Almost 100 California
residents are being harmed in hospitals in adverse events thought to be
preventable.
Records reveal the astonishing fact that during a 10-month
period doctors performed a wrong surgical procedure, on the wrong part of the
body or on the wrong patient 41 times. Moreover, for 145 times foreign objects such as surgical equipment have been forgotten in patients’ bodies.
According to California
Department of Public Health, these alarming mistakes doctors made are among the
1,002 severe medical harm cases which occurred between July 2007 and May 2008
in hospitals across the state.
In October, a technician wrongly
connected a ventilator hose, pumping oxygen by mistake into the lungs of a
9-day-old baby. Several weeks later, technicians at Santa
Cruz’s Dominican
Hospital misplaced a CT
scan of one patient into the electronic file of another one, the unfortunate
consequence being surgeons removing the wrong individual’s appendix.
These incidents are officially
called “adverse events” but they are also known as “never events”, for the
reason that they could never happen, being preventable.
Legislators and hospital
organizations from no less than 7 states agreed to guarantee protection to
patients by not having to reimburse the price of incorrect care. An assemblyman
from Sacramento
suggested a restriction on reimbursing hospitals for injuries tracked down by
the state.
Behind patient injuries, other
important aspect hospitals confront with concern the overcrowded emergency
rooms. At Kaiser Foundation Hospital San Jose in March, a patient was left
waiting in an emergency room for more than an hour, although doctors concluded
that he needed urgent care. Because all treatment bays were occupied, the
patient died in the waiting room.
|