![]() ![]() Senay and I chatted for awhile, then she asked if I would mind talking to Andy Rooney. So why don’t doctors and other caregivers pay more attention to errors? Before caregivers will act decisively, they – and the public – need to give up once and for all the comforting belief that the danger posed by treatment-caused errors is either unavoidable or hardly exists at all. Treatment-related injuries kill anywhere from two thousand to three thousand people every week, according to two major scientific studies – and that’s just in the hospital…. The frightening reality is that medical mistakes of all types are not unusual. I had been deeply shaken by what I discovered when examining the frequency and severity of medical errors. My book, Demanding Medical Excellence: Doctors and Accountability in the Information Age, had come out two years before. Emily Senay told me when she called, it was also a slow news week. Oh – and as CBS News health and medical correspondent Dr. This was the “House of Medicine” demanding a housecleaning. Third, the group making this claim wasn’t some nattering nabob of Naderite negativism, but a prestigious part of the National Academy of Sciences. Maybe not news to JAMA readers, but a jolt to the general public. Second, those numbers were raw, indeed: 44,000-98,000 preventable deaths each year in hospitals alone. That meant real families who could appear on TV or testify before Congress to give the raw numbers a human face. First, the IOM used names of real victims, taken from news reports. The appalling toll of medical errors wasn’t exactly a secret back then, but doctors and hospitals had gotten used to publicly tut-tutting about the “price we pay” for medical progress every time a new study came out and then going back to doing exactly what they’d been doing before.īut this time was different. It came right after the Institute of Medicine released its landmark report, To Err is Human, in November, 1999. But as it happens, I did have a phone conversation with Rooney about patient safety. OK, that was a cheap Andy Rooney imitation. This has offended some respondents who, blinded by their own biases, think a writer using a celebrity’s death to push for information that could be used to improve care is the same thing as accusing his physicians of negligence or hauling Rooney’s family into court to publicly disclose private details. ![]() The blog goes on to have Rooney ask for someone to find out what actually killed him. ![]()
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