I
suspect that this article does not reflect the half of the real
situation. It is commonly said iatrogenic 'deaths by medicine'
exceed deaths by car accident.
At
least this study Is a start and the results are damning.
It
is apparently taught at medical schools (or at least was) that “only 15 per cent of people who visit their doctor actually 'need help' Too
bad about the rest! The 35% will clear up, because that's what most
illness does. But then there's the 45% who claim to be ill but
medicine has 'decided' are not ill”
What
happened to the hippocratic oath: 'Do no harm"?
As
a practitioner of 'alternative' medicine, I would have been ashamed
by a 15 % success rate. I would also have been out of business.
28.9%
of NZ hospital patients harmed by medication
27
January, 2013
More
than a quarter of patients at hospitals run by three district health
boards were harmed by their medication in the year to February 2011.
The 28.9% rate is higher than previously reported.
A
review by Counties Manukau, Capital & Coast and Canterbury DHBs
considered 1210 patient hospital charts.
A
resulting report said 5% of these adverse drug events, causing
permanent harm to four people and contributing to the deaths of five
others.
Others
caused temporary harm to 94.5% of the affected patients and medical
intervention was needed.
Painkillers
like morphine, tramadol, and warfarin, an anti-clotting drug, were
most often cited.
The
report said the rate of harm detected is much higher than that
indicated by voluntary reporting in hospitals.
The
report also said the rate of harm detected shows improvements to
patient safety have been slow in the last decade.
One
of the authors said that was due to the complexity of the health
system. Dr Nigel Millar said patients can be taking several
medications and moving between different health services that may not
always communicate well with each other.
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