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posted by martyb on Tuesday October 27 2015, @07:27PM   Printer-friendly
from the added-surgical-risk dept.

About half of all surgeries involve some kind of medication error or unintended drug side effects, if a new study done at one of America’s most prestigious academic medical centers is any indication.

The rate, calculated by researchers from the anesthesiology department at Massachusetts General Hospital who observed 277 procedures there, is startlingly high compared with those in the few earlier studies. Those earlier studies relied mostly on self-reported data from clinicians, rather than directly watching operations, and found errors to be exceedingly rare.

“There is a substantial potential for medication-related harm and a number of opportunities to improve safety,” according to the new study, published today in the journal Anesthesiology . More than one-third of the observed errors led to some kind of harm to the patient.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-10-25/health-medication-errors-happen-in-half-of-all-surgeries

[Also Covered By]: http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/story/medication-errors-occur-half-surgeries-mgh-study-finds/2015-10-26


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by physicsmajor on Tuesday October 27 2015, @09:36PM

    by physicsmajor (1471) on Tuesday October 27 2015, @09:36PM (#255289)

    The more important, but non-obvious, reason this article was published from the anesthesia perspective is interesting. On a meta level, why would Harvard be publishing data that amounts to "anesthesiologists are terrible" - and not just any anesthesiologists, their department?! To understand this we need a little more background.

    See, anesthesiologists have a great gig. Limited hours, excellent pay. There's one big, looming problem though - the safety measures and monitoring used during these procedures are more than smart enough to do the vast majority of what constitutes their jobs. It's really a control system problem, and memorization-focused people coming through medical schools by and large aren't the best to be at the wheel. The best anesthesiologists are the rare few engineers who manage to survive the abuse of medical training, who keep everything fully green. But this isn't required. You can get by as an anesthesiologist basically sitting back until the machines alarm, then fix things. The monitors are that good.

    The obvious next question is: if the monitors are that good, can't we program in the appropriate action to be taken automatically? Such a system can definitely provide better control than humans can. It's a relatively simple 1-D DSP/control theory problem. And people are looking into this. Recently at least one company has come out with a fully automated solution. A machine which can do everything except hook the patient up. These are only approved in Europe for conscious sedation (e.g., colonoscopy) at this point, but it's coming fast.

    This terrifies the anesthesiologists.

    Circling back around, this type of article is getting published expressly because they're trying to build a trove of citations for a specific purpose. They need a list of citations noting all the nasty and unpredictable things which happen. That is the only reason Harvard is publishing an article which, on its face, seems like it makes them look bad. I don't know which side is going to win, but it'll be interesting to watch it play out.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 27 2015, @11:01PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 27 2015, @11:01PM (#255326)

    I'd be more willing to believe this if it came from MedicineMajor rather than Phisicsmajor.

  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Tuesday October 27 2015, @11:17PM

    by frojack (1554) on Tuesday October 27 2015, @11:17PM (#255330) Journal

    I haven't dug through all the inter-twined associations, but a cursory glance at the paper suggests very little about Harvard, other than the hospital is a teaching hospital for Harvard.

    The University probably exercises little in the way of control over papers published by hospital people.

    The money came from Doctors Company Foundation, the nation’s largest insurer of medical professional liability for physicians, surgeons, and other health professionals. Sounds like they would have an interest in this subject.

    If anything, Harvard was along for the ride, and never got even direct reference.
    I don't believe Harvard IS involved in publishing this at all.
    Its far more likely Insurance Companies are looking to enforce standards and cut mal-practice payments.

    This work was supported by grants from the Doctors
    Company Foundation (Napa, California) and the National
    Institute of General Medical Sciences (Bethesda, Maryland)
    of the National Institutes of Health (Award Number
    T32GM007592). The content is solely the responsibility of
    the authors and does not necessarily represent the official
    views of the Doctors Company Foundation or the National
    Institutes of Health. Neither the Doctors Company Foundation
    nor the National Institutes of Health had any role in the
    design and conduct of the study; collection, management,
    analysis, and interpretation of the data; or preparation,
    review, or approval of the manuscript.

    --
    No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Wednesday October 28 2015, @11:30AM

    by VLM (445) on Wednesday October 28 2015, @11:30AM (#255512)

    This terrifies the anesthesiologists.

    I suspect its a nearly perfect analogy for replacing pharmacists with vending machines.

    As long as the system can afford to remain corrupt, we'll have extremely highly paid human vending machines and human PID controllers. After that, well...

    Personally I expect their elimination to being in the military. If a mobile surgical hospital can replace two expensive officers and their part of the logistics tail with a PID controller running on an iphone and a vending machine, they'll do it.

    Another thing to watch for is outsourcing just like radiology. One dude in India will "supervise" 16 anesthesia machines over the internet.