Diagnostic errors are likely to be occurring in as many as 1 in every 14 (7 per cent) hospital patients which requires new approaches to medical surveillance, a new study has stressed.
The
study, published online in the journal BMJ Quality and Safety, said that 85 per
cent of these errors are likely preventable and underscore the need for new
approaches to improving surveillance to avoid these mistakes from happening in
the first place.
The
most frequent diagnoses associated with diagnostic errors included heart
failure, acute kidney failure, sepsis, pneumonia, respiratory failure, altered
mental state, abdominal pain and hypoxaemia (low blood oxygen levels).
According
to the study, cases deemed to be at high risk of diagnostic error were
categorised as transfer to intensive care 24 or more hours after admission,
death within 90 days of admission either in hospital or after discharge and
complex clinical issues but no transfer to intensive care or death within 90
days of admission.
"Complex
clinical issues included clinical deterioration, treatment by several different
medical teams, unexpected events such as cancelled surgery, unclear or
discrepant diagnostic information recorded in the medical notes," the findings
showed.
Harm
was classified as minor, moderate, severe, and fatal, and whether the
diagnostic error contributed to the harm and whether it was preventable were
also assessed. Cases with discrepancies or uncertainty about the diagnostic
error or its impact were further reviewed by an expert panel.
Among
all the cases reviewed, diagnostic errors were found in 160 cases (154
patients). These comprised intensive care transfer (54), death within 90 days
(34), complex clinical issues (52) and low risk patients (20).
The
study authors wrote that an estimated 85 per cent of harmful diagnostic errors
were preventable, with older, White, non-Hispanic, non-privately insured and
high-risk patients most at risk.
The
researchers suggested that a careful analysis of the errors and integrating AI
tools into the workflow should help minimise their prevalence, by improving
monitoring and triggering timely interventions.
No comments:
Post a Comment