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Error in medicine.
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Citations
27
References
1994
Year
NursingMedical EthicsAdverse EventMedical MalpracticeMalpracticePatient SafetyNursing ResearchMedical HistoryPatient EducationNursing StudentsInappropriate UseInjury PreventionFlorence NightingaleMedicineMedical DiagnosisMedical Error PreventionEmergency MedicineHospital Medicine
Medical and nursing students have long been taught Florence Nightingale’s dictum of “first, do no harm.” The authors analyzed cardiac arrest cases at a teaching hospital to assess preventability. Their findings indicate that a substantial proportion of hospitalized patients suffer iatrogenic injuries—approximately one‑third overall, with a significant fraction serious or fatal—and that 64 % of cardiac arrests were preventable, largely due to inappropriate drug use.
FOR YEARS, medical and nursing students have been taught Florence Nightingale's dictum—first, do no harm. 1 Yet evidence from a number of sources, reported over several decades, indicates that a substantial number of patients suffer treatment-caused injuries while in the hospital. 2-6 In 1964 Schimmel 2 reported that 20% of patients admitted to a university hospital medical service suffered iatrogenic injury and that 20% of those injuries were serious or fatal. Steel et al 3 found that 36% of patients admitted to a university medical service in a teaching hospital suffered an iatrogenic event, of which 25% were serious or life threatening. More than half of the injuries were related to use of medication. 3 In 1991 Bedell et al 4 reported the results of an analysis of cardiac arrests at a teaching hospital. They found that 64% were preventable. Again, inappropriate use of drugs was the leading cause of
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