A new study reveals that hospital errors are occurring 10 times the rate previously measured, and are costing billions of dollars a year.
Steve Chiotakis: There's a study out today in the journal Health Affairs that finds the rate of hospital errors is ten times what's been measured in the past. And a third of all admissions lead to a complication caused by medical care.
Marketplace's Mitchell Hartman reports, it's a multi-billion-dollar problem.
Mitchell Hartman: Dr. David Classen is at the University of Utah. His team analyzed individual patient records at three large hospitals, looking for medical mistakes.
David Classen: These are significant events, because it's not: 'They gave me a pill and I got a stomach ache. They gave me a pill and I started throwing up blood and they had to treat me.
It's a more rigorous method than most hospitals use -- they typically rely on voluntary reporting by medical staff, or on insurance claims.
Dr. John Santa of Consumer Reports says the problem costs at least $17 billion a year.
John Santa: We have an expensive system, and increasingly we know it's expensive because there's many mistakes.
According to another study in Health Affairs, the most expensive hospital-caused complications come from incorrect medication, post-operative infections and bedsores.
source
Thursday, April 7, 2011
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