Name:
E-mail:
Subject:
Phone:
City:
State:
Zip:
Your Questions or Comments:
 

Get Legal Advice & Help today!
Call Toll Free: (800) 752-4297


Lommen, Abdo, Cole, King & Stageberg, P.A.

Minneapolis Law Office
2000 IDS Center
80 South Eighth Street
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402

Phone: (612) 339-8131

Wisconsin Law Office
Grandview Professional Building
Suite 210, 400 South Second St.
Hudson, Wisconsin 54016

Phone: (715) 386-8217
Or:       (651) 436-8085



Anesthesia - Related Human Error and Equipment Failure

Adaptations of the critical-incident technique were used to gather reports of anesthesia-related human error and equipment failure. A total of 139 anesthesiologists, residents, and nurse-anesthetists from four hospitals participated as subjects in directed or open-ended interviews, and 48 of them functioned as "trained observers." A total of 1,089 descriptions of preventable "critical incidents" were collected. Of these, 70 represented errors or failures that had contributed in some way to a "substantive negative outcome."

From these incidents, ten potential strategies were developed for prevention or detection of incidents. Overall patterns observed in this wider study were similar to those of our earlier report. The incidents most frequently reported included breathing circuit disconnections, drug-syringe swaps, gas-flow control errors and losses of gas supply. Only 4% of the incidents with substantive negative outcomes involved equipment failure, confirming the previous impression that human error is the dominant issue in anesthesia mishaps.

Has anesthesiologists made an error in giving you anesthesia?
Contact Minnesota Medical Malpractice Attorney today!

Among the broad categories of key strategies for mishap prevention were additional technical training, improved supervision, improved organization, equipment human-factors improvements, and use of additional monitoring instrumentation. The data also suggest that less healthy patients are more likely to be affected adversely by errors.

It is suggested that, in future studies of anesthesia mortality and morbidity, untoward events should be classified according to preventive strategy rather than outcome alone as an aid to those who wish to apply the experience of others to lessen the risk in their individual practice

Read more about this at : Department of Health & Human Services

 

Site Map | MinnesotaMedicalMalpractice.com is designed for general malpractice information only. The information presented on this web site should not be formal legal advice nor the formation of a lawyer/client relationship. Our trial attorneys handle Minnesota and Wisconsin medical malpractice cases such as: doctor misdiagnosis, surgical errors, cancer misdiagnosis, implant injuries, birth trauma, prescription mistakes, hospital negligence, nursing neglect and other personal injury law related issues.

Minnesota Medical Malpractice Lawyers Copyright © 2008 - All rights reserved.
Web Design and Development by Copyright © 2008 Orion Foundry (US), Inc.