The article by Baker and associates in this issue (see page 1678) adds to the growing body of evidence that health care, though undoubtedly beneficial, also has potentially harmful effects on patients.1 According to the estimates published here, nearly 70 000 annual hospital admissions in Canada are associated with an adverse event (AE) that was preventable. Most are relatively minor, but a good proportion (20.8%) result in death. The impact on an already overtaxed system is not to be underestimated: patients experiencing AEs require a longer stay in hospital and may need more intensive care. What are we to make of these results? Are they sound? If so, what can be done about them? Or, are they a risk that we must accept in a world of increasingly complex and powerful therapeutic interventions with patients who are ever more frail?
Baker and associates followed a swath of investigations with similar methodologies published in the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, Denmark and New Zealand.2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 This is one of the study's strengths. Science establishes fact by replicating results under different conditions. Indeed, in some respects, this investigation pushes the boundaries in the field. It is probably the first study of AEs that can safely claim to be nationally representative, since the investigators selected hospitals of different sizes from 5 of Canada's most populous provinces. Furthermore, electronic data collection instruments may well have improved accuracy.
In scientific terms, the study results are reassuringly robust and familiar. There are some variations, of course. The overall AE rate (7.5% of all hospital admissions) is closer to European than to American findings. The proportion of AEs associated with death seems high when compared with that of other studies, and the proportion of AEs attributable to system-related events (just over 3.0%) is lower. But in other respects, including the distinctive distribution of AEs across hospital services (higher in surgery) and patient ages (higher among elderly patients), as well as a variety of other factors, the results are comparable with those of other studies.
One conclusion we can draw from this study is that, although the populations of Western societies might enjoy all the benefits of affluence and modern medical care, they also run a significant risk as patients. The hazard of AEs is contextual in nature and seems to be relatively uniform regardless of medicolegal culture, sociocultural setting and type of health care system. In New Zealand we have quantified what is in effect a newly discovered public health risk. Of the top 20 risk factors that account for nearly three-quarters of all deaths annually, adverse in-hospital health care events come in at number 11, above air pollution, alcohol and drugs, violence and road traffic injury, among others.11 Indeed, at 1500 deaths annually, this equals a third of the 5000 deaths attributed to tobacco each year.
The painful paradox is that, by lavishing ever more care on our patients, we may also be exposing them to a potential hazard.This is underlined by Baker and associates' finding that the AE rate was higher in teaching hospitals. Are these really more dangerous places than humbler institutions? The fact that the preventable AE rate was no higher in teaching hospitals suggests that quality was not the crucial factor. Rather, it may be that in a hospital-oriented referral system, the unchallenged therapeutic imperative of modern medicine to move patients to a higher level of intervention than they can — or even should — sustain needs to be re-examined. Other options may exist, particularly for older patients, who bear a disproportionate share of the iatrogenic burden.
At one level, treatment injury is a public health issue. It is a significant risk factor, associated with demonstrable variables, and there are clear opportunities for prevention. Although the results of this study do not bring this out, infection is likely an important source of harm, and it is one for which there are well-established control strategies. Other major areas where established procedures can be enhanced are the prescription and administration of medications. Indeed, a combination of evidence-based practice supported by information technology would go a long way to reducing the AE rate. Within the complexity of the modern hospital environment, we need to address issues of coordination, competence and communication. Stable team structures, openness to cross-professional exchange and sturdy peer-review mechanisms are vital factors in work organization, the lack of which contribute to the potential for AEs.
At another level, treatment injury is also a matter of human rights. Patients need to be made more aware of the level of risk involved in a particular course of treatment. When things go wrong, they must be informed. Their concerns — yes, even their complaints — must guide the system. And, if injured, they deserve rehabilitation, explanation and even compensation. Just as employees harmed at work might expect redress for the unwanted and possibly unanticipated risk to which they have been exposed, so patients harmed at a hospital — and their caregivers — might welcome an environment in which their claims can be heard. In New Zealand, for example, treatment injury is dealt with as a special case of accidental harm. Patients and their relatives do not have to litigate to receive compensation for AEs that result in injury or permanent harm or death. Instead, they approach the Accident Compensation Corporation, which administers a tax-based fund.12 Furthermore, in order to secure accountability for harm — whether it be an apology, remedial training or discipline — patients do not have to risk the courts either; they work through a semi-judicial complaints system headed by a health and disability commissioner.13
As with any matter of public policy, responding to AEs requires a mixture of sound empirical evidence, balanced scientific assessment and solid ethical grounding. The great contribution of studies such as Baker and associates' is that, for the first time, we have indisputable facts of a representative character. Those facts must be assessed against a balanced set of scientific criteria. What interventions are cost-effective? Which are most easily implemented and likely to have the greatest effect? Finally, we need an ethical debate on the purpose of medicine, placing the requirements of the patient at its core.
𝛃 See related article page 1678
Footnotes
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Competing interests: None declared.
Correspondence to: Dr. Peter Davis, Professor of Public Health, University of Otago, PO Box 4345, Christchurch, New Zealand
References
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