New Study: 150,000 Deaths This Year From Medical Mistakes and Inadequate Care In Hospitals

Wayne Parsons
Attorney
(866) 735-1102 Ext 585
Visit Wayne Parsons on FacebookVisit Wayne Parsons on LinkedIn
Posted by Wayne ParsonsOctober 28, 2008 6:28 AM

A non-profit organization, the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA), that monitors health care, has found that 57,000 Americans die each year because they do not receive adequate care in hospitals. Their report, The State of Health Care Quality concludes that:

These deaths should not be confused with those attributable to medical errors or lack of. (Institute of Medicine, To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System, 1999.) NCQA finds that Americans are not getting the care they need because the health care industry has failed to adopt needed technology, doctors inconsistently deliver appropriate care, and the health care system fails to measure and report on performance, among other reasons. access to health care, among other reasons

In 1999, the Institute of Medicine (IOM), part of the National Academy of Sciences, found that medical errors cause as many as 98,000 deaths each year.

The Center For Justice & Democracy (CJ&D) has reported that

The federal government’s Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality recently found that 18 categories of medical errors, such as postoperative infections, accidental reopening of surgical wounds, and medical objects left inside patients, result in 32,500 hospital deaths, cost $9.3 billion in additional hospital charges, and lead to over 2.4 million extra days spent in hospitals. (Julie Bell, “Study of Medical Errors Puts Tentative Price Tag on Impact: Hospital Charges Alone Boosted $9.3 Billion a Year," Baltimore Sun, Oct. 8, 2003.)

The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that even these figures greatly underestimate the problem since many medical complications were not analyzed for this study. (Lindsey Tanner, Associated Press,“Preventable Complications Cost More Than $9 Billion,” Deseret News, Oct. 8, 2003.)

Dr. Chunliu Zhan, the study’s lead researcher, said, “The message here is that medical injuries can have a devastating impact on the health care system. (”Research and Quality, Injuries in Hospitals Pose a Significant Threat to Patients and a Substantial Increase in Health Care Costs" Oct. 7, 2003)

Rather than trying block lawsuits by patients for injuries due to negligent medical care, doctors and hospitals should clean their own profession of this blatant cause of injury.

1 Comment

Have an opinion about this post? Please consider leaving a comment or subscribing to the feed to have future articles delivered to your feed reader.

Martine Ehrenclou
Posted by Martine Ehrenclou
October 28, 2008 2:41 PM

I read this article with great interest. Yet even more reported deaths due to inadequate hospital care. After interviewing over 150 doctors, nurses, hospital staff, and family members for my new book, Critical Conditions: The Essential Hospital Guide To Get Your Loved One Out Alive, I realized that until hospitals are willing to create an environment where nurses and physicians can do the jobs they aspire to, a hospitalized patient needs a loved one to act as an advocate, a watch dog, to oversee and support hospital medical care. My book explains exactly how to do this.

Comments for this article are closed.

Subscribe to InjuryBoard Honolulu

InjuryBoard Honolulu RSS Feeds

Keep up with the latest updates using your favorite RSS reader

Injury Board Honolulu is brought to you by Wayne Parsons Law Offices

Legal Assistance Center

More Info
Wayne Parsons Law Offices (866) 735-1102 Ext 585 www.wayneparsons.com
google
Personal Injury Lawyers Serving: Oahu, Maui, Hawaii, Kauai, Lanai
1406 Colburn St.Suite 201-C, Honolulu, Hawaii 96817 [ Show Map ]
Better Business Bureau Accredited Business Confidential

Your question will be referred to an attorney near you. If your question is of a legal nature, then by submitting this form you agree you are not forming a formal attorney / client relationship. Read our full privacy policy.

Looking for an InjuryBoard attorney closer to home? Click here.

Subscribe to Blog Updates

Enter your email address if you would like to receive email notifications when comments are made on this post.

Email address