Injured In Utah

And they say the lawyers are out of control?

175 surgical mistakes in 30 months. That's the number of times a surgeon or hospital made a mistake which actually caused harm to a patient. 253 close calls. That's the number of times medical professionals made a mistake, but corrected the error before any 'harm' to the patient. Obviously, it's not that there are too many lawsuits, lawyers, or 'greedy' plaintiffs, it's that there are too many surgeons, hospitals, and nurses committing errors. If 175 airplanes fell out of the sky every month, due to pilot error, would we blame the families seeking compensation for the loss of their mothers, fathers, wives, husbands and siblings? As the saying goes, don't hate the players, hate the game. It's time for serious medical reform, an open system where mistakes are not hidden from patients and where those making the mistakes don't blame the victims for seeking compensation because they had their thyroid gland removed for cancer, only to find out the lab screwed up and there was no cancer in the first instance. For all of the grim details, you can get the June 26, 2007 report direct Patient Safety Authority, a Pennsylvania state run and funded organization created to reduce the number of people injured by medical malpractice. Utah should be so lucky to get such an organization..

Seven Scariest Hospital Risks

"Hospitals are terrible places for sick people." Reaffirming the idea that, if you've got humans involved, you will have human error, a recent Forbes article discusses the seven scariest hospital risks. The article does an excellent job of detailing the inherent problems in our hospital industry, and offers helpful advice on how to avoid becoming the victim of medical mistakes which include surgeon errors, infection, and incorrect medications. The article observes that: "between 40,000 and 100,000 people die every year because of doctors' mistakes, including surgical mishaps and drug mix-ups. One big problem: Hospital patients may get the wrong drug one time out of five, according to a study by Auburn University. The death toll from mistakes is at least as bad as that from car accidents or breast cancer, and maybe as bad as that from strokes."