Publication: Failure in Medical Practice: Human Error, System Failure, or Case Severity?
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HEALTHCARE
Abstract
The success rate in medical practice will probably never reach 100%. Success rates depend
on many factors. Defining the success rate is both a technical and a philosophical issue. In opposition
to the concept of success, medical failure should also be discussed. Its causality is multifactorial
and extremely complex. Its actual rate and its real impact are unknown. In medical practice, failure
depends not only on the human factor but also on the medical system and has at its center a very
important variable—the patient. To combat errors, capturing, tracking, and analyzing them at an
institutional level are important. Barriers such as the fear of consequences or a specific work climate
or culture can affect this process. Although important data regarding medical errors and their
consequences can be extracted by analyzing patient outcomes or using quality indicators, patient
stories (clinical cases) seem to have the greatest impact on our subconscious as medical doctors and
nurses and these may generate the corresponding and necessary reactions. Every clinical case has its
own story. In this study, three different cases are presented to illustrate how human error, the limits
of the system, and the particularities of the patient’s condition (severity of the disease), alone or in
combination, may lead to tragic outcomes There is a need to talk openly and in a balanced way about
failure, regardless of its cause, to look at things as they are, without hiding the inconvenient truth.
The common goal is not to find culprits but to find solutions and create a culture of safety.
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Citation
Roman MD, Fleacă SR, Boicean AG, Mohor CI, Morar S, Dura H, Cristian AN, Bratu D, Tanasescu C, Teodoru A, et al. Failure in Medical Practice: Human Error, System Failure, or Case Severity? Healthcare. 2022; 10(12):2495. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10122495
