• Acad Emerg Med · Jan 2005

    Comparative Study

    Patient concerns about medical errors in emergency departments.

    • Thomas E Burroughs, Amy D Waterman, Thomas H Gallagher, Brian Waterman, David Adams, Donna B Jeffe, William Claiborne Dunagan, Jane Garbutt, Max M Cohen, Jane Cira, Joe Inguanzo, and Victoria J Fraser.
    • Center for Outcomes Research, Department of Internal Medicine, St. Louis University, MO 63104, USA. burroute@slu.edu
    • Acad Emerg Med. 2005 Jan 1;12(1):57-64.

    ObjectiveDespite large numbers of emergency encounters, little is known about how emergency department (ED) patients conceptualize their risk of medical errors. This study examines how safe ED patients feel from medical errors, which errors are of greatest concern, how concerns differ by patient and hospital characteristics, and the relationship between concerns and willingness to return for future care.MethodsMultiwave telephone interviews of 767 patients from 12 EDs were conducted. Patients were asked about their medical safety, concern about eight types of medical errors, and satisfaction with care.ResultsEighty-eight percent of patients believed that their safety from medical errors had been good, very good, or excellent; 38% of patients reported experiencing at least one specific error-related concern, most commonly misdiagnosis (22% of all patients), physician errors (16%), medication errors (16%), nursing errors (12%), and wrong test/procedure (10%). Concerns were associated with gender (p < 0.01), age (p < 0.0001), ethnicity (p < 0.001), length of stay (p < 0.001), ED volume (p < 0.0001), day of week (p < 0.0001), and hospital type (p < 0.0001). Concerns were highly related to a patient's willingness to return to the ED.ConclusionsThe majority of ED patients felt relatively safe from medical errors, yet a significant percentage of patients experienced concern about a specific error during their emergency encounter. Concerns varied by both patient and hospital characteristics and were highly linked to patient satisfaction. The selective nature of concerns may suggest that patients are attuned to cues they perceive to be linked to specific medical errors, but efforts to involve patients in error detection/prevention programs will be challenging given the stressful and intimidating nature of ED encounters.

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