Wrong-patient, wrong-site procedures persist despite safety protocol

My lede:

Performing surgery on the wrong body part — or, worse yet, the wrong patient — is the kind of mistake physicians agree should never happen.

A series of reports from hospitals documenting how these devastating errors slip through the cracks prompted the Joint Commission in 2004 to mandate a three-step protocol. It required physicians and other health professionals to perform a pre-procedure verification process, mark the correct site for the procedure and conduct a “timeout” discussion as a final check before the procedure begins.

Yet new evidence shows the commission’s “universal protocol” has not stopped wrong procedures.

In fact, the number of wrong-patient and wrong-site procedure reports rose, according to a study of more than 27,370 adverse events self-reported by Colorado physicians and published in the October Archives of Surgery. The study found that 132 wrong-patient and wrong-site procedures were voluntarily reported to the Colorado Physician Insurance Co. from 2002 to 2008, with peak annual numbers of reports for both categories occurring after the commission’s protocol was required.

Read the whole shebang.

Preventive measures shown to cut hospital C. diff rates

My lede:

Implementing a comprehensive set of infection control measures can cut the incidence of Clostridium difficile significantly, according to a study presented at the American College of Gastroenterology’s annual meeting.

Integris Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma City was able to cut its C. diff rate by 40%, from 11.3 per 10,000 admissions to 6.9, in three months after forming a multidisciplinary “war on C. diff” committee to devise and implement infection prevention measures.

The infection occurs nearly 500,000 times annually in hospitals and nursing homes. The national C. diff rate is 13 per 10,000 admissions, and about 30,000 people die each year of the disease in health care facilities, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Read the whole shebang.