- Planters Peanut Products Under Recall Due to Listeria Risk
- That ‘New Car Smell’ Could Be Toxic Carcinogens
- Gene Discovery Points to a New Form of Alzheimer’s
- Scientists May Have Located Your Brain’s ‘Neural Compass’
- Almost All Counterfeit Oxycontin Pills Contain Fentanyl
- A Parent’s Watchful Eye Does Keep Kids From Drugs, Alcohol: Study
- AI Might Boost Detection of A-Fib
- Drug May Help Folks Kick the Vaping Habit
- Small Pump May Let Kids Stay Home As They Await New Heart
- Gene Therapy Improves Vision in People With Inherited Blindness
Apologies Go a Long Way When Medical Errors Occur
Hospitals that take responsibility for medical mistakes aren’t at increased risk for lawsuits or more expensive settlements, a new study finds.
To come to that conclusion, researchers reviewed 989 medical mistakes that occurred at six hospitals in Massachusetts between 2013 and 2015. The hospitals were part of a program that informs patients about medical errors, apologizes for them, pledges to investigate and correct the problem, and offers compensation.
Only 5 percent of the medical errors led to malpractice claims or lawsuits, according to the report. When the program led to compensation, the median payment was $75,000. In 2015, the median payment nationwide when plaintiffs won malpractice lawsuits was about $225,000.
The study was published Oct. 2 in the journal Health Affairs.
“Our findings suggest that communication-and-resolution programs will not lead to higher liability costs when hospitals adhere to their commitment to offer compensation proactively,” lead author Michelle Mello, a professor of health research and policy, and of law at Stanford University in California, and colleagues wrote.
Medical errors are a leading cause of death in the United States, and the lawsuits they can trigger are a major concern for hospitals and doctors, the study authors noted.
Not only did the responsibility program examined in the study reduce liability costs, it also led to major improvements in patient safety, the researchers said.
“In these programs, hospitals scrutinize every serious harm event to answer the question, ‘What can we learn?’ ” Mello said in a university news release. “Traditionally, a risk manager’s focus has been on the patients who complain about the care or threaten to sue. But every patient deserves to know that what happened to them is being taken seriously.”
More information
The American Academy of Family Physicians outlines how patients can help prevent medical errors.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.