A new study by two physicians working for the Veterans Administration suggests that previous studies of mortality due to medical error have greatly overestimated the number of medical error-related deaths. According to researchers Rodney A. Hayward, MD and Timothy P. Hofer, MD, MS, previous studies have not addressed the likelihood of mortality in the absence of error. That is, would patients who died because of a medical error have died even if there had been no error.
Register to view the full article
Register for MeetingsNet.com and gain access to premium content including the CMI 25 Listing, our monthly digital edition, the MeetingsNet app, live and on-demand webinars, and much more.
0 comments
Hide comments