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More Drug-Related Deaths Blamed on Poor Handwriting by American Doctors

I've pointed out numerous times over the years how conventional wisdom of physicians and health care workers can lead to your death by medicine in a big hurry. And, many of them occur because of your local pharmacy every month.

Unfortunately, a recent report from the National Academies of Science's Institute of Medicine confirms the findings of a news report I posted two years ago that a doctor's poor handwriting can be deadly.

Fact is, sloppy handwriting -- interpreted incorrectly by a nurse or pharmacist -- contributes to the deaths of more than 7,000 Americans annually. Another number that makes all the difference: Less than a third of all American doctors write 80 percent of the nation's overall prescription volume.

While much of this interesting Time piece focuses on ways to prevent such errors, in part via Web-based tools developed by the National e-prescribing Patient Safety Initiative, steps like these do nothing to improve drug safety or slow down conventional medicine's first impulse to throw a drug at a problem, rather than treat conditions through safer, more natural means.

Institute of Medicine of the National Academies, Preventing Medication Errors, July 20, 2006 Free PDF Report

Time January 15, 2007




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Article's Comment     ( 9 Comments )
 
 
 +3 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY Josh Rubin   
  
[ Joined on 06/06 ]
[ Posted on January 16, 2007 ]
Post Reply
I agree with this 100%. I used to work in hospitals, etc for years doing rehab. I would have to say 99.999%of the time, we had so much trouble reading reports and everything in the chart for that matter. This can and does lead to communication issues, compliance issues, etc.
 

            
 
Author of the Article
BY notime4doctors   
  
[ Joined on 06/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on June 27, 2007 ]
 
Dr write poorly because they can get away with it.
People who have to read there sloppy writing can easily make mistakes. Waste time trying to contact the Dr.

Pharmacists, Nurses, and other Medical Professionals should be able to privately complain about Dr. handwriting.  States should sent up some kind of web place where we can complain.  Its a waste of time
and its also a health risk.

If enough complaints are filed against a doctor, they should be FINED. After a $10,000 fine a couple of times, I'm sure the writing would improve substantially because if it didn't the Dr. would get practice by writing checks.

The money should go to some kind of state fund for people who cannot afford medicine or other such deserving program.

 
 +1 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY fellowservantinchrist   
  
[ Joined on 06/06 ]
[ Posted on January 18, 2007 ]
Post Reply

As a Registered Nurse who has worked in the Emergency Room for more than a decade, I have seen my fair share of terrible writing.  Although this is true, I must stand up for the changes that have happened.  In my area doctors are now required to write their prescriptions directly into a computer, they are printed on script paper, and then the doctor signs them.  This has made medication errors decline in our hospital, and made it nicer for us nurses.  I have met my share of doctors who were unable to reread their own writing!  However, most doctors that I have worked with; would rather you ask them what it is they want for their patient than to see them be harmed.

So, as my motto goes:  If I can't read, don't understand it, or at ALL feel uncomfortable with it-----ASK!

Anita from Ohio

 

            
 
Author of the Article
BY Saritaface   
  
[ Joined on 01/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on February 02, 2007 ]
 
good for you Anita, that is so good to hear! Thank you for caring for other people and keep up the good work! Take care and God bless you

            
 
Author of the Article
BY Kathleen_Blanchard   
  
[ Joined on 01/07 ]
Author of the Article [ Posted on January 25, 2007 ]
 
[:)]  I too am a Registered Nurse with years of Emergency and ICU experience.  If a physician writes an order that is illegible there is not a credible practicing pharmacist or RN or Receptionist who would not get same clarified. 

 
 +1 Points           
 
Author of the Article
BY mmc88121