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One in 14 American Patients May Be Harmed by Hospital Diagnosis Mistakes

  • US Population: 345,992,498
  • Percent of persons with overnight hospital stays: 7.9%.
  • Projected number of persons with overnight hospital stays: 27,333,407
  • Projected number of persons harmed by hospital diagnosis mistakes: 1,952,386 [Data compiled by HEADLINE HEALTH]

NEWSWEEK – Harmful diagnostic errors may occur for as many as one in every 14 hospital patients receiving medical care, a new study based on a single medical center in the U.S. has found. As many as 85 percent of these errors may be preventable, highlighting the need for improved surveillance in hospital settings.

Previously published reports in the U.S. have suggested that existing surveillance tools underestimate the prevalence of diagnostic errors in healthcare settings.

To explore these findings, a team of researchers led by Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston randomly selected records from 675 patients admitted to hospital between July 2019 and September 2021.

“In the majority of cases, the diagnostic process works well, leading to a timely and accurate diagnosis,” Anuj Dalal, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and lead author on the study, told Newsweek.

“But sometimes things do break down. Interwoven systems, complex processes, and human factors can contribute to a missed diagnostic opportunity.”

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In their study, published in the journal BMJ Quality and Safety, Dalal and colleagues concluded that, based on this sample from a single medical center, harmful diagnostic errors occurred in 7 percent of patients, or one in 14, receiving general medical care.

They added that the majority of these errors were preventable.

“In our study, the key process breakdowns identified to include breakdowns in initial assessments and diagnostic testing,” Dalal said. “It is paramount to note that it is not one individual or process that is at fault.”

These findings add to previous work by Dalal and colleagues exploring existing electronic health record systems and their ability to monitor diagnostic errors in medical settings.

“We suspect a mix of underlying issues are driving the problems with test choice and clinical assessments we saw,” Andrew Auerbach, a professor of medicine in residence at the University of California San Francisco and co-author on this previous research, told Newsweek.

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“These in turn probably fall into system gaps …”

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