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J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Jun 2013
Medical errors: the performance gap in hypoplastic left heart syndrome and physiologic equivalents?
- Frederic Jacques, Vijay Anand, Edward J Hickey, Yasuhiro Kotani, Mrinal Yadava, Abdullah Alghamdi, Christopher A Caldarone, Andrew N Redington, Steven Schwartz, and Glen S Van Arsdell.
- Labatt Family Heart Centre, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
- J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg.. 2013 Jun 1;145(6):1465-73; discussion 1473-5.
BackgroundThe frequency and impact of medical errors during staged palliation are unknown.MethodsAll patients with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and physiologic equivalents (N = 191) who underwent staged palliation (2001-2011) were studied. Stage 1, interstage, and stage 2 were reviewed to identify diagnostic, technical, judgment, and management errors. The impact of errors on transplant-free survival was examined by parametric competing risks and risk-adjusted regressions using bootstrapping.ResultsStage 1 (N = 191) errors (n = 111, 58%) were common and predominantly intraoperative (n = 84, 44%) or postoperative (n = 43, 23%). Postoperative errors were determinants of death/transplant (hazard ratio, 1.7; P = .01), whereas technical errors (n = 65, 34%) were not, but they delayed recovery and discharge (extra 24 days approximately, P = .0024). Postoperative stage 1 errors led to decrements in total strategy success of approximately 30% (78% vs 48%, P = .004). Stage 2 (N = 134) errors (n = 66, 49%) were common. Intraoperative errors were the most prevalent (n = 61, 46%) but did not compromise survival. Postoperative errors (n = 11, 8%) were determinants of death/transplant (hazard ratio, 2.4; P < .0001). Interstage errors (n = 21, 16%) led to twice the intensive care unit stay (16 vs 7 days, P < .0001) and hospital stay (30 vs 17 days, P < .02) after stage 2. Overall, a child presenting with ideal morphology and managed with no postoperative errors at stage 1 or 2 would have a predicted late survival in excess of 80%.ConclusionsTechnical errors are common and delay recovery. Their effects on survival are mitigated. Intraoperative judgment errors are associated with strategy failure in a univariate model and lead to increased postoperative errors in a multivariate model. Postoperative errors are independently associated with a decrease in univentricular strategy survival.Copyright © 2013 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
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