Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Health Technology’s ‘Essential
Critic’ Warns Of Medical Mistakes
Preface: This
article is from Kaiser Health News. KHN
encourages its readers to use their original material. I have
long been a skeptic of electronic health records as the Holy Grail for
improving health care, eliminating errors, and preventing duplications. EHRs are a tool not a solution. EHRs are capable of doing great harm quickly without the knowledge of the patient or the physician.
"Computer mistakes like the one that produced incorrect
prescriptions for thousands of Rhode Island patients are probably far more
common and dangerous than the Obama administration wants you to believe, says
Drexel University’s Dr. Scot Silverstein.
Flawed software at Lifespan hospital group printed orders
for low-dose, short-acting pills when patients should have been taking
stronger, time-release ones, the Providence-based system disclosed in 2011.
Lifespan says nobody was harmed.
But Silverstein, a physician and adjunct professor of
healthcare informatics who is making a name for himself as a strident critic of
electronic health records, says the Lifespan breakdown is part of a much larger
problem.
“We’re in the midst of a mania right now” as traditional
patient charts are switched to computers, he said in an interview in his
Lansdale home. “We know it causes harm, and we don’t even know the level of
magnitude. That statement alone should be the basis for the greatest of caution
and slowing down.”
Use of electronic medical records is speeding up, thanks
to $10-billion-and-counting in bounties the federal government is paying to
caregivers who adopt them. The consensus among government officials and
researchers is that computers will cut mistakes and promote efficiency. So some
4,000 hospitals have or are installing digital records, the Department of
Health and Human Services said last month.
Seventy percent of doctors surveyed in September by
research firm CapSite said they had switched to digital data.
But the notion that electronic charts prevent more
mistakes than they cause just isn’t proven, Silverstein says. Government
doesn’t require caregivers to report problems, he points out, so many
computer-induced mistakes may never surface.
He doesn’t discount the potential of digital records to
eliminate duplicate scans and alert doctors to drug interactions and
unsuspected dangers.
But the rush to implementation has produced badly
designed products that may be more likely to confound doctors than enlighten
them, he says. Electronic health records, Silverstein believes, should be
rigorously tested under government supervision before being launched into
life-and-death situations, much like medical hardware or airplanes.
Silverstein “is an essential critic of the field,” said
Dr. George Lundberg, editor at large for MedPage Today and former editor of the
Journal of the American Medical Association. “It’s too easy for those of us in
medicine to get excessively enthusiastic about things that look like they’re
going to work out really well. Sometimes we go too far and don’t see the
downside of things.”
A growing collection of evidence suggests that poorly
designed software can obscure clinical data, generate incorrect treatment
orders and cause other problems. Cases include the Lifespan glitch;
a data-entry error that led to the 2010 death of a baby
at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Illinois; and computers at Trinity
Health System, a major Midwest chain, that logged doctors’ orders on the
wrong patients’ charts.
Computer mistakes voluntarily reported to the Food and
Drug Administration include those that researchers said were linked to 44 injuries and six deaths
at unidentified institutions. Those problems included tiny fonts causing
caregivers to click on the wrong medication; flipped images that led a surgeon
to operate on the wrong side of a patient’s head; and lost or misdated test
results that caused unnecessary surgery or delayed treatment.
The FDA’s Dr. Jeffrey Shuren has
said that such cases “likely reflect a small percentage of the
actual events that do occur.”
At conferences and working from home on the Health
Care Renewal blog, Silverstein chronicles digital failures and
criticizes hospitals in the same dogged way that he applied himself to building
the 1970s-era Heathkit computers he still keeps in his home, say people who
know him.
“His message has been consistent: [health IT]provides far
less benefit than is claimed by its proponents and opens new — sometimes potent
— routes to failure,” said Dr. Richard I. Cook, a medical error expert at the
University of Chicago who sat on a panel examining electronic record safety at
the authoritative Institute of Medicine. “No one wants him to be visible. But
his message and tone have not wavered.
The HIMSS Electronic Health Record Association, an
industry group, declined to comment on Silverstein. A spokesman for the HHS’s
Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, the
administration’s proponent of digital records, said: “It’s important to listen
to all the voices” in the discussion of the subject.
Trained as an internist and in medical info-tech as a
Yale postdoc, Silverstein, 55, served as Merck’s director of scientific
information in the early 2000s and then as a full-time Drexel professor,
shifting in recent years to part-time teaching and working on medical liability
cases for plaintiff attorneys. His insistent warnings about digital health
risks over more than a decade have effectively barred him from a lucrative
career at a hospital or software vendor.
“I’m sure Scot would be better off by keeping his mouth
shut and getting a job with a hospital that’s just put in a big effing system,”
said Matthew Holt, a Silverstein critic and co-chairman of Health 2.0, which
organizes health technology conferences.
Many say he comes on too strong. Even admirers cringed
when he began blogging about the 2011 death of his mother, which he blames in a
lawsuit on a computer error that allegedly caused Abington Memorial Hospital to
overlook a key medication. (Both he and the hospital said they couldn’t comment
on a pending suit.) Personalizing his campaign, some thought, made him seem
less objective.
“His refusal to temper his message makes it sometimes
difficult to hear,” said Ross Koppel, a University of Pennsylvania sociologist
and digital health record skeptic.
But Silverstein says his position today is the same as it
has always been. He believes in the potential power of electronic records for
good, he says. But any doctor who feels bound by the Hippocratic oath’s
injunction to “first, do no harm,” he adds, should balk at what’s going on.
“Patients are being harmed and killed as a result of
disruptions to care caused by bad health IT,” he said. “I’m skeptical of the
manner and pace [of implementation], not of the technology itself…. My only
bias is against bad medicine. And my bias is against people with complacent
attitudes about bad medicine.” "
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3 comments:
This is clearly a difficult and at times contentious issue. The old paper style medical records clearly have their own shortcomings as PHI needs to be shared across the care process. Yet there is a valid point that EHRs are still evolving.
Three issues we've seen are:
1) Doctors need to be intimately involved with the decisions on developing EHRs
2) A combination of designing EHRs to be effective tools within the care process, and care process redesign need to occur simultaneously
3) Chnage - the difficulty of moving away from the old habits and forming new habits is tough for humans, but is important to address.
As a pharmaist, I know transcription errors and reading errors harmed patients. There were/are errors in the paper system and there are errors in the electronic system.
Integrating information across the care process will become more and more important. We need to find how best to do it. The paper system is not a sustainable or effective way to address healthcare now or in the future.
I agree paper not sustainable but EHRs need to be improved, standarized, made cheaper, and easier to use.
I add that in the change to computerized healthcare systems, the patient should have more rights than the computer - and its purveyors.
Patients are not lab rats for testing of experimental or beta software.
(Think that does not happen? See http://www.ischool.drexel.edu/faculty/ssilverstein/cases/?loc=cases&sloc=lawsuit .
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