News
Communication Failures Linked to 1,744 Deaths in Five Years, US Malpractice Study Finds
Feb 01, 2016
Hospitals and doctors’ offices nationwide might have avoided nearly 2,000 patient deaths — and $1.7 billion in malpractice costs — if medical staff and patients communicated better, a report released Monday has found.
Communication failures were a factor in 30 percent of the malpractice cases examined by CRICO Strategies, a research and analysis offshoot of the company that insures Harvard-affiliated hospitals. The cases — including 1,744 deaths — involve some horror stories that no family, and no medical professional, wants to experience.
Citation for the full-text article:
Bailey M. (2016 February 1).Communication failures linked to 1,744 deaths in five years, US malpractice study finds. STAT News
Latest News from CRICO
Get all your medmal and patient safety news here.
Development of a Taxonomy for Characterising Medical Oncology-related Patient Safety and Quality Incidents: A Novel Approach
News
Using funding from CRICO, this study describes the development of a comprehensive, validated taxonomy for medical oncology-related incidents.
Improving Patient Handoffs Helps Reduce Malpractice Claims
News
Healthcare Risk Management reports on a large study conducted by Boston Children's Hospital (BCH) in which researchers reviewed 498 medical malpractice claims provided by Candello, CRICO's national medical malpractice collaborative. The work revealed a direct relationship between the quality of patient handoffs and claims.
Frequency and Nature of Communication and Handoff Failures in Medical Malpractice Claims
News
Using Candello data, this study examines the characteristics of malpractice claims which feature miscommunications.
EHR-Related Events in Medical Malpractice Claims
News
Analysis of a CRICO medical malpractice claims study of cases involving health IT.