Latest News

Hospital Diagnostic Errors May Affect 7% of Patients


 

Most Frequent Diagnoses

The most common diagnoses associated with diagnostic errors in the study included heart failure, acute kidney injury, sepsis, pneumonia, respiratory failure, altered mental state, abdominal pain, and hypoxemia. Dalal and colleagues emphasize the need for more attention to diagnostic error analysis, including the adoption of artificial intelligence–based tools for medical record screening.

“The technological approach, with alert-based systems, can certainly be helpful, but more attention must also be paid to continuous training and the well-being of healthcare workers. It is also crucial to encourage greater listening to caregivers and patients,” said La Regina. She noted that in the past, a focus on error prevention has often led to an increased workload and administrative burden on healthcare workers. However, the well-being of healthcare workers is key to ensuring patient safety.

“Countermeasures to reduce diagnostic errors require a multimodal approach, targeting professionals, the healthcare system, and organizational aspects, because even waiting lists are a critical factor,” she said. As a clinical risk expert, she recently proposed an adaptation of the value-based medicine formula in the International Journal for Quality in Health Care to include healthcare professionals’ care experience as one of the elements that contribute to determining high-value healthcare interventions. “Experiments are already underway to reimburse healthcare costs based on this formula, which also allows the assessment of the value of skills and expertise acquired by healthcare workers,” concluded La Regina.

This story was translated from Univadis Italy using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Surgical Center Wins $421 Million Verdict Against Blue Cross
MDedge Cardiology
Why Residents Are Joining Unions in Droves
MDedge Cardiology
How AI Is Revolutionizing Drug Repurposing for Faster, Broader Impact
MDedge Cardiology
Lawsuit Targets Publishers: Is Peer Review Flawed?
MDedge Cardiology
Beyond Scope Creep: Why Physicians and PAs Should Come Together for Patients
MDedge Cardiology
NY Nurse Practitioners Sue State Over Pay Equity, Alleged Gender Inequality
MDedge Cardiology
A Hard Look at Toxic Workplace Culture in Medicine
MDedge Cardiology
70% of Doctors Would Discharge Noncompliant Patients, Medscape Survey Finds
MDedge Cardiology
How Doctors Use Music to Learn Faster and Perform Better
MDedge Cardiology
Is It Possible To Treat Patients You Dislike?
MDedge Cardiology