Yes, but it is also a fact that the US has more medical errors per patient than other countries, too.
http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/survey-us-patients-report-high-rate-medical-errors
WASHINGTON – The United States leads six countries in its rate of medical mistakes, an international survey released today found. The study, which looked at healthcare safety, access and care coordination in Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, found that the United States also lacks care coordination and has high out-of-pocket costs for healthcare.
Medical errors are the eighth leading cause of death in this country
http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/errback.htm
Medical errors carry a high financial cost. The IOM report estimates that medical errors cost the Nation approximately $37.6 billion each year; about $17 billion of those costs are associated with preventable errors. About half of the expenditures for preventable medical errors are for direct health care costs.
Why does the US have such a high rate? The initial article cites lack of coordination of care. The second article says that the largest contributor is errors in medication.
My husband has for one reason or another clocked a very large number of days in a variety of hospitals. Here's some things I spotted in some that could be easily improved:
1. Very questionable cleanliness. This was in a hospital in a wealthy area that had a hard time getting cleaning staff.
2. Use of CNA's instead of RN's in a hospital with chronic money problems.
3. Not enough RN's, especially on weekends. If there was an emergency, nobody came. This is why people hire somebody to sit with them in the hospital. To make sure if there is an emergency, that the staff knows about it.
4. Hospital did not check for MRSA (my husband has it) We had to tell them after the rest of the interview.
5. Failure to do continuity between shifts in any good way (Yale New Haven has a nurse that is in charge of shift and weekend continuity for each patient, and a back up for the nurse for patients who will be in hospital for an extended stay. Costs nothing and avoids tons of screw ups on the weekend)
6. Inadequate checking of doctors for cancellation of licenses in other states. The doctor moved states, requalified, and no one checked that he had his license lifted for incompetence in another state.
7. Failure to check adequately that they have the right patient matched with the right surgery (there are more checks these days), which is why the error rate in 2002 was better than in 1999.
8. And the biggie, failure to get the medications right, including the patient's incoming medications.
So the medical community needs to take responsibility for their part of the problem, rather than blaming everything on patients not following directions and suing for malpractice.
Heck, mailing the patient directions is already a ridiculous thing. Not all patients can read. Not all patients can read English. And not all letters actually get delivered by the post office.