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Medical Malpractice is a Leading Cause of Death in US
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WASHINGTON --
According to a report by the Institute of
Medicine, medical errors are responsible for
at least 44,000 deaths each year in the
United States and possibly as many as 98,000
each year.This means that more people die
from medical mistakes each year than from
breast cancer, highway accidents, or AIDS,
the report noted.
The report
entitled "To Err is Human" was released by
the Institute of Medicine which is part of
the National Academy of Sciences, a private
organization created by Congress to advise
government on scientific matters.
"These
stunningly high rates of medical errors
resulting in deaths, permanent disability,
and unnecessary suffering are simply
unacceptable in a medical system that
promises to 'do no harm,'" says William
Richardson, Chair of the Committee that
wrote the report and President and Chief
Executive Officer of the W.K. Kellogg
Foundation, Battle Creek, Michigan.
According to the report, medical mistakes
occur not only in hospitals but in day
surgery and outpatient clinics, retail
pharmacies, nursing homes, and home care.
The report states that medication errors
alone contribute to more than 7,000 deaths
annually, exceeding those resulting from
workplace injuries.
The report
cited deficiencies in a number of areas,
from illegible writing in medical records to
the failure of physicians to regularly
retest their competence after receiving
their license to practice. The report
claims that the health care industry is far
behind other high-risk industries, such as
the airline industry, in its attention to
ensuring basic safety. To address these
alarming rates of medical mistakes, the
report recommends dramatic changes to the
health care system to achieve a minimum goal
of a fifty (50%) percent reduction in
medical mistakes within five (5) years.
On December 1, 1999, President Clinton
called for the health care community to work
to eliminate these mistakes. "We've got to
work through how we can use technology, and
how we can maybe even slow some of the
actions, to make sure that mistakes like
this aren't made," said Clinton. "Any error
that causes harm to a patient is one error
to many," said Dr. Nancy Dickey, past
President of the American Medical
Association.
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