Despite IOM Warning, Medical Errors May Have Killed 1 Million Plus In Past Decade

In a scathing report, Consumers Union estimates that more than 1 million people have died over the last decade due to preventable medical harm.  The newly released report, To Err is Human — To Delay is Deadly,” suggests that since the Institute of Medicine’s influential 1999 report on medical errors, “98,000 people die each year needlessly because of preventable medical harm, including health
care-acquired infections. Ten years after To Err is Human, we have no national entity comprehensively tracking patient safety events or progress.”

While some hospitals have made great strides in the effort to reduce medical errors and the U.S. government has taken steps to limit reimbursement for preventable medical events, the nation still has a long way to go.  Consumers Union is recommending that we develop a nationsl system for tracking medical errors.  The organization suggests that concerns about malpractice lawsuits due to reports of medical harm may be overstated.

To learn more about the Consumer Union report, please click here.



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