Coming to a Hospital Near You Soon?!?

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
think it can't happen here!?!? All we hear is that "barrycare" is what we need and once it is passed we will all see how it will be good for us....well we are headed for what they have in the UK and Canada....hope that "hope and change" works for you....


Neglected by 'lazy' nurses, man, 22, dying of thirst rang the police to beg for water

By Emily Andrews
Last updated at 2:19 PM on 06th March 2010
Neglected by 'lazy' nurses, Kane Gorny, 22, dying of thirst rang the police to beg for water | Mail Online

A man of 22 died in agony of dehydration after three days in a leading teaching hospital. Kane Gorny was so desperate for a drink that he rang police to beg for their help. They arrived on the ward only to be told by doctors that everything was under control.

The next day his mother Rita Cronin found him delirious and he died within hours. She said nurses had failed to give him vital drugs which controlled fluid levels in his body. 'He was totally dependent on the nurses to help him and they totally betrayed him.'

A coroner has such grave concerns about the case that it has been referred to police.

Sources say they are investigating the possibility of a corporate manslaughter charge against St George's Hospital in Tooting, South London.

Mr Gorny, from Balham, worked for Waitrose and had been a keen footballer and runner until he was diagnosed with a brain tumour the year before his death.

The medication he took caused his bones to weaken and he was admitted to St George's for a hip replacement in May last year. The operation left him immobile and unable to get out of bed.

His 50-year-old mother says that he needed to take drugs three times a day to regulate his hormones. Doctors had told him that without the drugs he would die.

Although he had stressed to staff how important his medication was, she said, no one gave him the drugs.

She said that two days after his hip operation, while Miss Cronin was at work, he became severely dehydrated but his requests for water were refused.

He became aggressive and nurses called in security guards to restrain him.

After they had left, he rang the police from his bed to demand their help.

Miss Cronin, who is divorced from her son's father Peter, said: 'The police told me he'd said, "Please help me. All I want is a drink and no one is helping me".

'By this time my son was confused due to his lack of medication and I think the nurses just ignored him because they thought he was just being badly behaved.

'They were lazy, careless and hadn't bothered to check his charts and see his medication was essential.'

That evening, Miss Cronin visited him. She said: 'I told Kane to behave himself because I thought he had been causing trouble - and I feel so bad about that now. I thought maybe he was having a bad reaction to the morphine he was on but in fact it was because he had not had his medication.'

The next morning she visited him before going to work. 'He was delirious and his mouth was open,' she said. 'I gave him a drink of Ribena.

'I told three nurses there was something wrong with my son and they said, "He's fine" and walked off. I started to cry and a locum doctor who was there told me not to worry.

'Eventually the ward doctor came round, took one look at Kane and started shouting for help.'

Miss Cronin was asked to leave her son's bedside. 'He died an hour later,' she said. 'I didn't even realise he was dying. I didn't even have a chance to say goodbye.'

The death certificate said Mr Gorny had died because of a 'water deficit' and 'hypernatraemia' - a medical term for dehydration.

His mother added: 'When I went back to the hospital I was told that all the nurses had been offered counselling as they were so traumatised, but nothing was offered to me.

'The whole thing is a disgrace. This hospital has a brilliant reputation and boasts of its excellent standards and safety record.

'But as soon as my son walked into that ward, his death warrant was signed. Of the 32 people who were involved in my son's care, every one made a mistake that ultimately led to his death, from the consultant to the care assistant.

'There has been an internal investigation but St George's never made it public and it was a whitewash-After his death the hospital never phoned me or wrote to me to apologise. How could this happen in the 21st century?'

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: 'Detectives from the Homicide and Serious Crime Command are investigating the death of Kane Gorny at St George's Hospital after this was referred to us by Westminster Coroner's Court.'

A spokesman for St George's Hospital said: 'We are extremely sorry about the death of Kane Gorny and understand the distress that this has caused to his family.

'A full investigation was carried out and new procedures introduced to ensure that such a case cannot happen in future.

'We have written to the family to explain the actions that have been taken and to answer their concerns about Mr Gorny's care. The family has also been invited to meet with trust staff to discuss the case in detail.'

The tragedy emerged a week after a report into hundreds of deaths at Stafford Hospital revealed the appalling quality of care given by many of the nurses.

This week a task force called on nurses to sign a public pledge that they will treat everyone with compassion and dignity.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Maybe best look at our own house as well

written 2004

In Hospital Deaths from Medical Errors at 195,000 per Year USA

An average of 195,000 people in the USA died due to potentially preventable, in-hospital medical errors in each of the years 2000, 2001 and 2002, according to a new study of 37 million patient records that was released today by HealthGrades, the healthcare quality company.

The HealthGrades Patient Safety in American Hospitals study is the first to look at the mortality and economic impact of medical errors and injuries that occurred during Medicare hospital admissions nationwide from 2000 to 2002. The HealthGrades study applied the mortality and economic impact models developed by Dr. Chunliu Zhan and Dr. Marlene R. Miller in a research study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in October of 2003. The Zhan and Miller study supported the Institute of Medicine's (IOM) 1999 report conclusion, which found that medical errors caused up to 98,000 deaths annually and should be considered a national epidemic.

The HealthGrades study finds nearly double the number of deaths from medical errors found by the 1999 IOM report "To Err is Human," with an associated cost of more than $6 billion per year. Whereas the IOM study extrapolated national findings based on data from three states, and the Zhan and Miller study looked at 7.5 million patient records from 28 states over one year, HealthGrades looked at three years of Medicare data in all 50 states and D.C. This Medicare population represented approximately 45 percent of all hospital admissions (excluding obstetric patients) in the U.S. from 2000 to 2002.

"The HealthGrades study shows that the IOM report may have underestimated the number of deaths due to medical errors, and, moreover, that there is little evidence that patient safety has improved in the last five years," said Dr. Samantha Collier, HealthGrades' vice president of medical affairs. "The equivalent of 390 jumbo jets full of people are dying each year due to likely preventable, in-hospital medical errors, making this one of the leading killers in the U.S."

HealthGrades examined 16 of the 20 patient-safety indicators defined by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) - from bedsores to post-operative sepsis - omitting four obstetrics-related incidents not represented in the Medicare data used in the study. Of these sixteen, the mortality associated with two, failure to rescue and death in low risk hospital admissions, accounted for the majority of deaths that were associated with these patient safety incidents. These two categories of patients were not evaluated in the IOM or JAMA analyses, accounting for the variation in the number of annual deaths attributable to medical errors. However, the magnitude of the problem is evident in all three studies.

"If we could focus our efforts on just four key areas - failure to rescue, bed sores, postoperative sepsis, and postoperative pulmonary embolism - and reduce these incidents by just 20 percent, we could save 39,000 people from dying every year," said Dr. Collier.

The HealthGrades study was released in conjunction with the company's first annual Distinguished Hospital Award for Patient SafetyTM, which honors hospitals with the best records of patient safety. Eighty-eight hospitals in 23 states were given the award for having the nation's lowest patient-safety incidence rates. A list of winners can be found at HealthGrades - Research Hospitals, Doctors and Nursing Homes.

Study Highlights Among the findings in the HealthGrades Patient Safety in American Hospitals study are as follows:

-- About 1.14 million patient-safety incidents occurred among the 37 million hospitalizations in the Medicare population over the years 2000-2002.

-- Of the total 323,993 deaths among Medicare patients in those years who developed one or more patient-safety incidents, 263,864, or 81 percent, of these deaths were directly attributable to the incident(s).

-- One in every four Medicare patients who were hospitalized from 2000 to 2002 and experienced a patient-safety incident died.

-- The 16 patient-safety incidents accounted for $8.54 billion in excess in-patient costs to the Medicare system over the three years studied. Extrapolated to the entire U.S., an extra $19 billion was spent and more than 575,000 preventable deaths occurred from 2000 to 2002.

-- Patient-safety incidents with the highest rates per 1,000 hospitalizations were failure to rescue, decubitus ulcer and postoperative sepsis, which accounted for almost 60 percent of all patient-safety incidents that occurred.




In Hospital Deaths from Medical Errors at 195,000 per Year USA
 
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OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
This article written recently shows nothing has changed...
Written 2009
More than 2 percent of all hospital patients are victims of a medical error, according to a study conducted by the health care ratings organization HealthGrades.

Researchers reviewed a Medicare database to evaluate almost 5,000 hospitals across the United States for their performance on 12 different measures of patient safety between the years of 2005 and 2007. They found records of a total of 913,000 "patient safety events," meaning errors that led to medical problems. This came out to 2.3 percent of Medicare admissions at those hospitals. Put another way, it translates to an error once every 1.7 minutes among Medicare patients alone.

Patients who were victims of a medical error had a 10 percent chance of dying, the researchers found.

According to lead researcher and orthopedic surgeon Rick May, the actual prevalence of errors is probably twice as high, since roughly half of medical errors go unreported.

The most common errors were bed sores, postoperative respiratory failure or serious infection, and death from serious but treatable complications among surgical inpatients.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Well the problem is simple, Medicare. We don't need it, it is endangering people's lives so let's get rid of it before it kills anyone else.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
Ovm the issue in the American hospitals as written in those articles was and is "medical errors" , not "diliberate neglect".....most often caused my a lack of good nurses and doctors and rationing of services in the socialized medical field in the UK.........
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
I once has a waitress ignore me. Another one brought me something I did not order.

People make mistakes of all kinds, and the system of health care a given country has won't affect that.
 

witness23

Veteran Expediter
think it can't happen here!?!? All we hear is that "barrycare" is what we need and once it is passed we will all see how it will be good for us....well we are headed for what they have in the UK and Canada....hope that "hope and change" works for you....

Seriously are you joking? That kind of thing happens here and all over the world. Along with the examples that OVM shared here's another caught on a surveilance camera.

Good try though chef, oh by the way I'm glad to see the propaganda machine back up and running.

YouTube - Woman Dies on Kings County Hospital Floor
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
These mistakes happen everywhere. It is my personal belief that they will increase here if we go over to a government system. Why do I believe that? First, the health care profession will no longer be answering to those who use the system, they will be accountable to the government. The government is not staffed with the brightest bulbs in the pack. The government will run this system on a "low bid" basis. The consumer of this product will have little say over the quality or quantity of care they receive. The more layers of control you put between the doctor and the patient the more problems will occur. This is not propaganda this is my personal beliefs based on my personal experience and observations over my lifetime. Nothing more.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
I do believe if we stay on the present system it too will egt worse...the one point that can not be ignored is the comparison billing....one that has and one that has not...

IF we get forced insurance thru these crooks costs will still be out of control...every procedure will be so darned expensive...
One thing for sure we can not let these insurance companies run the hen house alone,
 
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