Medical errors: What hospitals can learn from one state's new approach

Medical errors: What hospitals can learn from one state's new approach

Recently, state patient safety officials in Massachusetts released a report detailing the impact of medical errors in hospitals: The Financial and Human Cost of Medical Error.

According to the report, although the state’s done well with improving the safety of patients in its hospitals, the risk of death and injury from medical error is still a significant concern. And it becomes even more pressing when factoring in other settings where patients receive care, such as primary care practices, skilled nursing facilities – and even in their own homes.

In Massachusetts alone, there were nearly 62,000 preventable events that harmed patients in 2017. These events directly caused more than $617 million in insurance payouts – or just over 1% of the state’s total healthcare expenses for that year.

Errors have long-lasting effects on many of the patients who experience them. The writers of the report reached out to over 200 patients in the state who’d survived a medical error and conducted in-depth interviews with them about their experiences.




Next Article

  • How Mobile Devices Improve Patient Experience, Quality of Life

    How Mobile Devices Improve Patient Experience, Quality of Life

    In a wearable-technology intervention study, young adults with cancer improved their health-related quality of life and physical activity. Adolescent and young adult oncology patients wrestle with …

    Posted Jun 17, 2019mhealth apppatient engagement

Did you find this useful?

Medigy Innovation Network

Connecting innovation decision makers to authoritative information, institutions, people and insights.

Medigy Logo

The latest News, Insights & Events

Medigy accurately delivers healthcare and technology information, news and insight from around the world.

The best products, services & solutions

Medigy surfaces the world's best crowdsourced health tech offerings with social interactions and peer reviews.


© 2024 Netspective Foundation, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Built on Nov 15, 2024 at 12:42pm