Doctors'
basic errors are killing 1,000 patients a month
Biggest
ever study of errors in British hospitals finds one in ten patients
affected
13
July, 2012
Almost
12,000 patients are dying needlessly in NHS hospitals every year
because of basic errors by medical staff, according to the largest
and most detailed study into hospital deaths ever performed in the
UK.
The
researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
and colleagues found something went wrong with the care of 13 per
cent of the patients who died in hospitals. An error only caused
death in 5.2 per cent of these – equivalent to 11,859 preventable
deaths in hospitals in England.
Helen
Hogan, who led the study, said: "We found medical staff were not
doing the basics well enough – monitoring blood pressure and kidney
function, for example. They were also not assessing patients
holistically early enough in their admission so they didn't miss any
underlying condition. And they were not checking side-effects...
before prescribing drugs."
In
one case a middle-aged man who had a cyst on his neck removed
developed an infection. He was treated with antibiotics but medical
staff did not realise he was not responding until it was too late and
he died.
In
another case, a 40-year-old obese woman was in hospital for three
weeks while doctors investigated symptoms including vomiting and
weight loss before discovering she had ovarian cancer. She was never
given preventive treatment for blood clots – a risk of prolonged
bed rest – and died of a clot on the lung.
The
study was based on analysis of 1,000 deaths at 10 NHS trusts during
2009. Previous estimates have suggested up to 40,000 deaths a year
are caused by errors in care but these have been based on
international studies and have not directly linked the errors with
the cause of death.
Dr
Hogan added: "Hospitals must learn from careful analysis of
preventable deaths and make every effort to avoid [them]."
Most
of the patients who died were elderly and frail and suffering from
multiple conditions. But some were in their 40s and 30s. More
supervision by senior consultants was required to ensure junior
doctors carried out proper assessment on admission and liaised with
GPs and social services.
International
evidence suggests one in 10 hospital patients suffers harm as a
result of errors in their care, ranging from short-term effects from
a wrong prescription to severe harm resulting from an operation on
the wrong limb.
But
the new study, published online in BMJ Quality and Safety, found
errors of omission were more frequent than active mistakes.
Dr
Hogan said: "The NHS in the future is going to have to look
after very frail elderly patients as their numbers increase. Our
systems are not robust enough to ensure we avoid harming them."
The
authors say the quality of hospital care should be assessed on the
basis of harm caused by errors, rather than on deaths. "If 95
per cent of deaths in hospital are not due to preventable poor care,
the scope for hospitals to demonstrate reduction in their mortality
rate is limited," they say.
A
Department of Health spokesperson said it was an important study
which revealed a picture of preventable deaths.
"Patients
have a right to expect the very best care from the NHS. Any
preventable death in hospital is unacceptable and we expect the NHS
to ensure patients receive high-quality, safe and effective care. We
know that data like this can help hospitals to improve services,"
said the spokesperson.
Man
who died of dehydration was killed by hospital neglect
Neglect
by medical staff led to a man dying of dehydration in a hospital bed,
a coroner has ruled. Medical staff at St George's Hospital in
Tooting, south London, did not give Kane Gorny vital medication to
help him retain fluids. The 22-year-old, who was a keen sportsman,
even phoned police from his hospital bed as he was so desperate for a
glass of water, the inquest heard. Deputy Coroner Dr Shirley
Radcliffe told the hearing: "A cascade of individual failures
has led to an incredibly tragic outcome."
She
recorded a narrative verdict at Westminster Coroner's Court and said
Mr Gorny had died from dehydration contributed to by neglect. Dr
Radcliffe said: "Kane was undoubtedly let down by incompetence
of staff, poor communication [and] lack of leadership, both medical
and nursing."
James
Stevenson, the solicitor for Mr Gorny's family, said they were
"devastated by the number of missed opportunities" to
prevent his death.
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