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Medical Mistakes
that affect Multiple Patients should be
disclosed
Newswise, September 2010 — Health care
organizations should disclose medical
mistakes that affect multiple patients even
if patients were not harmed by the event,
according to an AHRQ-funded research paper
published in the New England Journal of
Medicine.
Medical mistakes that affect multiple
patients, known as large-scale adverse
events (LSAEs) to researchers, are incidents
or series of related incidents that harm or
could potentially harm multiple patients.
These events, which can include incompletely
sterilized surgical equipment, poor
laboratory quality control and equipment
malfunctions, are often identified after
care has been provided and can affect
thousands of patients.
“It’s clear that health care organizations
face a dilemma regarding disclosure of
large-scale adverse events – whether these
events lead to patient harm or not,” said
AHRQ Director Carolyn M. Clancy, M.D. “It’s
not always clear how to do that in a way
that minimizes risk to the patient and the
organization, but this research can help.”
According to researchers from the University
of Washington, Seattle, disclosure policies
for adverse events that affect individual
patients are becoming more common among
health care organizations but often fail to
address how to disclose LSAEs that could
have affected many patients.
Researchers weighed ethical considerations
of whether to disclose such events. For
instance, is disclosure ethical if patients
were unlikely to have been physically harmed
by the event but could be harmed
psychologically by the disclosure?
The
authors reviewed instances in which health
care institutions disclosed an LSAE and
analyzed the method of disclosure and
existing disclosure policies. They concluded
that, in most cases, these events should be
disclosed and offered these recommendations:
• Develop an institutional policy.
Organizations should have a clear set of
procedures for managing the disclosure
process, notifying patients and the public,
coordinating follow-up diagnostic testing
and treatment and responding to regulatory
bodies.
• Plan for disclosures. Disclosures should
be made proactively, unless a strong,
ethically justifiable argument can be made
not to do so. The method of disclosure may
depend on the event, but patients should be
informed personally and all at the same
time.
• Communicate with the public. Organizations
should assume that media coverage of a
large-scale adverse event is inevitable. To
build public trust, media responses should
demonstrate the organization’s commitment to
honesty and transparency.
• Plan for patient follow-up. Organizations
should provide follow-up diagnostic testing
and treatment to patients affected by the
LSAE and address any anxiety caused by the
disclosure. Patients who have suffered
physical harm due to an event resulting from
a preventable error or system failure should
be compensated.
“Disclosing large-scale adverse events is
essential if health care organizations are
to maintain patients’ and the public’s trust
and ensure that affected patients receive
the testing and treatment they need,” said
lead author Denise Dudzinski, Ph.D., an
associate professor in the Department of
Bioethics & Humanities at the University of
Washington, Seattle.
“These disclosures are never easy, but it is
critical that organizations invest the time
and resources necessary to learn how to
handle these disclosures effectively.”