Title: Fatal Care
1Telling Their Stories Sanjaya Kumar, M.D., M.Sc.,
MPH Karin Janine Berntsen, RN, BSN
THE QUALITY COLLOQUIUM - August 22, 2007
2FATAL CARE
- Vision Objectives
- Move the healthcare consumer beyond the
statistics associated with medical errors. - Who are the people behind the numbers?
- What are their stories?
- How do errors impact lives of those affected and
those that are involved? - Bringing the consumers to the forefront so they
can relate to the impact of medical errors on the
personal lives of people. - Move the consumer into action.
3FATAL CARE
- Rationale for Fatal Care
- Consumer naivety
- Medical overconfidence
- Assumptions can be deadly.
4- Good, non-fiction, literary work exists that is
beginning to bridge the gap between the consumer
and caregiver. - Internal Bleeding - Wachter, Shojania
- Through the Patients Eyes - Gerteis,
Edgman-Levitan, Daley, Delbanco - The Patients Guide to Preventing Medical Errors
-Berntsen - How Doctors Think - Groopman
- These works mostly emphasize the numbers and
statistics. - FATAL CARE is personal - you, your child, your
spouse, your neighbor, your friend, your
mother... - FATAL CARE - The next step to drive change in how
the consumer interacts in their healthcare to
help prevent medical errors.
5FATAL CARE Novel Type Non-Fiction Stories
The Janson Directive
Coma
The Scorpio Illusion
Shock
Critical
The Bancroft Strategy
Robin Cook
Robert Ludlum
New York Times bestsellers
6The Ambler WarningLudlum
On Parrish Island, off the coast of Virginia,
lies a psychiatric facility. Far from prying
eyes, it is a government - run hospital for
former intelligence employees in possession of
highly classified information. Former Consular
Operations agent Hal Ambler is one of these
patients whose mind is filled with secrets of
state - and is considered such a security risk
that he is kept heavily medicated and closely
watched. But theres one critical difference
between Ambler and the other patients - Ambler
isnt crazy. Now he must find a way to escape
the facility, find out who put him there, and
uncover the truth of who he wasand why someone
is willing to risk everything to see him dead.
7FATAL CARE
- Each chapter tells a different story of a family
impacted by a preventable medical error. - Three Little Angels Indiana Babies - Heparin
Overdose - Even the Tough Can Fall Charlie Weis - Surgical
Complication - Never Routine Lewis Blackman - Failure to Rescue
- Reading Between the Lines Trisha Torrey -
Misdiagnosis - Critically Wounded Diana Brookins - Bloodstream
Infection - Wrong Turn Benjamin Houghton - Wrong Side
Surgery - You Can Have My House Johanna Daly - Surgical
Site Infection - The Mission Taylor McCormack - Delay in
Treatment - Picking up the Pieces Diane Ford - PCA Pump
Failure - They Are Not Listening Ken Simon - Wrong
Diagnosis - Coming Together Linda Kenney - Medical Trauma
- One of Their Own Liz Augusta - Near Miss
8FATAL CARE
THREE LITTLE ANGELS
Heather heard muffled yelling and crying from
inside the door, but she couldnt make out what
they were saying. She felt a gnawing, sick
feeling in the pit of her stomach, like something
bad was about to happen and her body knew it
before her headNow Heather heard her mother
yelling. What do you mean? Whats wrong with
Thursday Dawn? Whats wrong with the baby?
Joannas voice became increasingly shrill and
hysterical. Accident, Hep-a-rin, what did you do
to her?
11 Percentage of medication errors involving
dangerous high-alert medications, such as
heparin, morphine, insulin, potassium chloride
and chemotherapy agents.
9FATAL CARE
- NEVER ROUTINE
- By Sunday afternoon, Lewis abdomen hurt worse
than ever. His belly grew rigid and distended.
His eyes had a sunken, hollow look. Alarmed by
his condition, Helen knew Lewis needed to see a
doctor right away. She repeatedly pushed the
call button, but they had stopped answering the
call light in room 749
10NEVER ROUTINE
- As morning broke, the awful pain in Lewis
abdomen abruptly stopped. When the nurse heard
this news, she took it as a positive sign and
said, Oh, good. But to Helen it seemed strange,
like the eerie calm in the eye of a hurricane,
where things are temporarily quiet before even
greater trouble lands onshore.
75 Percentage of U.S. hospitals who still have
not implemented a Rapid Response Team (RRT).
11Following Each StorySections that provide
insight and help for the consumer.
FATAL CARE
12FATAL CARE
Fatal points describe breakdowns in the process
that can lead to patient harm.
13FATAL CARE
Critical Safeguards describe steps that a
patient and family can take to help avoid a
medical error.
14FATAL CARE
- Safety Keys are brief snapshots of patient
resources and tips.
15FATAL CARE - Story Selections
16FATAL CARE
- A balance of positive and negative outcomes
- Fatal Care had a potential to be a downer.
- Limited fatal outcomes, included near misses.
- Altered positive and negative outcome stories.
- Unfortunately, it could have been Fatal Care
Children. - Limited children to three stories.
17FATAL CARE
- Geographic locations
- Medical errors happen in every area, city,
country and in-between. - Contacts came from all over the world - limited
to U.S. for this book. - New York City, LA, South Carolina, Everett
Washington, Chicago area, Portland, Boston
18FATAL CARE
- All size and types of hospitals
- Medical errors happen in every size hospital
- Teaching/University
- Community based hospitals
- Specialty hospitals
- Outpatient centers
19FATAL CARE
- Cross section of type of errors.
- Generally healthy people that received care or
treatment for an illness or injury. - For this book, we did not select chronic illness
or complex, multiple diagnosis case scenarios. - Targeting the general healthcare consumer who
could relate to, or experience a common medical
error.
20FATAL CARE
- Queries for the Stories
- Fatal Care Website http//www.fatalcare.com/
- PULSE http//www.pulseamerica.org/
- Previous contacts from
- The Patients Guide to Preventing Medical Errors
- Public news stories
- Mothers Against Medical Errors
- Mamemoms_at_aol.com
- National Patient Safety Foundation
- PATIENTSAFETY-L_at_LISTSERV.NPSF.ORG
21FATAL CARE
- Medication errors
- Infections
- SSI
- Device related infections
- Misdiagnosis
- Surgical complications
- Delays
- Wrong site surgery
- Near Miss
22FATAL CARE
- Methodology
- The key method was personal interviews.
- Written accounts
- Published stories
- Professional education
23FATAL CARE
- Stories
- Some are in litigation.
- Some had completed litigation/settlement.
- Others did not have litigation.
24FATAL CARE - its about the people