
Doctors Are the Third Leading Cause of Death
Studies show that doctors account for
250,000 deaths per year. They don't do it intentionally, but due to a lack
of knowledge, errors and over-influence
from drug companies that is the end result. Don't be a victim.
Article from the JAMA ( Journal American Medical Association
)
A "Landmark Article".
Only several ones like this are published every year. One of the major
reasons it
is so huge as that it is published
in JAMA which is the largest and one of the most respected medical journals
in the entire world.
Keep this article in mind and review it several times so you can use it
to counter the arguments of your friends and relatives who are so enthralled
with the traditional medical paradigm. These statistics prove very clearly
that the system is just not working. It is broken and is in desperate need
of repair.
Drugs are the fourth leading cause of death in this country. However,
this article makes it quite clear that the more powerful number is that
doctors are the third leading cause of death in this country killing nearly
a quarter million people a year. The only more common causes are cancer
and heart disease.
This statistic is likely to be seriously underestimated as much of the
coding only describes the cause of organ failure and does not address iatrogenic
causes at all.
Japan seems to have benefited from recognizing that technology is wonderful,
but just because you diagnose something with it, one should not be committed
to undergoing treatment in the traditional paradigm. Their health statistics
reflect this aspect of their philosophy as much of their treatment is not
treatment at all, but loving care rendered in the home.
Care, not treatment, is the answer. Drugs, surgery and hospitals are rarely
the answer to chronic health problems. Facilitating the God-given healing
capacity that all of us have is the key. Improving our diet, exercise,
and lifestyle are basic.
Effective interventions for the underlying emotional and spiritual wounding
behind most chronic illness are also important clues to maximizing health
and reducing disease.
The promise every doctor makes is ìFirst, do no harm.î But
doctors and hospitals do make mistakes. And the November 30 shocking report
from the Institute of Medicine showed medical mistakes are a common and
potentially life-threatening risk. If medical mistakes counted among the
leading causes of death in America, they would be eighth.
These total to
250,000 deaths per year from iatrogenic causes!!
What does the word iatrogenic
mean? This term is defined as induced in a patient by a physician's activity,
manner, or therapy. Used especially
of a complication of treatment.
Surgical gaffes like amputating the wrong
foot or a deadly chemotherapy overdose make headlines. But patients may never
hear of the more subtle
errors, like a delay in diagnosis or testing that costs precious time to
fight off disease. Medical mistakes costing lives. Medical mistakes are
a stunningly huge problem, says a new report by the Institute of Medicine.
It quoted studies estimating that at least 44,000 and perhaps as many as
98,000 hospitalized Americans die every year from errors. To put that into
sharper and more alarming perspective, even the lower figure of 44,000
deaths exceeds the number of people who die each year either on the highways,
of breast cancer or of AIDS.
It is an intolerable situation, especially
when it's taking place in the United States, which leads the world in medical
advances. The cause, according
to the Institute of Medicine, is not as much recklessness on the part of
doctors, nurses and other health providers as it is basic flaws in the
way hospitals, clinics and pharmacies operate. That kind of problem is
fixable.
As a matter of fact, safeguards have already been implemented to
reduce the likelihood of such lethal medical errors. Some hospitals are
now using
computerized prescriptions to ensure that pharmacists don't misread doctors'
scrawled prescriptions. At the urging of anesthesiologists, anesthesia
equipment is being standardized. And the Food and Drug Administration is
trying to reduce confusion by ensuring that the names of new drugs don't
sound too similar to drugs already on the market.
Doctors' notoriously poor
handwriting too often leaves pharmacists squinting to decipher a dose C
was it 10 milligrams or 10 micrograms? C or even the
name of the prescribed drug. Too many drug names sound confusingly alike.
Consider the painkiller Celebrex and the anti-seizure drug Cerebyx; or
Narcan, which treats morphine overdoses, and Norcuron, which can paralyze
breathing muscles.
But far more is needed: a concerted and comprehensive
effort to raise the bar on consumer safety in the health care industry,
not unlike what
has already taken place in other industries. Since many doctors already
feel beleaguered by financial constraints imposed on their care, insurers
and health maintenance organizations must also bear the burden of improving
safety.
At a minimum, the Institute of Medicine wants to reduce medical
errors by half within five years. Considering the number of people who
die each
year in hospitals - where they presumably go to get better - even that
goal may be too conservative.
Keeping Up with Changes
Health care is a decade behind other high-risk
industries in improving safety, the report said. It pointed to the transportation
industry as a
model: Just as engineers design cars so they cannot start in reverse, and
airlines limit pilotsí flying time to keep them rested, so can health
care be improved. Some fixes already are under way: Some hospitals have
computerized prescriptions. The Food and Drug Administration is hunting
ways to catch sound-a-like drugs.
Anesthesiologists persuaded many manufacturers
to standardize equipment and thus decreased technology-caused errors. Many
doctors now literally
mark the spot of surgical incisions before patients are put to sleep, so
everyone agrees on what will be cut.
Changes Coming from Congress
The Institute of Medicine is part of the National
Academy of Sciences, a private organization chartered by Congress to advise
the government on
scientific matters. Congress just passed legislation ordering the Agency
for Health Care Policy and Research to hunt strategies to reduce medical
mistakes. The bill will even change the name to the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality to reflect the emphasis. President Clinton is expected
to sign the bill soon. But the Institute of Medicine said reducing medical
mistakes requires a bigger commitment.
It recommended that Congress should
establish a federal Center for Patient Safety. It would require $35 million
to start and should eventually spend
$100 million a year in safety research.
The report said the total cost of
medical mistakes, lost income and production, cost of disability and health
care, totals $17 to 29 billion a year.
And thatís not mentioning
the human toll. The government should require that hospitals, and eventually
other health
organizations, report
all serious mistakes to state agencies so experts can detect patterns of
problems and take action. About 20 states now require error reporting.
But
how much and what penalties they impose varies widely. State licensing
boards and medical accreditors should periodically
re-examine health practitioners
for competence, stressing safety practices. Standardized medical equipment
and treatment guidelines can help doctors keep up. Change the ìculture
of secrecyî that surrounds medical mistakes, encouraging doctors
to discuss errors as well as near misses so problems are fixed.
But is there
something you can do, even from your sickbed, to protect yourself?
Become
an Expert
First, know what ails you. Ask your doctor all about it. Research
it on the Internet, for instance. Patients should feel entitled to inquire
about
their care no matter how sick they are. Second, know about your drugs.
The study shows more than 7,000 die each year because of medication errors.
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