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Hospital Malpractice
Lawyer
A report by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies (IOM), a not-for-profit,
non-governmental organization chartered as a part of the National Academy of Sciences estimates
that almost 100,000 people die as the result of medical errors in US hospitals each year. That
makes medical errors one of the leading causes of death and catastrophic injury in the U.S.
Even more disheartening, a study released in April, 2007 by Health Grades, which provides
ratings of hospitals, health care agencies and nursing homes in the US, found that patient safety
incidents rose three percent overall from 2003 to 2005. It further found that the
poorest-performing hospitals in the US had 40 percent higher rates of medical errors than the top
rated centers.
Among the types of patient-safety incidents studied, the highest occurrence rates were for
decubitus ulcer, failure to rescue, and post-operative respiratory failure. The greatest increases
were in post-operative sepsis, post-operative respiratory failure, and certain infections
attributable to medical care.
Hospitals can be held liable for the negligence of its staff nurses, therapists, and doctors.
Many doctors are not employed by a hospital, by are in private practice maintaining staff
privileges at the hospital. In such cases, the hospital may be held liable for medical
malpractice for failing to properly select and retain competent physicians, as well as being held
liable under ostensible agency, or apparent agency, theory.
Following are some tips you can follow to help protect yourself against medical errors:
- Keep health professionals involved in your health care informed
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- make sure your doctors know which over-the-counter and prescription medicines,
dietary supplements such as herbs and vitamins, and anything else you are taking.
- Make sure every member in your health care team has all your important health
information, including any adverse reactions and allergies you have had to
medicines.
- Learn about your condition, tests, and treatment recommended by your physician. After a
test, ask about the results. Don't be embarrassed to insist that healthcare workers who have
direct contact with you wash their hands first.
- Chose a hospital that has experience treating your condition.
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- Ask a friend or family member to be there with you – someone who can speak for you
when you can't.
- Before any surgery, make sure that you, your surgeon and your doctor are all clear
on exactly what will be done.
- Ask your doctor about the treatment plan you should follow after being discharged
from the hospital, and when you can return to your regular activities.
- Ask questions about your medicines, such as what they are for, how and for how long you are
supposed to take them, what side effects are likely, what you should do if they occur, if they
are safe to take with other medicines, dietary supplements, and food and drink additives. Make
sure your prescriptions are legible.
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- If you can't read them, chances are that your pharmacist won't be able to read them
either.
- Talk to your pharmacist
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- ask whether the medicine you are given is the medicine your doctor prescribed.
- ask if you have any questions about the directions on your medicines' labels. For
example, does “four doses daily” mean one dose every six hours or only during waking
hours? Be careful when measuring liquid medicines. A household teaspoon, for example,
is not a true teaspoon.
If you or a family member has been seriously injured or died as a result of hospital negligence,
then please contact us. Maybe we can help.
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