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4 in 10 of Public, More Than One-Third of
Physicians Say They Have Personally Experienced Medical Errors
Survey Shows Strong Disagreement
Between Physicians and the Public On Effectiveness of Potential
Solutions
MENLO PARK, Calif., Dec. 11
/PRNewswire/
- Some 42% of the public and more than one-third of U.S. doctors say they or
their family members have experienced medical errors in the course of
receiving medical care, with significant percentages reporting serious
consequences, according to a new survey by the Harvard School of Public
Health and the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.
However, implementing the actions
recommended by experts on medical errors may not be easy. Despite widespread
personal experience, neither the public nor physicians name medical errors
as a top problem facing health care and medicine today. Physicians and the
public also disagree about many proposed solutions.
The Harvard and Kaiser researchers
discuss their findings in a New England Journal of Medicine article being
published on December 12, 2002. The nationwide survey examined the views of
831 physicians in April-July 2002 and 1,207 adults in April-June 2002.
"One of the striking findings
of this study is that physicians disagree with national experts on the
effectiveness of many of the proposed solutions to the problem of medical
errors," said Robert Blendon, Sc.D., professor of Health Policy at the
Harvard School of Public Health.
"This survey provides strong
documentation that medical errors represent a problem that affects a
significant number of people," said Drew Altman, Ph.D., president and
CEO of the Kaiser Family Foundation. "The fact that so many physicians
report personal experiences with errors corroborates what we heard from the
public," Altman added.
Experience with Medical Errors
Both physicians and the public were
read a common definition of a medical error early in the survey.
Subsequently, 35% of physicians and 42% of the public reported experiencing
a medical error in their own care or that of a family member at some point
in their life; 18% of physicians and 24% of the public said an error caused
"serious health consequences" such as death (reported by 7% of
physicians and 10% of the public), long-term disability (6% and 11%,
respectively) or severe pain (11% and 16%, respectively).
Three in 10 (29%) of all doctors
said that in their role as a physician they had seen a medical error that
resulted in serious harm to a patient in the last year, and a majority of
those who had seen an error said it is "very likely" (15%) or
"somewhat likely" (45%) that they would see a similar one at the
same institution in the next year.
Not Viewed As A Top Problem
Facing Health and Medicine
Doctors and the public agree that
as many as half of the deaths due to medical errors could have been
prevented, but neither group listed medical errors among the top
"problems facing health care and medicine in the country today."
Only 5% of physicians and 6% of the public identified medical errors as a
top concern.
Instead, when asked to name in an
open-ended question the top problems facing health care and medicine today
physicians identified malpractice insurance costs and lawsuits (29%), health
care costs (27%), and problems with insurance companies and health plans
(22%). The public cited the cost of health care (38%) and cost of
prescription drugs (31%) as the top problems facing health care and
medicine.
Preventing Medical Errors?
Doctors and the public differ in
their views of the most effective ways of reducing medical errors. Much of
the public agreed that nine of the 16 offered proposals could be very
effective, but a majority of practicing physicians saw just two proposals as
very effective: requiring hospitals to develop systems to avoid
medical errors (55%) and increasing the number of hospital nurses (51%).
Physicians and the public disagree
substantially in their views on some of the key proposals:
- Seven in 10 of the public (71%)
said requiring hospitals to report errors to a state agency would be very
effective, compared with 23% of physicians.
- A majority of the public (62%)
said reports of serious errors should be released publicly; just 14% of
physicians agreed, with most doctors (86%)
saying hospital reports should remain confidential.
- Half of the public (50%), but
only 3% of physicians, said that suspending the licenses of health
professionals who make medical errors would be a very effective solution for
reducing errors.
- Two-thirds of the public said it
would be very effective to reduce the work hours of physicians in training
(66%) compared to 33% of physicians.
Although few physicians said that
more malpractice suits could be effective in preventing individual errors, a
majority believes that surgeons who make errors with serious consequences
should be subject to lawsuits.
Gap Between Medical Error Experts
and Views of Physicians and the Public
Physicians and the public do not
necessarily agree with the views of experts regarding the effectiveness of
certain approaches to reducing errors. For example, less than a majority of
both physicians and the public believes that limiting certain high-risk
procedures to high volume centers (40% of physicians, 45% of public),
increasing use of computerized medical records (19% and 46%, respectively),
or use of computers in ordering of medical tests and drugs (23% and 45%,
respectively) would be very effective solutions.
Furthermore, about one-third of
physicians (34%) agree that another key proposal of experts -- using only
physicians trained in intensive care medicine in hospital ICUs -- would be
very effective.
Causes of Medical Error
Physicians said the leading causes
of errors are a shortage of nurses (53%) and overwork, stress or fatigue of
health professionals (50%). A majority of the public identified seven
causes; the top four they cited are physicians not having enough time with
patients (72%); overwork, stress or fatigue of health professionals (70%),
health professionals not working together or communicating as a team (67%)
and a shortage of nurses (65%).
About seven in 10 physicians
thought an error would be more likely at a hospital that does fewer
procedures. The public was less sure, with about half saying that an error
would be more likely at a low-volume center and the other half saying that
errors would be more likely at a high-volume center (23%) or that volume
would make no difference (26%).
Methodology
The Harvard School of Public Health
and Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation's Medical Errors: Practicing Physician
and Public Views is based on two surveys, one of physicians and one of the
public, both designed and analyzed by a team of researchers from Harvard
School of Public Health and the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Physician Survey
The fieldwork for the survey of
physicians was conducted April 24-July 22, 2002 by mail or online with 831
physicians by Harris Interactive, Inc. The sample was drawn from the
national list of physicians provided by Medical Marketing Service, Inc. This
list includes both American Medical Association members and non-members and
is updated weekly. The margin of sampling error was +/-3.5 percentage
points.
General public sample
The survey of the public was
conducted by telephone April 11- June 11, 2002 with a nationally
representative sample of 1,207 adults 18 years and older. The fieldwork for
the survey was conducted in Spanish and English by ICR/International
Communications Research. The margin of sampling error was +/-2.6
percentage points.
Please note that for both surveys
sampling error may be larger for other subgroups and that sampling error is
only one of many potential sources of error in these or any other public
opinion poll.
The Kaiser Family Foundation is an
independent, national health philanthropy dedicated to providing information
and analysis on health issues to policymakers, the media, and the general
public. The Foundation is not associated with Kaiser Permanente or Kaiser
Industries.
Harvard School of Public Health is
dedicated to advancing the public's health through learning, discovery, and
communication. More than 300 faculty members are engaged in teaching and
training the 800-plus student body in a broad spectrum of disciplines
crucial to the health and well being of individuals and populations around
the world. Programs and projects range from the molecular biology of AIDS
vaccines to the epidemiology of cancer; from risk analysis to violence
prevention; from maternal and children's health to quality of care
measurement; from health care management to international health and human
rights.
http://tbutton.prnewswire.com/prn/11690X15726543
SOURCE Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
CO: Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation; Harvard School
of Public Health
ST: California
SU: NPT SVY
http://www.prnewswire.com
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