Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 3 | Page 12

HEALTH CARE QUALITY AND SAFETY: BEHIND THE BUZZWORDS Hugh W. Shoff, MD, MS W e hear the words all the time. The government, administration, colleagues and even our patients speak them. They have become synonymous with improvement projects, medical errors and health care costs. They are the words “quality and safety,” and you can’t walk through the hospital without hearing one or both of them. The catalyst for the push to higher quality and safer care for our patients began in 1999 when the Institute of Medicine (IOM) released its report “To Err is Human.” In that report, it was estimated that 44,000 to 98,000 deaths each year could be attributed to avoidable medical errors. At that time, medical errors placed 8th on the list of top causes of death. In a 2001 follow-up report (“Crossing the Quality Chasm"), the IOM laid out six aims on which we should focus our improvement: safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equitable … care. These aims were developed to guide improvement in our health care system. For the IOM, they are the pillars on which we could build a safer system. Fifteen years after the IOM’s second report we may not be making significant strides. In a recent article published in the BMJ, Martin Makary and Michael Daniel at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE estimate that our current rate of death due to medical errors falls between 210,000 and 400,000 deaths per year. Extrapolating data from 1999 to 2013, they estimate a mean death rate of 251,4