11 serious errors a day in NHS surgery

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  • gmb45

    #1

    11 serious errors a day in NHS surgery

    A total of 722 objects were left inside patients during surgery last year

    Eleven people are seriously harmed during NHS surgery every day, it emerged yesterday.

    The number of major errors has risen by 28 per cent in five years, with more than 4,000 patients hurt in 2007/08.

    Mistakes include objects such as scalpels and coils being left inside patients, organs being punctured, and the wrong dosage of drugs being given.

    A total of 722 objects were left inside patients during surgery last year ? one every two and a half days.

    That number has soared by 13 per cent in the five years to 2007/08.

    The figures were revealed just days after a damning MPs' report found that many hospitals are routinely covering up such mistakes.

    The Commons health select committee warned that another hospital disaster like the one at Stafford, where up to 400 people died, could not be ruled out ? because managers were putting Whitehall targets and cost-cutting above patient safety.

    Government policy 'too often' gave the impression that hitting waiting list targets, achieving financial balance and attaining elite foundation trust status were more important than patient safety.

    'This has undoubtedly, in a number of well documented cases, been a contributory factor in making services unsafe,' the report said.

    The MPs added that many mistakes were not reported by the NHS ? raising the possibility that the recorded number of medical mishaps is just the tip of the iceberg.

    The latest figures were uncovered by the Liberal Democrats in a parliamentary answer.

    Health spokesman Norman Lamb said: 'These figures raise serious concerns and call into question the Government's claim to be making patient safety a priority.

    'There really is no excuse for leaving objects inside people. Far too many avoidable mistakes are still being made.

    'Many doctors and nurses are under enormous amounts of pressure to meet Government targets.

    'We have to ensure that patient safety isn't being compromised to satisfy the whims of Whitehall.

    'If we really want to raise standards in the NHS then we need to give local people the power to hold their health services to account.'

    The figures show that there have been a total of 17,921 errors during surgery over the past five years.

    The number of cases every year has shot up by 28 per cent to 4,161 in 2007/08 ? 11 a day.

    Most of the cases involve people having organs mistakenly punctured, which can lead to haemorrhaging.

    Over the last five years, the organs of 12,125 patients were punctured, with the annual figures soaring 33 per cent to 2,817 in 2007/08.

    Hundreds of other surgical mistakes were reported, including not removing or inserting tubes properly, using wrongly-matched blood, forgetting to give drugs on time, and not sterilising equipment properly.

    Failure to sterilise is a key method by which superbugs such as C. Diff and MRSA can spread.

    There were also dozens of reports of the catch-all 'performance of inappropriate operations'.

    The total uncovered by the LibDems represents only a fraction of the mistakes made in the NHS every year, as it only covers errors during operations.

    Overall, there are around 250,000 mistakes causing harm to patients reported across the Health Service every year. More than 3,600 of those affected die as a result
  • basheer
    Newbie
    • Jun 2009
    • 1

    #2
    intresting post

    Comment

    • chroma
      V.I.P. Member
      • Feb 2009
      • 1976

      #3
      Ive got a friend whos training to be a surgeon.

      Its not uncommon for her to pull 16hr days then go home and study some more.
      Any free time she has is spent doing paperwork or passed out sleeping. she has no actual downtime.

      This is set to be her life foe the next god knows how long, i figure i could keep up that routine for maybe a year before i wander into the place with a gun and start firing off rounds at anything that moves (luckily id be too sleep depraved to actualy hit anything)

      No human i know had the mental fortitude to concentrate consistently for an entire year without rest.
      He who laughs last thinks slowest.

      Comment

      • Lainie
        V.I.P. Member
        • Mar 2008
        • 3062

        #4
        gmb why do you post all this info but never give your opinion on it??

        sigpic

        Its nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice

        Comment

        • forntida
          DK Veteran
          • Feb 2009
          • 1281

          #5
          Originally posted by Lainie
          gmb why do you post all this info but never give your opinion on it??

          I think he/she is saying that medical staff are overworked and tired and susceptible(where did that come from?) to errors.
          I can't wake up Grumpy now in case I am accused of Dwarfism

          Comment

          • gmb45

            #6
            Originally posted by Lainie
            gmb why do you post all this info but never give your opinion on it??

            no need yours and forntidas is enough

            Comment

            • maca
              Mr. DK DJ
              • Feb 2009
              • 6310

              #7
              my sister is a nurse in the royal hospital in liverpool. to say medical staff are overworked is an understatement, she normally has to at least 3. 14 hour shifts a week and as chroma says when she gets home she still has to got chores to do round the house. and people wonder why mistakes are being made in our hospitals. what we need are more nurses and doctors on our wards. every year new nurses find almost impossible to find work because the hospitals say there on a budget, also lets give these nurses a wage they deserve. and stop pooring good money after bad on people coming here to the uk for medical check ups, opperations , just because there free ...

              Comment

              • Mr Pumpy
                DK Veteran
                • Jan 2009
                • 1467

                #8
                Originally posted by maca58
                my sister is a nurse in the royal hospital in liverpool. to say medical staff are overworked is an understatement, she normally has to at least 3. 14 hour shifts a week and as chroma says when she gets home she still has to got chores to do round the house. and people wonder why mistakes are being made in our hospitals. what we need are more nurses and doctors on our wards. every year new nurses find almost impossible to find work because the hospitals say there on a budget, also lets give these nurses a wage they deserve. and stop pooring good money after bad on people coming here to the uk for medical check ups, opperations , just because there free ...

                Agreed maca..

                Me mother has been a staff nurse all her working life and Mrs Pumpy works on the Orthopedic ward at our town hospital so I here all the stories.
                Basically all departments are woefully understaffed because the management are constantly trying to cut costs.
                I refuse to answer that question on the grounds that I do not know the answer.

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