Doctors, nurses, and other health professionals dedicate their lives to caring for their patients. But providing health care can be complicated. There are often multiple steps involved in a health care visit. A number of different medical staff may be take part in the care of a single patient. And patients may be confused by unfamiliar words and technical language.
Although hospitals, clinics, and doctor’s offices take many steps to keep their patients safe, medical errors can happen. Often, medical errors (also called adverse events) happen when there is a single misstep in a chain of activities.
Missed or wrong diagnosis makeup the lion’s share of US malpractice lawsuit payouts. These are the most common and most costly of all malpractice claims. Diagnosis-related errors are the leading cause of claims associated with death and disability. Most diagnostic errors occur in the outpatient setting, but those that occur while a person was in the hospital are more likely to be fatal.
Research estimates that the number of misdiagnosis-related claims that cause preventable, permanent damage or death may be as high as 160,000 each year. Errors can happen anywhere along the way. It can be a wrong diagnosis, no diagnosis or delayed diagnosis. If a healthcare provider gets the diagnosis wrong, the chances of getting the therapy right are greatly reduced. Sometimes these mistakes are fatal right off the bat. For example, in one case our firm handled, the patient presented with the worst headache of her life and was told to take ibuprofen. What she really had was a brain aneurysm and patient ended up a paraplegic.
Even great doctors make mistakes. Patients need to be persistent with physicians because so often the doctor will make a diagnosis and over time, it becomes clear that it was wrong. The first attempt may not be accurate. Think of it as a work in progress instead of being written in stone. Ask, “is there anything else this can be?'”. If the doctor says “no” then ask “why?” and an answer such as “because it’s the only thing it could be” is not good enough.
Take an active role in working with your doctor or nurse when you are ill. To help them put all of this information together to find the right diagnosis (health problem), your doctor or nurse will need to:
1. Tell Your Story Well: Be Clear, Complete, and Accurate when you tell your doctor or nurse about your illness. Take some time to think about when your symptoms started, what made your symptoms better or worse, or if your symptoms were related to taking medications, eating a meal, exercising, or a certain time of day. Try to remember all of the important information about your illness. Write down some notes and bring them with you, a family member may be able to help you with this.
Sometimes a nurse or health technician may ask you questions about your illness before you see the doctor. Make sure your doctor hears the same story.
2. Be A Good Historian:
3. Be A Good Record Keeper:
Be an Informed Consumer:
5. Take Charge of Managing Your Health:
6. Know Your Test Results:
7. Follow Up:
8. Make Sure It Is The Right Diagnosis:
By following this checklist, you become a partner in finding the right diagnosis for you.