purchasing", is a payment model that offers financial incentives to physicians, hospitals, medical groups, and other healthcare providers for meeting certain performance measures. Clinical outcomes, such as longer survival, are difficult to measure, so pay for performance systems usually evaluate process quality and efficiency, such as measuring blood pressure, lowering blood pressure, or counseling patients to stop smoking. This model also penalizes health care providers for poor outcomes, medical errors, or increased costs. Integrated delivery systems where insurers and providers share in the cost are intended to help align incentives for value-based care.

Defensive medicine, also called defensive medical decision making, refers to the practice of recommending a diagnostic test or medical treatment that is not necessarily the best option for the patient, but mainly serves to protect the physician against the patient as potential plaintiff. Defensive medicine is a reaction to the rising costs of malpractice insurance premiums and patients’ biases on suing for missed or delayed diagnosis or treatment but not for being overdiagnosed.

Patient safety is a discipline that emphasizes safety in health care through the prevention, reduction, reporting and analysis of error and other types of unnecessary harm that often lead to adverse patient events. The magnitude of avoidable adverse events, often known as patient safety incidents, experienced by patients was not well known until the 1990s, when multiple countries reported significant numbers of patients harmed and killed by medical errors. Recognizing that healthcare errors impact 1 in every 10 patients around the world, the World Health Organization (WHO) calls patient safety an endemic concern. Indeed, patient safety has emerged as a distinct healthcare discipline supported by an immature yet developing scientific framework. There is a significant transdisciplinary body of theoretical and research literature that informs the science of patient safety with mobile health apps being a growing area of research.

Transitional care refers to the coordination and continuity of health care during a movement from one healthcare setting to either another or to home, called care transition, between health care practitioners and settings as their condition and care needs change during the course of a chronic or acute illness. Older adults who suffer from a variety of health conditions often need health care services in different settings to meet their many needs. For young people the focus is on moving successfully from child to adult health services.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Donald Berwick</span> American government official

Donald M. Berwick is a former Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Prior to his work in the administration, he was President and Chief Executive Officer of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement a not-for-profit organization.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Psychiatry</span> Branch of medicine devoted to mental disorders

Psychiatry is the medical specialty devoted to the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of deleterious mental conditions. These include various matters related to mood, behaviour, cognition, perceptions, and emotions.

Health information technology (HIT) is health technology, particularly information technology, applied to health and health care. It supports health information management across computerized systems and the secure exchange of health information between consumers, providers, payers, and quality monitors. Based on a 2008 report on a small series of studies conducted at four sites that provide ambulatory care – three U.S. medical centers and one in the Netherlands, the use of electronic health records (EHRs) was viewed as the most promising tool for improving the overall quality, safety and efficiency of the health delivery system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Iatrogenesis</span> Causation of harm by any medical activity

Iatrogenesis is the causation of a disease, a harmful complication, or other ill effect by any medical activity, including diagnosis, intervention, error, or negligence. First used in this sense in 1924, the term was introduced to sociology in 1976 by Ivan Illich, alleging that industrialized societies impair quality of life by overmedicalizing life. Iatrogenesis may thus include mental suffering via medical beliefs or a practitioner's statements. Some iatrogenic events are obvious, like amputation of the wrong limb, whereas others, like drug interactions, can evade recognition. In a 2013 estimate, about 20 million negative effects from treatment had occurred globally. In 2013, an estimated 142,000 persons died from adverse effects of medical treatment, up from an estimated 94,000 in 1990.

Health care quality is a level of value provided by any health care resource, as determined by some measurement. As with quality in other fields, it is an assessment of whether something is good enough and whether it is suitable for its purpose. The goal of health care is to provide medical resources of high quality to all who need them; that is, to ensure good quality of life, cure illnesses when possible, to extend life expectancy, and so on. Researchers use a variety of quality measures to attempt to determine health care quality, including counts of a therapy's reduction or lessening of diseases identified by medical diagnosis, a decrease in the number of risk factors which people have following preventive care, or a survey of health indicators in a population who are accessing certain kinds of care.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">OpenNotes</span> American healthcare research initiative

OpenNotes is a research initiative and international movement located at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kaveh Shojania</span> Canadian doctor, academic

Kaveh G. Shojania is a Canadian doctor, academic and an author. He is the vice chair of quality & innovation in the department of medicine at the University of Toronto as well as staff physician at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre.

References

  1. Zhang, J., Patel, V.L., & Johnson, T.R (2008). "Medical error: Is the solution medical or cognitive?". Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association. 6 (Supp1): 75–77. doi:10.1197/jamia.M1232. PMC   419424 . PMID   12386188.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. Hofer, TP; Kerr, EA; Hayward, RA (2000). "What is an error?". Effective Clinical Practice. 3 (6): 261–9. PMID   11151522. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved June 11, 2007.
  3. Hayward, Rodney A.; Hofer, Timothy P. (July 25, 2001). "Estimating Hospital Deaths Due to Medical Errors: Preventability Is in the Eye of the Reviewer". JAMA. 286 (4): 415–20. doi:10.1001/jama.286.4.415. PMID   11466119.
  4. Kopec, D.; Tamang, S.; Levy, K.; Eckhardt, R.; Shagas, G. (2006). "The state of the art in the reduction of medical errors". Studies in Health Technology and Informatics. 121: 126–37. PMID   17095810.
  5. Graber, Mark L.; Franklin, Nancy; Gordon, Ruthanna (July 11, 2005). "Diagnostic error in internal medicine". Archives of Internal Medicine. 165 (13): 1493–1499. doi:10.1001/archinte.165.13.1493. ISSN   0003-9926. PMID   16009864.
  6. Schiff, Gordon D.; Hasan, Omar; Kim, Seijeoung; Abrams, Richard; Cosby, Karen; Lambert, Bruce L.; Elstein, Arthur S.; Hasler, Scott; Kabongo, Martin L.; Krosnjar, Nela; Odwazny, Richard; Wisniewski, Mary F.; McNutt, Robert A. (November 9, 2009). "Diagnostic error in medicine: analysis of 583 physician-reported errors". Archives of Internal Medicine. 169 (20): 1881–1887. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2009.333. ISSN   1538-3679. PMID   19901140.
  7. Singh, Hardeep (2014). "Editorial: Helping health care organizations to define diagnostic errors as missed opportunities in diagnosis". Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. 40 (3): 99–101. doi:10.1016/s1553-7250(14)40012-6. ISSN   1553-7250. PMID   24730204.
  8. Balogh, E. P.; Miller, B. T.; Ball, J. R.; Committee on Diagnostic Error in Health Care; Board on Health Care Services; Institute of Medicine; The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (December 29, 2015). Balogh, Erin P.; Miller, Bryan T.; Ball, John R. (eds.). Improving Diagnosis in Health Care. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press. doi:10.17226/21794. ISBN   978-0-309-37769-0. PMID   26803862.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. "Medication Error Definition". National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention. Archived from the original on July 17, 2023. Retrieved July 17, 2023.
  10. 1 2 3 Ciapponi, Agustín; Fernandez Nievas, Simon E; Seijo, Mariana; Rodríguez, María Belén; Vietto, Valeria; García-Perdomo, Herney A; Virgilio, Sacha; Fajreldines, Ana V; Tost, Josep; Rose, Christopher J; Garcia-Elorrio, Ezequiel (November 25, 2021). "Reducing medication errors for adults in hospital settings". Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2021 (11): CD009985. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD009985.pub2. PMC   8614640 . PMID   34822165.
  11. Leape LL (1994). "Error in medicine". JAMA. 272 (23): 1851–7. doi:10.1001/jama.272.23.1851. PMID   7503827.
  12. "Cancer". World Health Organization. Archived from the original on December 29, 2010. Retrieved March 2, 2017.
  13. 1 2 Maaskant, Jolanda M; Vermeulen, Hester; Apampa, Bugewa; Fernando, Bernard; Ghaleb, Maisoon A; Neubert, Antje; Thayyil, Sudhin; Soe, Aung (March 10, 2015). Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care Group (ed.). "Interventions for reducing medication errors in children in hospital". Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (3): CD006208. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD006208.pub3. PMC   10799669 . PMID   25756542.
  14. Donaldson, L (2000). "An organisation with a memory: Report of an expert group on learning from adverse events in the NHS". Patient Safety Network, UK. Archived from the original on July 17, 2023. Retrieved July 17, 2023.
  15. Hayward, Rodney A.; Heisler, Michele; Adams, John; Dudley, R. Adams; Hofer, Timothy P. (August 2007). "Overestimating Outcome Rates: Statistical Estimation When Reliability Is Suboptimal". Health Services Research. 42 (4): 1718–1738. doi:10.1111/j.1475-6773.2006.00661.x. PMC   1955272 . PMID   17610445.
  16. 1 2 Hayward R, Hofer T (2001). "Estimating hospital deaths due to medical errors: preventability is in the eye of the reviewer". JAMA. 286 (4): 415–20. doi:10.1001/jama.286.4.415. PMID   11466119.
  17. "Medication Errors Injure 1.5 Million People and Cost Billions of Dollars Annually". The National Academy of Science. 2006. Archived from the original on November 26, 2015. Retrieved February 1, 2011.
  18. "2002 Annual Report". Archived from the original on April 16, 2018.
  19. 1 2 3 Institute of Medicine (2000). To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. p. 4. doi: 10.17226/9728 . ISBN   978-0-309-26174-6. PMID   25077248. Archived from the original on June 16, 2020. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  20. Charatan, Fred (March 4, 2000). "Clinton acts to reduce medical mistakes". BMJ. 320 (7235): 597. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7235.597. PMC   1117638 . PMID   10698861.
  21. 1 2 3 Weingart SN, Wilson RM, Gibberd RW, Harrison B (March 2000). "Epidemiology of medical error". BMJ. 320 (7237): 774–7. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.774. PMC   1117772 . PMID   10720365.
  22. 1 2 Brennan T, Leape L, Laird N, Hebert L, Localio A, Lawthers A, Newhouse J, Weiler P, Hiatt H (1991). "Incidence of adverse events and negligence in hospitalized patients. Results of the Harvard Medical Practice Study I". N Engl J Med. 324 (6): 370–6. doi: 10.1056/NEJM199102073240604 . PMID   1987460. S2CID   3101439.
  23. 1 2 Lucas B, Evans A, Reilly B, Khodakov Y, Perumal K, Rohr L, Akamah J, Alausa T, Smith C, Smith J (2004). "The Impact of Evidence on Physicians' Inpatient Treatment Decisions". J Gen Intern Med. 19 (5 Pt 1): 402–9. doi:10.1111/j.1525-1497.2004.30306.x. PMC   1492243 . PMID   15109337.
  24. McGlynn EA, Asch SM, Adams J, Keesey J, Hicks J, DeCristofaro A, Kerr EA (2003). "The quality of health care delivered to adults in the United States". N Engl J Med. 348 (26): 2635–45. doi: 10.1056/NEJMsa022615 . PMID   12826639.
  25. Fisher ES (October 2003). "Medical Care — Is More Always Better?". New England Journal of Medicine. 349 (17): 1665–7. doi:10.1056/NEJMe038149. PMID   14573739.
  26. Makary, Martin A; Daniel, Michael (May 3, 2016). "Medical error—the third leading cause of death in the US". BMJ. 353: i2139. doi:10.1136/bmj.i2139. PMID   27143499. S2CID   206910205.
  27. Moriyama, IM; Loy, RM; Robb-Smith, AHT (2011). Rosenberg, HM; Hoyert, DL (eds.). History of the Statistical Classification of Diseases and Causes of Death (PDF). Hyattsville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. ISBN   978-0-8406-0644-0. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 5, 2011. Retrieved September 10, 2017.
  28. 1 2 Clapper, Timothy C.; Ching, Kevin (2020). "Debunking the myth that the majority of medical errors are attributed to communication". Medical Education. 54 (1): 74–81. doi: 10.1111/medu.13821 . ISSN   1365-2923. PMID   31509277.
  29. 1 2 Hannawa, Annegret; Wendt, Anne; Day, Lisa J. (December 4, 2017). New Horizons in Patient Safety: Safe Communication: Evidence-based core Competencies with Case Studies from Nursing Practice. De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110454857. ISBN   978-3-11-045485-7. Archived from the original on April 21, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  30. 1 2 Hannawa, Annegret; Wu, Albert; Juhasz, Robert (March 6, 2017). New Horizons in Patient Safety: Understanding Communication: Case Studies for Physicians. De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110455014. ISBN   978-3-11-045501-4. Archived from the original on August 14, 2024. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  31. Harrison, Bernadette; Gibberd, Robert W.; Wilson, Ross McL; Weingart, N. Saul (March 18, 2000). "Epidemiology of medical error". BMJ. 320 (7237): 774–777. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.774. PMC   1117772 . PMID   10720365.
  32. Friedman, Richard A.; D, M (2003). "CASES; Do Spelling and Penmanship Count? In Medicine, You Bet". The New York Times. Archived from the original on August 29, 2019. Retrieved August 29, 2018.
  33. Hannawa, Annegret F (June 2018). ""SACCIA Safe Communication": Five core competencies for safe and high-quality care". Journal of Patient Safety and Risk Management. 23 (3): 99–107. doi:10.1177/2516043518774445. ISSN   2516-0435. S2CID   169364817. Archived from the original on April 23, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  34. Lyundup, Alexey V.; Balyasin, Maxim V.; Maksimova, Nadezhda V.; Kovina, Marina V.; Krasheninnikov, Mikhail E.; Dyuzheva, Tatiana G.; Yakovenko, Sergey A.; Appolonova, Svetlana A.; Schiöth, Helgi B.; Klabukov, Ilya D. (October 29, 2021). "Misdiagnosis of diabetic foot ulcer in patients with undiagnosed skin malignancies". International Wound Journal. 19 (4): 871–887. doi:10.1111/iwj.13688. ISSN   1742-481X. PMC   9013580 . PMID   34713964. S2CID   240154096.
  35. Aoki, Takuya; Watanuki, Satoshi (August 20, 2020). "Multimorbidity and patient-reported diagnostic errors in the primary care setting: multicentre cross-sectional study in Japan". BMJ Open. 10 (8): e039040. doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039040. ISSN   2044-6055. PMC   7440713 . PMID   32819954.
  36. Maskell, Giles (2019). "Error in radiology—where are we now?". The British Journal of Radiology. 92 (1096): 20180845. doi:10.1259/bjr.20180845. PMC   6540865 . PMID   30457880.
  37. McGurk, S; Brauer, K; Macfarlane, TV; Duncan, KA (2008). "The effect of voice recognition software on comparative error rates in radiology reports". Br J Radiol. 81 (970): 767–70. doi:10.1259/bjr/20698753. PMID   18628322.
  38. Wadhwa, R. R.; Park, D. Y.; Natowicz, M. R. (2018). "The accuracy of computer-based diagnostic tools for the identification of concurrent genetic disorders". American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 176 (12): 2704–2709. doi:10.1002/ajmg.a.40651. PMID   30475443. S2CID   53758271.
  39. Weingart SN (June 2000). "Epidemiology of medical error". Western Journal of Medicine. 172 (6): 390–3. doi:10.1136/ewjm.172.6.390. PMC   1070928 . PMID   10854389.
  40. "Feeding Tube Placement Devices Recalled After 23 Patient Deaths". schmidtlaw.com. Archived from the original on February 13, 2023. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  41. List of medical symptoms. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_medical_symptoms#Medical_signs_and_symptoms Archived January 26, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  42. Utter, Garth H.; Atolagbe, Oluseun O.; Cooke, David T. (December 1, 2019). "The Use of the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification and Procedure Classification System in Clinical and Health Services Research: The Devil Is in the Details". JAMA Surgery. 154 (12): 1089–1090. doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2019.2899. ISSN   2168-6262. PMID   31553423.
  43. Emmett, K. R. (1998). "Nonspecific and atypical presentation of disease in the older patient". Geriatrics. 53 (2): 50–52, 58–60. ISSN   0016-867X. PMID   9484285.
  44. Ronicke, Simon; Hirsch, Martin C.; Türk, Ewelina; Larionov, Katharina; Tientcheu, Daphne; Wagner, Annette D. (March 21, 2019). "Can a decision support system accelerate rare disease diagnosis? Evaluating the potential impact of Ada DX in a retrospective study". Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases. 14 (1): 69. doi: 10.1186/s13023-019-1040-6 . ISSN   1750-1172. PMC   6427854 . PMID   30898118.
  45. 1 2 3 Neale, Graham; Woloshynowych, Maria; Vincent, Charles (July 2001). "Exploring the causes of adverse events in NHS hospital practice". Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 94 (7): 322–30. doi:10.1177/014107680109400702. PMC   1281594 . PMID   11418700.
  46. 1 2 Gardner, Amanda (March 6, 2007). "Medication Errors During Surgeries Particularly Dangerous". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on July 15, 2018. Retrieved March 13, 2007.
  47. McDonald, MD, Clement J. (April 4, 2006). "Computerization Can Create Safety Hazards: A Bar-Coding Near Miss". Annals of Internal Medicine. 144 (7): 510–516. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-144-7-200604040-00010 . PMID   16585665.
  48. US Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality (January 9, 2008). "Physicians Want To Learn from Medical Mistakes but Say Current Error-reporting Systems Are Inadequate". Archived from the original on February 17, 2008. Retrieved March 23, 2008.
  49. Clement JP; Lindrooth RC; Chukmaitov AS; Chen HF (February 2007). "Does the patient's payer matter in hospital patient safety?: a study of urban hospitals". Med Care. 45 (2): 131–8. doi:10.1097/01.mlr.0000244636.54588.2b. PMID   17224775. S2CID   22206854.
  50. "Incorporating Patient-Safe Design into the Guidelines". The American Institute of Architects Academy Journal. October 19, 2005. Archived from the original on October 7, 2006. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  51. "Improving America's Hospitals". Archived from the original on April 16, 2008. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  52. 1 2 3 4 5 Wu AW, Folkman S, McPhee SJ, Lo B (1991). "Do house officers learn from their mistakes?". JAMA. 265 (16): 2089–94. doi:10.1001/jama.265.16.2089. PMID   2013929.
  53. Michael L. Millenson (2003). "The Silence". Health Affairs. 22 (2): 103–112. doi:10.1377/hlthaff.22.2.103. PMID   12674412. S2CID   40037135.
  54. Henneman, Elizabeth A. (October 1, 2007). "Unreported Errors in the Intensive Care Unit, A Case Study of the Way We Work". Critical Care Nurse. 27 (5): 27–34. doi:10.4037/ccn2007.27.5.27. PMID   17901458. Archived from the original on October 13, 2008. Retrieved March 23, 2008.
  55. Phillips DP; Barker GE (May 2010). "A July Spike in Fatal Medication Errors: A Possible Effect of New Medical Residents". J Gen Intern Med. 25 (8): 774–779. doi:10.1007/s11606-010-1356-3. PMC   2896592 . PMID   20512532.
  56. Krupa, Carolyne (June 21, 2010). "New residents linked to July medication errors". American Medical News. 6 (21). Archived from the original on October 21, 2020. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  57. Jerome E. Groopman (November 5, 2009). "Diagnosis: What Doctors are Missing". New York Review of Books . Archived from the original on September 17, 2015. Retrieved July 9, 2014.
  58. Croskerry, P. (2009). "A Universal Model of Clinical Reasoning". Acad Med. 84 (8): 1022–8. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181ace703 . PMID   19638766.
  59. 1 2 Ker, Katharine; Edwards, Philip James; Felix, Lambert M; Blackhall, Karen; Roberts, Ian (May 12, 2010). "Caffeine for the prevention of injuries and errors in shift workers". Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2010 (5): CD008508. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD008508. PMC   4160007 . PMID   20464765.
  60. Barger, L. K.; et al. (2006). "Impact of Extended-Duration Shifts on Medical Errors, Adverse Events, and Attentional Failures". PLOS Med. 3 (12): e487. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030487 . PMC   1705824 . PMID   17194188.
  61. 1 2 "When Doctors Don't Sleep". NPR . Archived from the original on May 9, 2021. Retrieved April 3, 2018.
  62. Nocera, Antony; Khursandi, Diana Strange (June 1998). "Doctors' working hours: can the medical profession afford to let the courts decide what is reasonable?". Medical Journal of Australia. 168 (12): 616–618. doi:10.5694/j.1326-5377.1998.tb141450.x. PMID   9673625. S2CID   34759813.
  63. Landrigan, Christopher P.; Rothschild, Jeffrey M.; Cronin, John W.; Kaushal, Rainu; Burdick, Elisabeth; Katz, Joel T.; Lilly, Craig M.; Stone, Peter H.; Lockley, Steven W.; Bates, David W.; Czeisler, Charles A. (October 28, 2004). "Effect of Reducing Interns' Work Hours on Serious Medical Errors in Intensive Care Units". New England Journal of Medicine. 351 (18): 1838–1848. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa041406 . PMID   15509817.
  64. Barger, Laura K; Ayas, Najib T; Cade, Brian E; Cronin, John W; Rosner, Bernard; Speizer, Frank E; Czeisler, Charles A; Mignot, Emmanuel (December 12, 2006). "Impact of Extended-Duration Shifts on Medical Errors, Adverse Events, and Attentional Failures". PLOS Medicine. 3 (12): e487. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030487 . PMC   1705824 . PMID   17194188.
  65. 1 2 Pereira-Lima, K; Mata, DA; Loureiro, SR; Crippa, JA; Bolsoni, LM; Sen, S (2019). "Association Between Physician Depressive Symptoms and Medical Errors: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis". JAMA Network Open. 2 (11): e1916097. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.16097. PMC   6902829 . PMID   31774520.
  66. Fahrenkopf, Amy M; Sectish, Theodore C; Barger, Laura K; Sharek, Paul J; Lewin, Daniel; Chiang, Vincent W; Edwards, Sarah; Wiedermann, Bernhard L; Landrigan, Christopher P (March 1, 2008). "Rates of medication errors among depressed and burnt out residents: prospective cohort study". BMJ. 336 (7642): 488–491. doi:10.1136/bmj.39469.763218.BE. PMC   2258399 . PMID   18258931.
  67. Aiken, Linda H.; Clarke, SP; Sloane, DM; Sochalski, J; Silber, JH (October 23, 2002). "Hospital Nurse Staffing and Patient Mortality, Nurse Burnout, and Job Dissatisfaction". JAMA. 288 (16): 1987–93. doi: 10.1001/jama.288.16.1987 . PMID   12387650.
  68. 8th Annual MEDMARX Report (January 29, 2008). "Press Release". U.S. Pharmacopeia. Archived from the original on February 8, 2008. Retrieved March 23, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  69. 1 2 Waite, Stephen; Grigorian, Arkadij; Alexander, Robert G.; Macknik, Stephen L.; Carrasco, Marisa; Heeger, David J.; Martinez-Conde, Susana (June 25, 2019). "Analysis of Perceptual Expertise in Radiology – Current Knowledge and a New Perspective". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 13: 213. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2019.00213 . PMC   6603246 . PMID   31293407.
  70. Alexander, Robert; Yazdanie, Fahd; Waite, Stephen Anthony; Chaudhry, Zeshan; Kolla, Srinivas; Macknik, Stephen; Martinez-Conde, Susana (2021). "Visual Illusions in Radiology: untrue perceptions in medical images and their implications for diagnostic accuracy". Frontiers in Neuroscience. 15: 629469. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2021.629469 . PMC   8226024 . PMID   34177444.
  71. Anderson, J.G. (2005). Information technology for detecting medication errors and adverse drug events. (Expert Opin Drug Saf 3). pp. 449–455.
  72. Abrahamson, Kathleen; Anderson, J.G. (2017). "Your Health Care May Kill You: Medical Errors". Studies in Health Technology and Informatics. 234 (Building Capacity for Health Informatics in the Future): 13–17. doi:10.3233/978-1-61499-742-9-13. PMID   28186008. Archived from the original on September 2, 2021. Retrieved September 2, 2021.
  73. Makary, Martin; Daniel, Michael (2016). "Medical error—the third leading cause of death in the US". BMJ. 353: i2139. doi:10.1136/bmj.i2139. PMID   27143499. S2CID   206910205.
  74. Shreve, J et al (Milliman Inc.) (June 2010). "The Economic Measurement of Medical Errors" (PDF). Society of Actuaries. Archived (PDF) from the original on January 15, 2021. Retrieved November 11, 2019.
  75. Arlen, Jennifer (October 1, 2013). "Economic Analysis of Medical Malpractice Liability and Its Reform". New York University Law and Economics Working Papers. SSRN   2262792.
  76. Berlin, Leonard (2007). "Accuracy of Diagnostic Procedures: Has It Improved Over the Past Five Decades?". American Journal of Roentgenology. 188 (5): 1173–1178. doi:10.2214/AJR.06.1270. PMID   17449754.
  77. Brady, Adrian (December 7, 2016). "Error and discrepancy in radiology: inevitable or avoidable?". Insights into Imaging. 8 (1): 171–182. doi: 10.1007/s13244-016-0534-1 . PMC   5265198 . PMID   27928712.
  78. Brady, Adrian (January 2012). "Discrepancy and Error in Radiology: Concepts, Causes and Consequences". Ulster Med J. 81 (1): 3–9. PMC   3609674 . PMID   23536732.
  79. Siemieniuk, Reed; Fonseca, Kevin; Gill, M. John (November 2012). "Using Root Cause Analysis and Form Redesign to Reduce Incorrect Ordering of HIV Tests". Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. 38 (11): 506–512. doi:10.1016/S1553-7250(12)38067-7. PMID   23173397.
  80. Berner, Eta S.; Graber, Mark L. (May 2008). "Overconfidence as a Cause of Diagnostic Error in Medicine". The American Journal of Medicine. 121 (5): S2–S23. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2008.01.001 . PMID   18440350.
  81. Weng, Qing Yu; Raff, Adam B.; Cohen, Jeffrey M.; Gunasekera, Nicole; Okhovat, Jean-Phillip; Vedak, Priyanka; Joyce, Cara; Kroshinsky, Daniela; Mostaghimi, Arash (February 1, 2017). "Costs and Consequences Associated With Misdiagnosed Lower Extremity Cellulitis". JAMA Dermatology. 153 (2): 141–146. doi:10.1001/jamadermatol.2016.3816. PMID   27806170. S2CID   205110504. Archived from the original on August 14, 2024. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  82. Bowden, Charles L. (January 2001). "Strategies to Reduce Misdiagnosis of Bipolar Depression". Psychiatric Services. 52 (1): 51–55. doi:10.1176/appi.ps.52.1.51. PMID   11141528.
  83. "Schizophrenia Symptoms". schizophrenia.com. Archived from the original on December 5, 2015. Retrieved March 30, 2008.
  84. Dagan Y, Ayalon L (2005). "Case study: psychiatric misdiagnosis of non-24-hours sleep–wake schedule disorder resolved by melatonin". J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 44 (12): 1271–1275. doi:10.1097/01.chi.0000181040.83465.48. PMID   16292119.
  85. van Vliet, J A; Eekers, PJ; Haan, J; Ferrari, MD; Dutch RUSSH Study, Group. (August 1, 2003). "Features involved in the diagnostic delay of cluster headache". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry. 74 (8): 1123–1125. doi:10.1136/jnnp.74.8.1123. PMC   1738593 . PMID   12876249.
  86. "IHS Classification ICHD-II 3.1 Cluster headache". The International Headache Society. Archived from the original on 3 November 2013. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  87. Tfelt-Hansen, Peer C.; Jensen, Rigmor H. (July 2012). "Management of Cluster Headache". CNS Drugs. 26 (7): 571–580. doi:10.2165/11632850-000000000-00000. PMID   22650381. S2CID   22522914.
  88. Brett, Denise; Warnell, Frances; McConachie, Helen; Parr, Jeremy R. (2016). "Factors Affecting Age at ASD Diagnosis in UK: No Evidence that Diagnosis Age has Decreased Between 2004 and 2014". Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. 46 (6): 1974–1984. doi:10.1007/s10803-016-2716-6. PMC   4860193 . PMID   27032954.
  89. Lehnhardt, F.-G.; Gawronski, A.; Volpert, K.; Schilbach, L.; Tepest, R.; Vogeley, K. (November 15, 2011). "Das psychosoziale Funktionsniveau spätdiagnostizierter Patienten mit Autismus-Spektrum-Störungen – eine retrospektive Untersuchung im Erwachsenenalter" [Psychosocial functioning of adults with late diagnosed autism spectrum disorders--a retrospective study]. Fortschritte der Neurologie · Psychiatrie (in German). 80 (2): 88–97. doi:10.1055/s-0031-1281642. PMID   22086712. S2CID   25077268.
  90. Aggarwal, Shilpa; Angus, Beth (February 4, 2015). "Misdiagnosis versus missed diagnosis: diagnosing autism spectrum disorder in adolescents". Australasian Psychiatry. 23 (2): 120–123. doi:10.1177/1039856214568214. PMID   25653302. S2CID   43475267.
  91. Corvin, Aiden; Fitzgerald, Michael (2001). "Diagnosis and differential diagnosis of Asperger syndrome". Advances in Psychiatric Treatment. 7 (4): 310–318. doi: 10.1192/apt.7.4.310 .
  92. Leskovec, Thomas J.; Rowles, Brieana M.; Findling, Robert L. (March 2008). "Pharmacological Treatment Options for Autism Spectrum Disorders in Children and Adolescents". Harvard Review of Psychiatry. 16 (2): 97–112. doi:10.1080/10673220802075852. PMID   18415882. S2CID   26112061.
  93. "Reliability and Prevalence in the DSM-5 Field Trials" (PDF). January 12, 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2012. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  94. Linda T. Kohn; Janet M. Corrigan; Molla S. Donaldson (2000). To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System. doi:10.17226/9728. ISBN   978-0-309-26174-6. PMID   25077248.
  95. 1 2 Raden Anita Indriyanti; Fajar Awalia Yulianto; Yuke Andriane (2019). "Prescription Writing Errors in Clinical Clerkship among Medical Students" (PDF). Global Medical and Health Communication. 7: 41–42. doi: 10.29313/gmhc.v7i1.4069 . ISSN   2301-9123. OCLC   8186593909. Archived from the original on September 26, 2020 via DOAJ.
  96. "APPEAL NO. 991681 Texas v. Dr. K" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on January 8, 2021. Retrieved April 16, 2020.
  97. Elliott, Rachel (February 22, 2018). "PREVALENCE AND ECONOMIC BURDEN OF MEDICATION ERRORS IN THE NHS IN ENGLAND" (PDF). University of Sheffield. Policy Research Unit in Economic Evaluation of Health & Care Interventions. Archived (PDF) from the original on September 26, 2022. Retrieved June 19, 2022.
  98. Mill, Deanna; Bakker, Michael; Corre, Lauren; Page, Amy; Johnson, Jacinta (November 6, 2020). "A comparison between Parkinson's medication errors identified through retrospective case note review versus via an incident reporting system during hospital admission". International Journal of Pharmacy Practice. 28 (6): 663–666. doi:10.1111/ijpp.12668. ISSN   0961-7671. PMID   32844477.
  99. Coutsouvelis, John; Siderov, Jim; Tey, Amanda Y.; Bortz, Hadley D.; o'Connor, Shaun R.; Rowan, Gail D.; Vasileff, Hayley M.; Page, Amy T.; Percival, Mia A. (2020). "The impact of pharmacist-led strategies implemented to reduce errors related to cancer therapies: A systematic review". Journal of Pharmacy Practice and Research. 50 (6): 466–480. doi: 10.1002/jppr.1699 . S2CID   229332634.
  100. Donyai, Parastou (February 2008). "The effects of electronic prescribing on the quality of prescribing". British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. 65 (2). Br J Clin Pharmacol: 230–237. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2125.2007.02995.x. PMC   2253693 . PMID   17662088.
  101. Hilfiker D (1984). "Facing our mistakes". N. Engl. J. Med. 310 (2): 118–22. doi:10.1056/NEJM198401123100211. PMID   6690918.
  102. Christensen JF, Levinson W, Dunn PM (1992). "The heart of darkness: the impact of perceived mistakes on physicians". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 7 (4): 424–31. doi:10.1007/bf02599161. PMID   1506949. S2CID   415258.
  103. Wu AW (2000). "Medical error: the second victim : The doctor who makes the mistake needs help too". BMJ. 320 (7237): 726–7. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.726. PMC   1117748 . PMID   10720336.
  104. Waterman AD, Garbutt J, Hazel E, Dunagan WC, Levinson W, Fraser VJ, Gallagher TH (2007). "The Emotional Impact of Medical Errors on Practicing Physicians in the United States and Canada". Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. 33 (2): 467–476. doi:10.1016/S1553-7250(07)33050-X. PMID   17724943.
  105. 1 2 Dean B, Barber N, Schachter M (October 2000). "What is a prescribing error?". Qual Saf Health Care. 9 (4): 232–237. doi:10.1136/qhc.9.4.232. PMC   1743540 . PMID   11101708.
  106. 1 2 3 Romero-Perez, Raquel; Hildick-Smith, Philippa (September 2012). "Minimising Prescribing Errors in Paediatrics - Clinical Audit" (PDF). Scottish Universities Medical Journal. 1: 14–1. Archived (PDF) from the original on January 10, 2021. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  107. Gandhi, Tejal K.; Kachalia, Allen; Thomas, Eric J.; Puopolo, Ann Louise; Yoon, Catherine; Brennan, Troyen A.; Studdert, David M. (October 3, 2006). "Missed and Delayed Diagnoses in the Ambulatory Setting: A Study of Closed Malpractice Claims". Annals of Internal Medicine. 145 (7): 488–96. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-145-7-200610030-00006. PMID   17015866. S2CID   29006252.
  108. Redelmeier, Donald A.; Tan, Siew H.; Booth, Gillian L. (May 21, 1998). "The Treatment of Unrelated Disorders in Patients with Chronic Medical Diseases". New England Journal of Medicine. 338 (21): 1516–1520. doi: 10.1056/NEJM199805213382106 . PMID   9593791.
  109. Lurie, Nicole; Rank, Brian; Parenti, Connie; Woolley, Tony; Snoke, William (June 22, 1989). "How Do House Officers Spend Their Nights?". New England Journal of Medicine. 320 (25): 1673–1677. doi:10.1056/NEJM198906223202507. PMID   2725617.
  110. Lyle CB, Applegate WB, Citron DS, Williams OD (1976). "Practice habits in a group of eight internists". Ann. Intern. Med. 84 (5): 594–601. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-84-5-594. PMID   1275366.
  111. Thomas Laurence (2004). "What Do You Want?". Extreme Clinic -- An Outpatient Doctor's Guide to the Perfect 7 Minute Visit. Philadelphia: Hanley & Belfus. p. 120. ISBN   978-1-56053-603-1.
  112. 1 2 Seder D (2006). "Of poems and patients". Ann. Intern. Med. 144 (2): 142. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-144-2-200601170-00014. PMID   16418416. S2CID   2927435.
  113. Berlinger, N; Wu, AW (February 1, 2005). "Subtracting insult from injury: addressing cultural expectations in the disclosure of medical error". Journal of Medical Ethics. 31 (2): 106–108. doi:10.1136/jme.2003.005538. PMC   1734098 . PMID   15681676.
  114. 1 2 "Medical Error Disclosure Competence (MEDC) -- Prof. Dr. Annegret Hannawa". prof. annegret hannawa. Archived from the original on April 21, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  115. West, Colin P.; Huschka, Mashele M.; Novotny, Paul J.; Sloan, Jeff A.; Kolars, Joseph C.; Habermann, Thomas M.; Shanafelt, Tait D. (September 6, 2006). "Association of Perceived Medical Errors With Resident Distress and Empathy". JAMA. 296 (9): 1071–8. doi: 10.1001/jama.296.9.1071 . PMID   16954486.
  116. Wu AW, Folkman S, McPhee SJ, Lo B (1993). "How house officers cope with their mistakes". West. J. Med. 159 (5): 565–9. PMC   1022346 . PMID   8279153.
  117. Gallagher TH, Waterman AD, Ebers AG, Fraser VJ, Levinson W (2003). "Patients' and physicians' attitudes regarding the disclosure of medical errors". JAMA. 289 (8): 1001–7. doi: 10.1001/jama.289.8.1001 . PMID   12597752.
  118. Rosemary Gibson; Janardan Prasad Singh (2003). Wall of Silence. Regnery. ISBN   978-0-89526-112-0.
  119. Wu, Albert W.; Cavanaugh, Thomas A.; McPhee, Stephen J.; Lo, Bernard; Micco, Guy P. (December 1997). "To tell the truth". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 12 (12): 770–775. doi:10.1046/j.1525-1497.1997.07163.x. PMC   1497204 . PMID   9436897.
  120. Shaw, Liz; Lawal, Hassanat M.; Briscoe, Simon; Garside, Ruth; Thompson Coon, Jo; Rogers, Morwenna; Melendez-Torres, G. J. (December 1, 2023). "Patient, carer and family experiences of seeking redress and reconciliation following a life-changing event: Systematic review of qualitative evidence". Health Expectations. 26 (6): 2127–2150. doi:10.1111/hex.13820. ISSN   1369-6513. PMC   10632635 . PMID   37452516.
  121. "How to improve investigations of medical harm". NIHR Evidence. January 10, 2024. doi:10.3310/nihrevidence_61101. S2CID   266946352. Archived from the original on January 12, 2024. Retrieved January 12, 2024.
  122. Kelly, Karen (2005). "Study explores how physicians communicate mistakes". University of Toronto. Archived from the original on March 22, 2006. Retrieved March 17, 2006.
  123. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved April 25, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  124. Snyder L, Leffler C (2005). "Ethics manual: fifth edition". Ann Intern Med. 142 (7): 560–82. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-142-7-200504050-00014. PMID   15809467. S2CID   53090205.
  125. Kaldjian LC, Jones EW, Wu BJ, Forman-Hoffman VL, Levi BH, Rosenthal GE (2007). "Disclosing Medical Errors to Patients: Attitudes and Practices of Physicians and Trainees". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 22 (7): 988–96. doi:10.1007/s11606-007-0227-z. PMC   2219725 . PMID   17473944.
  126. Weissman JS, Annas CL, Epstein AM, et al. (2005). "Error reporting and disclosure systems: views from hospital leaders". JAMA. 293 (11): 1359–66. doi: 10.1001/jama.293.11.1359 . PMID   15769969.
  127. Wu AW (1999). "Handling hospital errors: is disclosure the best defense?". Ann. Intern. Med. 131 (12): 970–2. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-131-12-199912210-00012. PMID   10610651. S2CID   36889006.
  128. Zimmerman R (May 18, 2004). "Doctors' New Tool To Fight Lawsuits: Saying 'I'm Sorry'". The Wall Street Journal. p. A1. Archived from the original on August 23, 2007.
  129. Newman MC (1996). "The emotional impact of mistakes on family physicians". Archives of Family Medicine. 5 (2): 71–5. doi:10.1001/archfami.5.2.71. PMID   8601210.
  130. 1 2 Sobecks, Nancy W.; Justice, AC; Hinze, S; Chirayath, HT; Lasek, RJ; Chren, MM; Aucott, J; Juknialis, B; Fortinsky, R; Youngner, S; Landefeld, CS (February 16, 1999). "When Doctors Marry Doctors: A Survey Exploring the Professional and Family Lives of Young Physicians". Annals of Internal Medicine. 130 (4_Part_1): 312–9. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-130-4-199902160-00017. PMID   10068390.
  131. Oscar London (1987). "Rule 35: Don't Take Too Much Joy in the Mistakes of Other Doctors". Kill as few patients as possible: and fifty-six other essays on how to be the world's best doctor . Berkeley, Calif: Ten Speed Press. ISBN   978-0-89815-197-8.
  132. Barach, P.; Small, SD (March 18, 2000). "Reporting and preventing medical mishaps: lessons from non-medical near miss reporting systems". BMJ. 320 (7237): 759–763. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.759. PMC   1117768 . PMID   10720361.
  133. Banja, John D. (2005). Medical errors and medical narcissism . Sudbury, Massachusetts: Jones and Bartlett. ISBN   978-0-7637-8361-7.
  134. Weiss, Gail Garfinkel (January 4, 2011). "'Some Worms Are Best Left in the Can' -- Should You Hide Medical Errors?". Medscape. Archived from the original on March 1, 2021. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  135. Helmreich, R. L (March 18, 2000). "On error management: lessons from aviation". BMJ. 320 (7237): 781–785. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.781. PMC   1117774 . PMID   10720367.
  136. Espinosa, J. A; Nolan, TW (March 18, 2000). "Reducing errors made by emergency physicians in interpreting radiographs: longitudinal study". BMJ. 320 (7237): 737–740. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.737. PMC   27314 . PMID   10720354.
  137. Relihan, Eileen C; Silke, Bernard; Ryder, Sheila A (June 23, 2012). "Design template for a medication safety programme in an acute teaching hospital". European Journal of Hospital Pharmacy. 19 (3): 340–344. doi:10.1136/ejhpharm-2012-000050. hdl: 2262/66780 . S2CID   54178056.
  138. Alam, Rabiul (2016). "Spinal needle with prefilled syringe to prevent medication error: A proposal". Indian Journal of Anaesthesia. 60 (7): 525–7. doi: 10.4103/0019-5049.186014 . PMC   4966365 . PMID   27512177.
  139. West, Colin P (2016). "Physician Well-Being: Expanding the Triple Aim". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 31 (5): 458–459. doi:10.1007/s11606-016-3641-2. PMC   4835383 . PMID   26921157.
  140. Hanlon, Carrie; Sheedy, Kaitlin; Kniffin, Taylor; Rosenthal, Jill (2015). "2014 Guide to State Adverse Event Reporting Systems" (PDF). NASHP.org. National Academy for State Health Policy. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 2, 2017. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  141. "A national survey of medical error reporting laws" (PDF). Yale Journal of Health Policy, Law, and Ethics. 9 (1): 201–86. 2009. PMID   19388488. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 18, 2015. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  142. "Report Finds Most Errors at Hospitals Go Unreported". The New York Times . Archived from the original on February 26, 2021. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
  143. "Summary Hospital Incident Reporting Systems Do Not Capture Most Patient Harm". Archived from the original on January 14, 2016. Retrieved January 6, 2012.
  144. Gaba, David M. (March 18, 2000). "Anaesthesiology as a model for patient safety in health care". BMJ. 320 (7237): 785–788. doi:10.1136/bmj.320.7237.785. PMC   1117775 . PMID   10720368.
  145. Barnsteiner, Jane H. (2008), Hughes, Ronda G. (ed.), "Medication Reconciliation", Patient Safety and Quality: An Evidence-Based Handbook for Nurses, Advances in Patient Safety, Rockville (MD): Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (US), PMID   21328749, archived from the original on March 31, 2023, retrieved July 17, 2023
  146. Khalil, Hanan; Bell, Brian; Chambers, Helen; Sheikh, Aziz; Avery, Anthony J (October 4, 2017). Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care Group (ed.). "Professional, structural and organisational interventions in primary care for reducing medication errors". Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2017 (10): CD003942. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD003942.pub3. PMC   6485628 . PMID   28977687.
  147. Pease E (1936). "Minimum standards for a hospital pharmacy". Bull Am Coll Surg. 21: 34–35.
  148. Garrison TJ (1979). Smith MC; Brown TR (eds.). IV.1 Medication Distribution Systems. Williams and Wilkins. ISBN   978-0-683-07884-8.
  149. Woodward WA; Schwartau N (1979). Smith MC; Brown TR (eds.). Chapter IV.3 Developing Intravenous Admixture Systems. Williams and Wilkins. ISBN   978-0-683-07884-8.
  150. Powell MF (1986). Smith MC; Brown TR (eds.). Chapter 53 The Patient Profile System (2 ed.). Williams and Wilkins. ISBN   978-0-683-01090-9.
  151. Evens RP (1986). Smith MC; Brown TR (eds.). Chapter 31 Communicating Drug Information (2 ed.). Williams and Wilkins. ISBN   978-0-683-01090-9.
  152. Gorski DH (February 4, 2019). "Are medical errors really the third most common cause of death in the U.S.? (2019 edition)". Science-Based Medicine. Archived from the original on June 7, 2022. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  153. René Amalberti; Yves Auroy; Don Berwick; Paul Barach (May 3, 2005). "Five System Barriers to Achieving Ultrasafe Health Care". Annals of Internal Medicine. 142 (9): 756–764. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-142-9-200505030-00012 . PMID   15867408.

Further reading