Wednesday, April 10, 2013


Human Entered Health Information Errors and Computer Malfunctions
Garbage in, Garbage Out.

Computer Users’ Aphorism, 1970
And as the smart ship grew,
In stature, grace, and hue

In shadow silent distant grew
The Iceberg too.

Thomas Hardy (1840-1928), The Convergence of the Hue (Line on the Loss of the Titanic), 1912

The April 5 issue of HealthLeaders Media ran an article “HIT Errors ‘Tip of the Iceberg,’  says ECRI."
The ECRI (Economic Cycle Research Institute) publishes and consults on patient safety, quality improvement, risk management, medical devices, health care technology, and health policy.
The iceberg analogy may be a little misleading.  HIT is improving, but given the billions of transactions in hospitals and doctors’ office,  I have no doubt errors occur and like icebergs,  90% of these errors may be beneath the surface.
In any case, ECRI has just issued a 40 page report , “Health IT and Patient Safety Building a Safer System for Better Care.”  The report documents 171 errors in 36 hospitals.  The errors were traced  to human mistakes and  to computer malfunctions, each of which  might have caused patient harm.
The 171 errors involved:
·         53%,Medication mismanagement (25% computer entry. 15% EHRs, 13% lab information, 11% pharmacy system, 2% other)

·         17%, poor clinical documentation

·         13%, inaccurate lab information

·         9% faulty computer malfunction

·         8%  misleading diagnostic information

·         1% inadequate clinical decision support
 
The errors were of two types:

·         Caused by humans in their interaction  with computers (47%)

·         Caused by computers that moved too slow, couldn’t communicate, or crashed (53%)

Given the volume of computer transactions in hospitals, these errors should surprise no one.  Humans are fallible. So are human designed machines.  In the case of EHRs, add to these factors the fact that 50% of the time, patients  omit information or lie when they know their information is being entered into the record.  
Garbage in, Garbage out  is too harsh a term to apply to these errors, which may be  decreasing with advances such dictation entries,  standardized entry,  computing in the cloud, and better training of entry personnel. It is too early to tell if the iceberg analogy applies to HIT. We should not let the perfect drive out the good.

Tweet: In an HIT study in 23 hospitals, the Economic Cycle Research Institute found 171 errors that might cause patient harm.

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