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What healthcare professionals must keep in mind for patient safety

WHO will launch a global campaign to create awareness of patient safety and urge people to show their commitment to making health care safer.

“Errors are an inevitable and unfortunate reality of medical practise”.

The complete Healthcare System is an interlocked system. Many factors contribute in making of a Healthcare system. So an error in any step will have an influence on another action. Most medical errors are not due to improper care by doctors or nurses but because of system failure. It is wrong to blame only doctors or nurses. The problem is not bad people in Healthcare – it is good people working in bad systems. The people working in health care are the most educated and dedicated people in any industry. However, the consequences of errors in medical practise are potentially serious for both doctors as well as the patients alike.

During old times doctors were considered next to Gods and they were rarely accused of an error made during the practise. But now as medical technology has advanced so has patient’s expectations and a slightest error can drag a doctor in court of law.

44,000 to 98,000 Americans die every year due to medical error whereas in India 5 lacs death occur every year, according to a study by Harvard university.

An Error is defined as the failure of a planned action to be completed as intended (i.e. Error of execution) or, the use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim (i.e. Error of Planning).1

Errors can be:

  1. Medication Errors
  2. Diagnostic Errors
  3. Treatment procedure Errors
  4. Clerical Errors
  5. Errors due to Equipment failures
  6. Preventive Errors
  7. Other errors
  1. MEDICATION ERRORS:

They can be either due to Doctor’s, Nursing staff’s or Pharmacist’s mistake. A Doctor can make a mistake while prescribing a Wrong drug, a drug which the patient is Allergic to, Unnecessary drug, Failure to recognise Drug- Drug interaction, Inappropriate dosage form, Inappropriate route, Wrong indication, ordering of Contraindicated therapy, Orders for the wrong patient, Orders missing information required for the dispensing and administration of the drug.

A nurse can give a wrong drug, wrong dosage, wrong route of administration, or to a wrong patient. They can sometimes fail to monitor drug transfusion.

A pharmacist can give wrong drug due to illegible prescriptions, similar sounding medicine names.

It can be a delayed diagnosis, wrong diagnosis, Improper management of correct diagnosis or a missed diagnosis by the doctor. Misdiagnosis can result in Incorrect choice of tests and incorrect treatment which can harm the patient.

DISCLOSURE OF MEDICAL ERROR: Whatever be the reason of medical error, it is a sensitive topic for the Doctors, Institutions/ organisations as well as for the patients. Disclosure of medical errors to patients is the best ethical, clinical and legal course. Every Patient has a fundamental right to know regarding their health. In absence of disclosure there is a higher chance of suing of the physician by the patient if he comes to know about it through some other sources and the physician will be more liable in such cases. Physicians should start with an apology and explain the complete situation clearly. They should try to address all the concerns and issues raised by the patient and his relatives. Patients  expect their physicians to be honest in revealing what went wrong and what was done to ameliorate that harm.

BARRIERS TO DISCLOSURE OF ERRORS:  Fear of legal action, guilt feeling,  shame, loss of respect, loss of reputation of hospitals are some of the reasons preventing truthful disclosures by individual doctors and hospitals.

METHODS TO PREVENT AND REDUCE ERRORS: Patient safety is very important. There is a need to understand the cause of errors and the methods to prevent it.

No one should be harmed in health care and yet, every day, thousands of patients suffer avoidable harm while receiving care. The objective of World patient safety day is to raise global awareness about patient safety and encourage global solidarity and action.

About the author: Dr. Rupali Patil is a Medico-Legal Consultant of CHD Group and is also a practicing ENT surgeon and Allergy specialist. 

Disclaimer: The views expressed are the author’s own and not of CHD Group.


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