Posts Tagged ‘health & safety’

Chances are, one of the most dangerous things you will ever do is stay overnight at a hospital.

If that sounds alarmist, it’s because the numbers are truly alarming: A recent study of Medicare participants found that, in a single month, one of every 17 hospital patients was injured or killed by a preventable medical error. Many more Americans are hurt by unsafe drugs and medical devices.

Given the staggering injury and death rate, it’s shocking that some members of Congress want to shield from accountability those in the medical field who are responsible for harm.

They’re pushing H.R. 5, and overreaching bill that would immunize practically the entire medical industry from responsibility when their defective products or services hurt people. If it passes, the costs of medical mistakes would shift from the negligent actors to injured patients, their families, and taxpayer-funded health and disability programs.

Only an extremely small number of doctors are responsible for most medical errors. Just 5 percent are responsible for more than half of all medical errors. Those doctors should be held responsible for their actions – not given a free pass. The same goes for drug companies and medical device manufacturers.

Instead of attacking patients’ rights, Congress should focus on improving patient safety and reducing deaths and injuries. H.R. 5 does neither. But Public Citizen’s research has shown that 10 basic safety measures would save, conservatively, $35 billion and 85,000 lives a year.

Urge your representative to oppose H.R. 5.

Dr. Sidney Wolfe

You would think that when doctors are disciplined for serious wrongdoing by the hospitals where they work, state medical boards would similarly discipline the dangerous doctors so they can’t go elsewhere and injure more patients.

You would be wrong.

A new Public Citizen study shows that state medical boards have failed to discipline 55 percent of the nation’s doctors who either lost their clinical privileges or had them restricted by the hospitals where they worked.

Why is this important? Well, hospital disciplinary reports are peer-review actions and, as such, are one of the most valuable sources of information for medical board oversight. Subsequent state medical board action against a physician’s license is a crucial next step to protect patients. Boards have the authority to oversee and even limit the practice of a disciplined physician, which not only yields a more complete record for the purpose of patient safety but also serves to inform other state boards and future employers.

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clear sky
As incomprehensible as it seems, the Republican leaders in Congress are pulling out the stops to undermine crucial public protections. They seem hellbent on hamstringing agencies that are supposed to be protecting our air, water, land and more.

The vehicle they focused on today was the Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act (H.R. 10). Here is a statement from the newly formed Coalition for Sensible Safeguards, of which Public Citizen is a member:

The House Judiciary Committee moved one step closer today to approving the Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act (H.R. 10), a bill that would undermine the public protections most crucial to our health, safety, environment and economy. The Coalition for Sensible Safeguards (CSS) strongly opposes the REINS Act and its attempts to radically alter the balance of power in government and jeopardize the public interest.

The REINS Act would require congressional approval of all major federal rules within 70 legislative days. Without approval, the rules would be nullified. If enacted, the bill will mire these rules in congressional gridlock and endanger the commonsense standards that protect the food our families eat, the air our children breathe and the products we buy for our homes. The bill could also undermine new laws regulating Wall Street and expanding access to health care.

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Guest post by Inez M. Tenenbaum, CPSC Chairman

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is the leading federal agency charged with ensuring the safety of consumer products. We protect families like yours, from risks of injury or death from thousands of types of consumer products, including items that many of you use every day, such as cribs, strollers, sleepwear and toys.

From the first day I took over as Chairman of CPSC, I have been committed to making the agency more open to the public and to families.  In just a few weeks, we will launch our biggest open-government project.  Starting in March 2011, CPSC will unveil a new publicly searchable database of reports of harm we receive from consumers and others relating to the use of consumer products. The database will be posted on the website SaferProducts.gov.

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We expected this, but it is no less disappointing. Yesterday, House members of Congress submitted a proposal to impose cruel restrictions on medical malpractice victims under the misleading guise of lowering health care costs.

The only result practically ensured from their bill, ironically called the HEALTH Act, is the further devastation of patients who suffer debilitating injuries from medical errors. The bill aims to give a free pass to practically every player in the health industry (physicians, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, and nursing homes, to name a few), releasing them of their duty to treat patients with adequate care and respect. Meanwhile, injured patients will lose their ability to hold these powerful groups accountable.

And on top of it all, this bill won’t even lower health care costs. All it would do is shift the burden of paying for medical providers’ bad behavior from the wrongdoers themselves to the patients, their families and taxpayers.

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