- How to Tell if Spring Symptoms Owe to Allergy, Cold or Something More Serious
- Journalists Capsulize Weight Loss News and ACA Premium Pressures
- BJC executives: Key questions shaping value-based care strategy
- Michael Dowling: Time to hold social media platforms accountable for the youth mental health crisis
- California county breaks ground on $23.7M behavioral health center
- Rhode Island hospital birthing center to remain open amid funding push
- OHSU CEO out after 3 months
- Arkansas system names CEO
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- What increased hygienist autonomy means for dentistry
- COVID vaccination rates rise among healthcare workers: CDC
- More medical schools swap lectures for active learning
- 43 recent hospital, health system executive moves
- NorthBay receives $14.9M for new behavioral health center
- Buffalo Bills, Kaleida Health extend naming rights partnership
- The specialty facing a million dollar gender pay gap
- 10+ new cardiology practice openings in Q1
- WHO updates opioid treatment, overdose guidance
- Michigan dentist charged with racketeering, Medicaid fraud
- Vermont Dental Society, U of Detroit to open state’s largest dental clinic
- How 5 specialties’ pay has changed over 5 years
- The anesthesia staffing strategies that are actually working
- How Medicaid Contractors Stand To Gain From Trump’s Policy
- Ohio hospital to pay $1.7M to resolve Stark law allegations
- Idaho to restore Medicaid mental health programs after cuts
- ADA wary of impact CMS’ antifraud program could have on dentistry
- What’s new with Tenet?
- Federal agencies to revise mental health parity rule
- Inside SALT Dental Partners’ growth spurt
- Centerstone receives $750K VA suicide prevention grant
- Utah physician indicted for selling unapproved drugs
- Breaking Barriers: How Innovation Can Expand Access to Dental Care
- Lee Health breaks ground on 60K-square-foot ASC, MOB
- 15 big dental technology, AI updates to know from Q1
- Gastro Health inks deal with Virginia practice
- Montana hospital launches ASC expansion project
- Centene subsidiary to invest $6M in California behavioral health campus
- 5 dental mergers, acquisitions in March
- 4 DSOs making headlines
- USDA Warns of Lead Risk in Frozen Dino-Shaped Chicken Nuggets
- New Heart Diet Advice Counters U.S. Guidance on Meat and Dairy
- Peeled Garlic Recalled Over Risk of Deadly Botulism
- Some CDC Lab Testing Paused Amid Internal Review
- White House floats 12.5% budget cut for HHS in FY2027, reiterates reorganization plan
- Boston Scientific receives FDA clearance for the Asurys Fluid Management System
- Boston Scientific receives FDA clearance for the Asurys Fluid Management System
- Serenity Medical Receives FDA Humanitarian Device Exemption for IIH Venous Stent
- Serenity Medical Receives FDA Humanitarian Device Exemption for IIH Venous Stent
- Blue Shield of California’s virtual-first plan continues to show lower costs, increased access for members
- Merit Medical Acquires View Point Medical, Inc., expanding the Merit Therapeutic Oncology Portfolio
- Merit Medical Acquires View Point Medical, Inc., expanding the Merit Therapeutic Oncology Portfolio
- FDA Publishes New Set of Real-World Evidence Examples
- FDA Publishes New Set of Real-World Evidence Examples
- Industry Voices—Hospitals are fueling AI innovation, should they own a piece of it?
- Nerve Stimulation Therapy May Ease Fibromyalgia Pain, Fatigue
- Psychotherapists Often Poorly Trained in Treating Muscle-Linked Disorders in Males
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- Most Americans Don't Realize Brain Donation Is Needed to Study Autism
- Weekend Binge Drinking Triples Risk of Permanent Liver Damage
- Tax Time Brings Surprises for Some Who Receive ACA Subsidies
- An update on the pharma industry’s reshoring effort
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- Biopharma R&D pipeline shrinks for 1st time in 30 years: report
- UConn Health to acquire children’s psychiatric facility
- What the Health? From KFF Health News: GOP Mulls More Health Cuts
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Trump’s 100% drug tariff; Takeda layoffs; Lilly, Insilico's AI deal
- CMS locks in MA star ratings overhaul, bumps proposed special enrollment window for provider terminations
- Oregon university launches dental therapy program
- Trump slaps 100% duties on imported drugs but leaves plenty of exceptions
- OSU Wexner Medical Center reports 25% drop in safety incidents: 5 notes
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The health care community has turned against gun ownership with a vengeance, establishing many gun control advocacy groups masquerading as firearms safety initiatives.
Garen Wintemute, the University of California, Davis Medical Center blowhard, has been declared a “hero of medicine” by Time magazine for his relentless efforts to gut the Second Amendment.
Here in Michigan, the University of Michigan Health system has established the Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention. Drs. Patrick Carter, Rebecca Cunningham and Paul Ehrlich never miss an opportunity to trash gun owners after every event where another mental health case on the loose goes on a shooting rampage.
There are about 50,000 firearms deaths in America every year from all causes: homicide, suicide, and accidents. The good doctors are wont to point out that this is entirely unacceptable, despite over 50% of firearms deaths being suicides and not genuine gun violence.
It turns out that health care doctors kill seven times as many Americans as firearms - annually !!! Researchers from Johns Hopkins and the Risk Management Foundation of the Harvard Medical Institutions looked at 15 diseases and concluded that 371,000 Americans died and 424,000 were permanently disabled as a result of misdiagnoses.
https://www.upi.com/Health_News/2023...7231689858030/
Medical mistakes kill, permanently disable 795,000 Americans a year, study findsBy Cara Murez - July 20, 2023
About 795,000 Americans die or are permanently disabled every year due to misdiagnosed medical conditions.A new analysis led by experts at Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore looks more closely at diagnostic error and its impact.
"Prior work has generally focused on errors occurring in a specific clinical setting, such as primary care, the emergency department or hospital-based care," lead author Dr. David Newman-Toker, director of the Center for Diagnostic Excellence, said in a Hopkins news release.
"These studies could not address the total serious harms across multiple care settings, the previous estimates of which varied widely from 40,000 to 4 million per year. The methods used in our study are notable because they leverage disease-specific error and harm rates to estimate an overall total," he added.
The researchers, from Johns Hopkins and the Risk Management Foundation of the Harvard Medical Institutions, looked at 15 diseases and concluded that 371,000 Americans died and 424,000 were permanently disabled as a result of misdiagnoses.
About 75% of the serious harms happen in connection with vascular events, infections and cancers. In all, 15 diseases account for nearly 51% of the serious harms.
Five conditions -- stroke, sepsis, pneumonia, venous thromboembolism and lung cancer -- cause nearly 39% of total serious harms.
Across diseases, the overall average error rate was estimated at 11%, but the rate ranges widely -- from 1.5% for heart attack to 62% for spinal abscess. Stroke was the top cause of serious harm from misdiagnosis, found in 17.5% of cases.
Diseases with high error rates should be top priority targets for solutions, the authors said.
"A disease-focused approach to diagnostic error prevention and mitigation has the potential to significantly reduce these harms," Newman-Toker said. "Reducing diagnostic errors by 50% for stroke, sepsis, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism and lung cancer could cut permanent disabilities and deaths by 150,000 per year."
Johns Hopkins has already developed and started using solutions to address missed stroke cases, he said.
Solutions include virtual patient simulators to improve the skills of front-line clinicians, as well as portable eye movement recordings via video goggles and mobile phones to enable specialists to remotely assist clinicians in diagnosing stroke. They also include computer-based algorithms to automate parts of the diagnostic process and dashboards that measure performance and provide feedback on quality improvement.
"Funding for these efforts remains a barrier," Newman-Toker said. "Diagnostic errors are, by a wide margin, the most under-resourced public health crisis we face, yet research funding only recently reached the $20 million per year mark. If we are to achieve diagnostic excellence and the goal of zero preventable harm from diagnostic error, we must continue to invest in efforts to achieve success."
The study findings were published recently in BMJ Quality & Safety.
Ἰατρέ, θεράπευσον σεαυτόν
About 75% of the serious harms happen in connection with vascular events, infections and cancers.
Wait, so 3/4 of the cases had potentially-fatal diagnoses, but the cause of harm is doctor error?
This type of report has always been a little hinky, and this one holds true to form.
That said, if these political docs don't understand self-defense in the 2A context, who's to say they hold to it in medical practice? "First, do no harm" has a strong element of respect for patient autonomy essential to informed consent.
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