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October 2009Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineDifficult Encounters: A CMO and CNO RespondErnest J. Ring, MD; Jane E. Hirsch, RN, MS
Excerpt: "Cardiology consultation on an elderly man admitted to the orthopedic service following a hip fracture reveals aortic stenosis. The cardiologist recommends against surgery, due to the risk of anesthesia. When the nurse reads these recommendations to the orthopedic resident, he calls her "stupid" and contacts the OR to schedule the surgery anyway. The Chief Medical Officer is called to intervene."
Surg/AnesthesiaWho Nose Where the Airway Is?Christopher R. Lee, MD
Excerpt: "Following surgery for peripheral vascular disease, a patient otherwise ready for discharge complains of liquid shooting from his nose. The surgeons make the patient NPO and order a consultation from an otolaryngologist, who discovers the nasopharyngeal airway still lodged in the patient's nasal cavity."
PediatricsDanger in DisruptionDorrie K. Fontaine, RN, PhD
Excerpt: "A toddler admitted for severe dehydration requires a femoral IV. The anesthesiologist ignores a nurse's reminder that hospital policy requires monitoring if a child is to receive sedation in the unit. When the nurse attempts to stop the procedure, the anesthesiologist throws the needle to the floor."

August 2009Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
NursingNurse Staffing Ratios: The Crucible of Money, Policy, Research, and Patient CareVictoria Rich, PhD, RN
Excerpt: "Admitted to the ICU for COPD exacerbation and atrial fibrillation, a patient who had stabilized is left unattended in the bathroom while the nurse on an understaffed unit attends to a more emergent patient. An assistant later finds the patient on the floor, unresponsive and cyanotic."
MedicineHiding in Plain SightJeffrey M. Weinberg, MD
Excerpt: "One day after being discharged from the ED, a woman with severe back pain returns and is admitted for observation and analgesics. The next morning, the hospitalist notes a vesicular rash in the exact distribution of the patient's pain symptoms and diagnoses a herpes zoster infection (shingles). "
MedicineIs the Admission Drug Dose Too Low?Rainu Kaushal, MD, MPH; Erika Abramson, MD
Excerpt: "The theophylline dose of a patient admitted for COPD exacerbation and pneumonia is doubled, and he develops atrial flutter with a rapid ventricular response, chest pain, and increased shortness of breath. "

May 2009Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineDelirium or Dementia?James L. Rudolph, MD, SM
Excerpt: "An elderly woman hospitalized for pneumonia becomes disoriented during hospitalization. Even though the patient was never confused at baseline, doctors attribute it to "senile dementia" and place her in restraints."
Emergency MedMissing TraumaGregory J. Jurkovich, MD
Excerpt: "After an hour of failed resuscitative efforts, a woman who collapsed in a market is pronounced dead in the emergency department (ED). Only later do the paramedics and physician discover a small bullet in the patient's chest."
Surg/AnesthesiaVial Mistakes Involving HeparinTim Vanderveen, PharmD, MS
Excerpt: "Hospitalized for an elective procedure, a patient is given heparin in an incorrect concentration—off by a factor of 100."

April 2009Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
PediatricsBreakage of a PICC LineVesselin Dimov, MD
Excerpt: "A premature infant had a PICC line placed for parenteral nutrition. During an attempt to remove it, the line broke. The infant had to be sent for surgical removal of the catheter and required an increased level of care, including ventilator support."
MedicineEptifibatide EpilogueWilliam W. Churchill, MS, RPh; Karen Fiumara, PharmD
Excerpt: "A powerful anti-clotting medication is ordered for a patient admitted for coronary intervention. Due to a forcing function in the computer order entry system, the intern enters an arbitrary maintenance infusion rate, assuming that the pharmacy will fix it if it is wrong. The pharmacy dispenses it as written, and the nurse administers it—underdosing the patient by a factor of 40."
MedicineEMR Entry Error: Not So BenignRoss Koppel, PhD
Excerpt: "A patient hospitalized with Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia and advanced AIDS is given another patient's malignant biopsy results, leading his primary physician to mistakenly recommend hospice care."

February/March 2009Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedAll in the HistoryChristopher Fee, MD
Excerpt: "Interrupted during a telephone handoff, an ED physician, despite limited information, must treat a patient in respiratory arrest. The patient is stabilized and transferred to the ICU with a presumed diagnosis of aspiration pneumonia and septic shock. Later, ICU physicians obtain further history that leads to the correct diagnosis: pulmonary embolism."
MedicineMedication Reconciliation Victory after an Avoidable ErrorTimothy W. Cutler, PharmD
Excerpt: "A 91-year-old woman is found lethargic and incontinent, with slurred speech. Review of her medications reveals numerous duplicates, including some considered potentially inappropriate for use in elderly patients."
NursingDouble Dosing, by the RulesHedy Cohen, RN, BSN, MS
Excerpt: "New medication administration policies at one hospital cause a patient to receive two doses of her daily medication within a few hours, when only one dose was intended."

January 2009Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineTo Transfer or Not to TransferJesse M. Pines, MD, MBA, MSCE
Excerpt: "An elderly man, recently discharged from one hospital after having his automated internal cardioverter-defibrillator (AICD) replaced, is taken to another hospital when his AICD misfires multiple times. "
Surg/AnesthesiaAre Two Insulin Pumps Better Than One?Curtiss B. Cook, MD
Excerpt: "Admitted to the hospital for surgery, a man with type 1 diabetes mellitus asked the staff to leave his home insulin pump in place but did not mention that he was adjusting his insulin pump himself based on serial glucose measurements. As the patient was also receiving an intravenous insulin infusion, he developed hypoglycemia."
OncologyHospital Admission Due to High-Dose Methotrexate Drug InteractionLydia C. Siegel, MD; Tejal K. Gandhi, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "Four months after surgery, a woman with osteosarcoma receiving outpatient chemotherapy was admitted for possible cellulitis. Discharged home on methotrexate and antibiotics, the patient developed methotrexate toxicity, partly due to a drug interaction."

November 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
PediatricsDangerous ShiftEmily S. Patterson, PhD
Excerpt: "Due to lack of communication during shift change, an infant's transfer to a higher level of care is delayed. The infant develops respiratory distress, prompting a call to the rapid response team and transfer to the ICU."
MedicineA Mid-Summer FogClarence H. Braddock III, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A woman with diabetes is admitted to a teaching hospital in July. An intern, who received training at a hospital where only paper orders were used, mistakenly chose the wrong form for the insulin order. As a result, the insulin dose was not adjusted for the patient's NPO (nothing by mouth) status, and she became unresponsive."
MedicineSick and PregnantShareen El-Ibiary, PharmD, BCPS
Excerpt: "A pregnant woman with asthma was admitted to the hospital with respiratory distress. Although the emergency department providers noted that she was pregnant, this information was not conveyed to the floor. On admission, the patient was given an antibiotic that could have been dangerous."

October 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineRecurrent Hypoglycemia: A Care Transition Failure?Ted Eytan, MD, MS, MPH
Excerpt: "An elderly, non–English-speaking man with diabetes was admitted to the hospital twice in 8 days due to hypoglycemia. At discharge, the patient was instructed not to take any antidiabetic medications. In between hospitalizations, he saw his primary care physician, who restarted an antidiabetic medication."
Surg/AnesthesiaMistaken IdentityLeslie W. Hall, MD
Excerpt: "Orthopedic surgeons rounding on an elderly Cantonese-speaking woman recommend conservative, nonsurgical treatment for her broken hip, as their examination noted that the patient was able to walk. Given that strict bed rest orders were in place for this patient, a medical intern found the note peculiar. Further investigation revealed that the surgeons had actually walked the patient's roommate, another Cantonese-speaking woman."
PediatricsComing Up ShortZe'ev Hochberg, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "Well-child checks failed to determine that the growth of a young immigrant girl was severely behind the curve. At the age of 12, routine lab tests showed a TSH of 834—indicating severe hypothyroidism."

September 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineEmpiric Steroids: the Good, the Bad, and the UglyEdward D. Harris, Jr., MD
Excerpt: "For fear of exacerbating underlying disease processes, certain comorbidities should preclude the use of steroids. Three case examples illustrate appropriate indications and contraindications for using glucocorticoids."
MedicineWhere’s the Feeding Tube?Norma A. Metheny, RN, PhD; Kathleen L. Meert, MD
Excerpt: "A boy was receiving enteral feedings while recovering from a traumatic brain injury. The nasojejunal tube migrated to the gastric area, and the patient developed pneumonia, likely due to aspiration."
Ob/GynFailure to LatchMitch Rodriguez, MD, MBA; Rebecca Mannel, BS, IBCLC; Donna Frye, RN, MN
Excerpt: "After several pediatric visits, parents of a newborn with low output and weight loss contact a lactation consultant, who discovered that ankyloglossia (tongue-tie) was preventing the infant from receiving adequate intake from breastfeeding."

July 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineDependence vs. Pain Adam J. Gordon, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A man with a history of heroin use came to the hospital with abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting. Admitted for dehydration and opiate withdrawal, he was given intravenous fluids, methadone, and morphine for abdominal pain. The patient complained of worsening pain overnight and was given more methadone. In the morning, the patient had more severe pain and tachycardia, and was found to have a perforated colon."
MedicineWhat Was in Those Platelets? Roslyn Yomtovian, MD
Excerpt: "Following spinal surgeries, two different patients developed tachycardia, hypotension, and hypoxia due to sepsis. Given the similarity in clinical course, the hospital investigated and found that both patients had received platelets contaminated with Staphylococcus aureus."
NursingWrong Route for NutrientsJill R. Scott-Cawiezell, RN, PhD
Excerpt: "An elderly man receiving feedings through a percutaneous enterostomy tube was prescribed intravenous total parenteral nutrition (TPN). A licensed practical nurse (LPN) mistakenly connected the TPN to the patient's enterostomy tube. His daughter (a retired nurse) asked her about it, and the RN on duty confirmed the error. The LPN disconnected the mistakenly placed (and now contaminated) line, but then prepared to attach it to the intravenous catheter. Luckily, both the patient's daughter and the RN were present and stopped her."

May 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineDiagnosing HIV-It Doesn't Take a Brain SurgeonRoger Chou, MD
Excerpt: "Head imaging findings for a man admitted following new-onset headaches and a seizure revealed a brain mass. The patient was sent for craniotomy and brain biopsy, which revealed toxoplasmosis, prompting an HIV test that returned positive."
Surg/AnesthesiaThe Inside of a Time OutDavid L. Feldman, MD, MBA
Excerpt: "Prior to surgery, an anesthesiologist and surgical physician assistant noted a patient's allergy to IV contrast dye, but no order was written. During a time out before the procedure, an operative nurse raised concern about the allergy, but the attending anesthesiologist was not present and the resident did not speak up."
Hospital MedicineIs It Safe to Be Direct?Nita S. Kulkarni, MD; Mark V. Williams, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly patient seen in his primary care physician's office was stable but had a suspected heart failure exacerbation. The PCP chose to admit the patient directly to the hospital, to avoid a long emergency department stay. While in the admitting office awaiting an available bed, the patient deteriorated."

April 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineAntibiotics for URI/Sinusitis—A Simple Decision Gone BadSumant Ranji, MD
Excerpt: "A woman with symptoms of sinusitis was given 2 different courses of broad-spectrum antibiotics, neither of which improved her symptoms. Hospitalized for autoimmune hemolysis (presumably from the antibiotic), the patient suffered multiorgan failure and septic shock, and died."
Emergency MedThe Wrongful ResuscitationJoan M. Teno, MD, MS
Excerpt: "Despite having a signed DNR (do not resuscitate) form, an elderly man brought to the emergency department with severe pain was rushed to the operating room for urgent abdominal aortic aneurysm repair."
Hospital MedicineThe Forgotten DripS. Andrew Josephson, MD
Excerpt: "A man hospitalized for acute intracranial hemorrhage and cerebral edema was continued too long on an intravenous diuretic. He developed severe dehydration, hypernatremia, and renal failure."

March 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedBack AgainJon D. Lurie, MD
Excerpt: "A man went to the emergency department 3 times in 1 week for progressively worsening back pain. Providers assumed that the pain did not represent a serious illness; however, at the third visit, the patient was admitted and died of complications from an infection."
MedicineOverdose on Oxygen?B. Ronan O'Driscoll, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly woman with COPD on home oxygen was admitted for pneumonia. The next morning, the patient was sleepy and not alert, and physicians discovered that her carbon dioxide level was abnormally high, likely from too much oxygen."
Hospital MedicineHold That OrderMatthew Grissinger, RPh
Excerpt: "A woman with a history of a pituitary tumor and diabetes was admitted for management of a high sodium level. Once the level was stable, the physician ordered that a sodium-lowering medicine be "held"—not knowing that such an order would discontinue that medication and send the patient's sodium level back up."

January 2008Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineHow Do Providers Recover from Errors?Colin P. West, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "An elderly man with COPD and end-stage congestive heart failure was admitted for increasing shortness of breath, due to a pleural effusion. A resident performed a thoracentesis on the wrong side, and the patient developed a pneumothorax and died. The resident disclosed the error but was devastated."
NursingChemotherapy ExtravasationLisa Schulmeister, RN, MN, APRN-BC
Excerpt: "A nurse has trouble placing an IV catheter for a woman receiving her first dose of outpatient chemotherapy. The patient complains of pain at the site. Closer examination revealed that the chemotherapy had infused outside of the vein into the skin."
Lab. MedicineContaminated or Not? Guidelines for Interpretation of Positive Blood CulturesMelvin P. Weinstein, MD
Excerpt: "Blood culture results on a man with chronic health problems revealed Corynebacterium spp. One month later, the patient became ill, and cultures again revealed Corynebacterium. The physician who received the result was unfamiliar with the patient, assumed that this finding was a contaminant, and took no action. Three weeks later, the patient was admitted and diagnosed with subacute bacterial endocarditis."

December 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineElopementDebra Gerardi, RN, MPH, JD
Excerpt: "An inpatient missing from his room is found several hours later outside the emergency department. Despite having arrived at the ED in a hospital gown with an inpatient ID bracelet, the patient is treated in the ED and discharged."
Surg/AnesthesiaDeaths Not Foretold: Are Unexpected Deaths Useful Patient Safety Signals?Kaveh G. Shojania, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly woman undergoes surgery to repair a hip fracture. Even though formal preoperative assessment placed her at low risk, the patient suffers a pulseless electrical activity arrest during the operation and dies the next day."
PediatricsToo Hot For ComfortHeather Cleland, MBBS; Jason Wasiak, BN, MPH
Excerpt: "After removing the IV line on an infant receiving IV fluid and antibiotics, a nurse places a warm compress on the wound site. Later, another nurse discovers that the compress has caused a burn."

October 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaDo Not Disturb!F. Daniel Duffy, MD; Christine K. Cassel, MD
Excerpt: "Following surgery, a woman on a patient-controlled analgesia pump is found to be lethargic and incoherent, with a low respiratory rate. The nurse contacted the attending physician, who dismisses the patient's symptoms and chastises the nurse for the late call."
MedicineToxic TachycardiaLeonard Wartofsky, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "An elderly woman was admitted with severe abdominal pain and tachycardia. After 3 days in the hospital with no clear etiology discovered for these symptoms, a TSH level was found to be undetectable and the patient was diagnosed with thyrotoxicosis."
Critical CareCode Blue—Where To?Bruce D. Adams, MD
Excerpt: "A code blue is called on an elderly man with a history of coronary artery disease, hypertension, and schizophrenia hospitalized on the inpatient psychiatry service. Housestaff covering the code team did not know where the service was located, and when the team arrived, they found their equipment to be incompatible with the leads on the patient."

September 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaMedication Reconciliation: Whose Job Is It?Eric G. Poon, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "Hospitalized for surgery, a woman with a history of seizures was given an overdose of the wrong medicine due to multiple errors, including an inaccurate preadmission medication list, failure to verify medication history, and uncoordinated information systems."
MedicineDischarging Our ResponsibilityGregg C. Fonarow, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly man with a history of hypertension, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure (CHF), and countless hospital admissions for CHF came to the emergency department complaining of shortness of breath and fatigue. The admitting physician discovered that the patient had never received clear education about caring for himself outside the hospital."
MedicineComing Undone: Failure of Closure DeviceJose L. Baez-Escudero, MD; Glenn N. Levine, MD
Excerpt: "A man underwent coronary angiography; one stent was placed and bypass surgery was scheduled for 4 days later. He developed bleeding at the catheter site and returned to the hospital. A CT scan revealed a large retroperitoneal hematoma, which was repaired surgically. While in the hospital awaiting the delayed bypass surgery, the patient had a cardiac arrest and died."

July/August 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineResuscitation Errors: A Shocking ProblemBenjamin S. Abella, MD, MPhil; Dana P. Edelson, MD
Excerpt: "A code blue was called on a man admitted for chest pain, but the defibrillation pads placed on the patient were incompatible with the machine."
MedicineCopy and PasteWilliam Hersh, MD
Excerpt: "A hospitalized elderly woman had clinical indications to receive medication to prevent venous thromboembolism. The intern noted this in the electronic record, and although this information was copied and pasted in the record on 4 consecutive days, the patient never received the intended prophylaxis and suffered a pulmonary embolism after discharge."
DentistryMark My ToothRichard A. Smith, DDS
Excerpt: "A patient underwent tooth extraction, but awoke from anesthesia and found that the wrong two teeth had been removed."

June 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaBeeline to SpineGerald W. Smetana, MD
Excerpt: "Based on preoperative discussions, a patient undergoing knee replacement expected to receive spinal anesthesia; however, general anesthesia was administered, and the records did not note or explain this change. The patient suffered an unusual complication."
MedicineAbnormal Volunteer ResultsConrad V. Fernandez, MD
Excerpt: "A healthy woman who volunteered to participate in a radiology study was notified several weeks later of a "major abnormality" discovered on her MRI. She sought further evaluation and was diagnosed with uterine cancer."
Surg/AnesthesiaInformed or Misled? Stuart M. White, FRCA, BSc, MA
Excerpt: "Based on preoperative discussions, a patient undergoing knee replacement expected to receive spinal anesthesia; however, general anesthesia was administered, and the records did not note or explain this change. The patient suffered an unusual complication."

May 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineAntiseizure Medication DisorderBrian K. Alldredge, PharmD
Excerpt: "An elderly patient with a seizure disorder (and recent admission for uncontrolled seizures) was admitted to the hospital to evaluate symptoms of lethargy, confusion, and decreased appetite. The team misattributed his mental status change to an infection but later discovered that the patient had phenytoin toxicity."
MedicineOn the Other HandElizabeth A. Henneman, RN, PhD
Excerpt: "A young woman with Takayasu's arteritis, a vascular condition that can cause BP differences in each arm, was mistakenly placed on a powerful intravenous vasopressor because of a spurious low BP reading. The medication could have led to serious complications."
Surg/AnesthesiaProduction PressuresPascale Carayon, PhD
Excerpt: "On the day of a patient's scheduled electroconvulsive therapy, the clinic anesthesiologist called in sick. Unprepared for such an absence, the staff asked the very busy OR anesthesiologist to fill in on the case. Because the wrong drug was administered, the patient did not wake up as quickly as expected."

March 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
PediatricsFailure to ReportPatrice L. Spath, BA, RHIT
Excerpt: "An infant receives an overdose of the wrong antibiotic (cephazolin instead of ceftriaxone). The nurse spoke with the ED physician on duty but was informed that the medications were essentially equivalent and did not report the error."
MedicineBack to BasicsRichard Hellman, MD
Excerpt: "For a woman with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, the admitting medical team ordered sliding scale insulin. Her blood glucose levels became very difficult to control, and she developed diabetic ketoacidosis. In the morning, the physician instituted a more appropriate insulin regimen."
Surg/AnesthesiaStaggered Sensitivity ResultsB. Joseph Guglielmo, PharmD
Excerpt: "Several days after a patient’s surgery, preliminary wound cultures grew Staphylococcus aureus. Although the final sensitivity profile for the cultures showed resistance to the antibiotic that the patient was receiving, the care team was not notified and the patient died of sepsis."

February 2007Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
PediatricsThe "Customer" Is Always RightNiraj L. Sehgal, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A parent brings her 18-month-old into the clinic with multiple complaints, including rash, diarrhea, and concern for fracture due to a fall. The child is sent home with a diagnosis of viral syndrome. Later, still concerned about her child's gait, the mother takes her to the ED, where an x-ray reveals a fractured tibia."
MedicineCrossed CoverageSteven R. Kayser, PharmD
Excerpt: "A woman admitted to the hospital for cardiac transplantation evaluation is mistakenly given warfarin despite an order to hold the dose due to an increase in her INR level."
PediatricsRapid Mis-St(r)epEdward L. Kaplan, MD
Excerpt: "In the urgent care clinic, a 5-year-old with fever and sore throat undergoes a rapid strep test, which is negative. Later, the child seems worse, and the father takes her to the ED, where another rapid strep test is strongly positive for group A streptococcal infection."

December 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineHidden Heparins: HIT HappensPatrick F. Fogarty, MD
Excerpt: "A hospitalized woman with multiple medical problems is diagnosed with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) but is mistakenly exposed to heparin flushes during dialysis."
MedicineRight Patient, Wrong SampleMichael Astion, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "A man admitted to the hospital for elective surgery has blood drawn. Despite a policy for proper identification, the blood samples were all mislabeled with another patient's name. The error was discovered at the lab, and there was no harm to the patient."
PsychiatryCrossing the BorderlineJohn M. Oldham, MD
Excerpt: "A young woman with borderline personality disorder hospitalized following a suicide attempt is allowed to leave the hospital and attempts suicide again."

November 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineGetting a Good Report Card: Unintended Consequences of the Public Reporting of Hospital QualityPeter Lindenauer, MD, MSc
Excerpt: "A woman with end stage renal disease and heart disease on anticoagulation receives a pneumonia vaccination that causes a large hematoma."
Surg/AnesthesiaUrinary Retention DilemmaAngela C. Joseph, RN, MSN, CURN
Excerpt: "Following elective surgery, a man with benign prostatic hypertrophy began having trouble with urination. Delay in addressing this issue caused discomfort and the need for catheterization and antibiotics."
Surg/AnesthesiaSecured But Not Always SafeJonathan S. Jahr, MD; Puya Hosseini
Excerpt: "An elderly woman underwent knee replacement, during which her airway was maintained with a laryngeal mask airway. However, she developed a fever and fullness in her neck, which a CT scan revealed to be retropharyngeal and mediastinal abscesses."

September 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Hospital MedicineTriple HandoffArpana R. Vidyarthi, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly man was admitted to the hospital for pacemaker placement. Although the postoperative chest film was normal, the patient later developed shortness of breath. Over the course of several nursing and physician shift changes and signouts, results of a follow-up stat x-ray are not properly obtained, delaying discovery of the patient's pneumothorax."
MedicineA Troubling AmineElizabeth A. Flynn, PhD
Excerpt: "A woman admitted for heart and respiratory failure is mistakenly given penicillamine (a chelating agent) rather than penicillin (an antibiotic)."
Surg/AnesthesiaDNR in the OR and AfterwardsBernard Lo, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly woman who had a DNR in place took a fall that required her to have surgery. Discussion with the patient's health care proxy led to the DNR order being suspended during surgery, with the understanding that it would be reinstated postoperatively. Several days later, a nurse noticed that patient remained 'full code' because the DNR had not been restored."

August 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicinePhysical Diagnosis: A Lost Art?George R. Thompson III, MD, and Abraham Verghese, MD
Excerpt: "A man with paraplegia was admitted to the hospital, but the admitting physician, night float resident, and daytime team all "deferred" examination of the genital area. The patient was later discovered to have life-threatening necrotizing fasciitis of this area."
Hospital MedicineMiscalculated RiskScott A. Strassels, PharmD, PhD, BCPS
Excerpt: "In anticipation of discharge, a patient's opiate medication is changed from an immediate-release to a long-acting form—but the dose was incorrectly converted, resulting in an overdose. The patient develops respiratory distress and requires a 2-week stay in the ICU."
Primary CareIt's All in the SyringeSaul N. Weingart, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "In the office, a man with diabetes has high blood sugar, and the nurse practitioner orders insulin. After administration, she discovers that she has injected the insulin with a tuberculin syringe rather than an insulin syringe, resulting in a 10-fold overdose."

July 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
NursingMoving PainsHildy Schell, RN, MS, CCNS; Robert M. Wachter, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly woman was transported to CT with no medical escort and an inadequate oxygen supply. She died later that day."
MedicineOne ACE Too ManyDavid N. Juurlink, BPhm, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "A patient presenting to the ED with chest pain was ruled out for MI, and discharged on an ACE inhibitor. Two weeks later, he returns with a critically elevated potassium level, has a cardiac arrest, and dies."
Hospital MedicineOver Not So EasyRuss Cucina, MD, MS
Excerpt: "Despite full documentation and a wristband regarding her severe food allergy, an inpatient is advertently fed eggs and suffers an allergic reaction."

May 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaRight? Left? Neither!Elizabeth A. Howell, MD, MPP; Mark R. Chassin, MD, MPP, MPH
Excerpt: "A woman with a fractured right foot receives spinal anesthesia and nearly has surgery for trimalleolar fracture and dislocation of the left ankle. Only immediately prior to surgery did the team realize that the x-ray was not hers."
MedicineCitrate Mix-UpRobert J. Weber, MS, RPh
Excerpt: "A pharmacist mistakenly dispenses Polycitra instead of Bicitra, and a patient winds up with severe hyperkalemia and hyperglycemia."
NursingCups of ErrorMary A. Blegen, PhD, RN; Ginette A. Pepper, PhD, RN
Excerpt: "A nursing student administers the wrong 'cup' of medications to an elderly man. A different student discovered the error when she reviewed the medicines in her patient's cup and noticed they were the wrong ones."

April 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaIs the "Surgical Personality" a Threat to Patient Safety?Charles L. Bosk, PhD
Excerpt: "Because members of the OR team were reluctant to speak up to a senior surgeon with a reputation for yelling, a child undergoing surgery experiences a complication and has a delay in chemotherapy."
Ob/GynInsert OmissionPhilip Darney, MD, MSc
Excerpt: "A woman has an intrauterine contraceptive device placed at the time of "her period." A month later it is discovered that she is pregnant, as she had been at the time of the insertion."
PediatricsLanguage BarrierGlenn Flores, MD
Excerpt: "With no one to interpret for them and pharmacy instructions printed only in English, non–English-speaking parents give their child a 12.5-fold overdose of a medication."

March 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
RadiologyThe Wet ReadRonald L. Arenson, MD
Excerpt: "A patient with metastatic cancer admitted for pain control develops acute shortness of breath. The overnight resident reads the CT as a large pulmonary embolism, but the next morning, the attending reads it differently."
Surg/AnesthesiaLiposuction Gone AwryJames A. Yates, MD
Excerpt: "A man undergoes plastic surgery at an outpatient center and winds up with a complication requiring prolonged stay in the ICU."
Surg/AnesthesiaCollegiality vs. CompetenceTodd Sagin, MD, JD
Excerpt: "Despite formal investigation of complications in past cases, a senior surgeon is still allowed to operate on a patient, with disastrous results."

Febuary 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedLost in TransitionChristopher Beach, MD
Excerpt: "A woman comes to the ED with mental status changes. Although numerous tests are run and she is admitted, a critical test result fails to reach the medicine team in time to save the patient's life."
MedicineDeciphering the CodeMary K. Goldstein, MD, MS
Excerpt: "Failure to enter documentation of a DNR order causes a severely ill elderly man to be resuscitated against his wishes. Shortly thereafter, the patient's wife confirms his wishes, and within minutes, the patient dies."
NursingWorkaround ErrorTess Pape, PhD, RN, CNOR
Excerpt: "Bypassing the safeguards of an automated dispensing machine in a skilled nursing facility, a nurse administers medications from a portable medication cart. A non-diabetic patient receives insulin by mistake, which requires his admission to intensive care and delays his chemotherapy for cancer."

January 2006Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaAn Ounce of PreventionNils Kucher, MD
Excerpt: "Following reconstructive surgery to her hand, a woman suffers sudden cardiopulmonary arrest. After successful resuscitation, further review revealed that she had a pulmonary embolism and that she had received no venous thromboembolism prophylaxis. "
MedicineAn Outpatient “Zebra”Lee Berkowitz, MD
Excerpt: "Over several weeks, a man with left foot pain and numbness is evaluated by numerous doctors, each resident and attending pair offering a different incorrect diagnosis until the patient's fourth visit. "
PediatricsConfusion with AcetaminophenJames E. Heubi, MD
Excerpt: "Parents of a 5-year-old, told to give their son acetaminophen for his fever, return 2 days later because he is acutely ill. Tests reveal dangerously high acetaminophen levels. It turns out the parents had miscalculated the dosage."

December 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaLow on the Totem PoleRobert M. Wachter, MD
Excerpt: "A medical student notices that, prior to surgery, a urinary catheter is inserted into a child without sterile prep. Being new to the OR setting, he says nothing until a few days later on rounds when the patient shows signs of infection."
MedicineDischarged BlindlyLisa I. Iezzoni, MD, MSc
Excerpt: "A man is discharged home with injections and written instructions on how to administer his medications. However, the nurse and pharmacist did not notice that he was blind."
Ob/GynSlippery Slide into LifeLouis P. Halamek, MD
Excerpt: "A resident in the middle of delivering an infant turns away for a moment, during which the mother adjusts herself and the infant drops headfirst onto the floor."

November 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedReconciling DosesFrank Federico, RPh
Excerpt: "An elderly man on warfarin is admitted to the hospital with suspected meningitis. The admitting team bases his dose of warfarin on the paramedics' run-sheet but does not verify the dose. The patient winds up with a dangerous INR level, which causes a serious neurologic complication."
MedicineOne Dose, Fifty Pills Lawrence Smith, MD
Excerpt: "Told to give a patient one gram of steroids, an intern mistakenly orders fifty 20-mg pills. Although a pharmacist questions the order, the intern insists that the medication be given as ordered."
NursingInfused, not IngestedMary E. Foley MS, RN
Excerpt: "An ICU patient scheduled for a CT scan is given contrast solution by a nurse unfamiliar with its administration. Rather than orally, the contrast is mixed into a bag of saline and given intravenously."

September 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineDouble TroubleJerry H. Gurwitz, MD
Excerpt: "An elderly man with diabetes admitted to the hospital with hypoglycemia is switched from a combination medication (two pills in one) to a single drug. Two weeks later, he presents with mental status changes."
Surg/AnesthesiaTime of Death?Jeffrey M. Taekman, MD; Melanie C. Wright, PhD
Excerpt: "A few minutes after the code is "called" on an elderly patient, a nurse rushes from the room stating that the patient is breathing spontaneously."
NursingThe Wrong Channel John Gosbee, MD, MS
Excerpt: "In labor, a woman receiving medications for preeclampsia, labor induction, and hydration from a multi-channel infusion pump is mistakenly given an extra bolus of the wrong drug."

July/August 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineImpatient Inpatient DosingRichard H. White, MD
Excerpt: "An intern increases a patient's warfarin dosage nightly based on subtherapeutic INR levels drawn each morning; after several days, the patient develops potentially life-threatening bleeding. "
Surg/AnesthesiaPCA OverdoseD. John Doyle, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "Following surgery, a woman receives morphine via a patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) pump. A few hours after arriving on the floor, she is found barely breathing."
Critical CareSurprise WireJeffrey M. Pearl, MD; Nancy E. Donaldson RN, DNSc
Excerpt: "A nurse preparing a patient for transfer out of the ICU discovers the guidewire used for central line placement (1 week earlier) still in the patient's leg vein."

June 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedGetting to the Root of the MatterScott A. Flanders, MD; Sanjay Saint, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "Using a case of a dosing error, the authors describe the best practices in performing a root cause analysis."
MedicineTwo Pills, Same DrugJan Horsky, MA, MPhil; Vimla L. Patel, PhD, DSc
Excerpt: "An AIDS patient prescribed a combination medicine, including a drug she was already taking, narrowly misses being overdosed. "
Surg/AnesthesiaBlind SpotLorri A. Lee, MD
Excerpt: "A woman undergoes surgery and immediately has blurry vision, mistakenly attributed to ointment. Two weeks later, she returns complaining of blindness in one eye."

May 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedDiagnosing Diagnostic MistakesRobert McNutt, MD; Richard Abrams, MD; Scott Hasler, MD
Excerpt: "Using past WebM&M cases, the authors discuss the challenges inherent in classifying diagnostic mistakes as medical errors. "
MedicineDischarge Against Medical AdviceStephen W. Hwang, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A man admitted with alcoholic dementia and a broken upper arm refuses surgery and decides to leave the hospital in the middle of the night. "
Ob/GynPregnant with DangerMark D. Pearlman, MD; Jeffrey S. Desmond, MD
Excerpt: "A woman who was 38 weeks pregnant came to the emergency department (ED) complaining of left leg pain. Ruled out for deep vein thrombosis, she was sent home, only to die the following morning."

April 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedCompare and ContrastKerry C. Cho, MD; Glenn M. Chertow, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A patient with presumed small bowel obstruction undergoes a contrast-enhanced CT scan. She develops contrast nephropathy requiring dialysis."
MedicineThe Forgotten MedRuss Cucina, MD, MS
Excerpt: "Thinking that the patient's glycemic control had spontaneously improved (and not realizing that the patient was continuing to receive long-acting insulin injections), a physician discontinues daily glucose checks and insulin sliding scale orders. Four days later, the patient is found unresponsive and hypoglycemic."
NeurologyHold the tPASusan C. Fagan, PharmD, BCPS, FCCP
Excerpt: "A patient with presumed stroke is given tPA before the results of her coagulation studies are known. Five minutes later, the lab reports that the INR was elevated—an absolute contraindication to thrombolytic therapy. "

March 2005Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Hospital MedicineHidden MysteryDouglas D. Brunette, MD
Excerpt: "The challenges of examining and imaging a hospitalized morbidly obese patient delay diagnosis, threatening the patient's life."
MedicinePreventable RashCatherine McLean, MD
Excerpt: "At a routine clinic visit, screening labs are sent for a man with HIV. Not notified of the results, he assumes they are normal. One month later, he develops a classic syphilitic rash."
Surg/AnesthesiaOn O.R. Off?Michael Leonard, MD
Excerpt: "Surgeons cancel revascularization surgery on an elderly man so that he can first undergo cardiac catheterization. The next morning, the patient is taken to the OR anyway and given general anesthesia."
Surg/AnesthesiaAround the BlockTracy Minichiello, MD
Excerpt: "Despite a box on the admission form warning against using blood thinners and epidural anesthesia together, a patient admitted for elective surgery receives both, and becomes permanently paralyzed."
RadiologyTechno TripRichard I. Cook, MD
Excerpt: "Transferred from one hospital to another for urgent evaluation, a patient is initially misdiagnosed when the CD (containing her radiographs) sent with her displays the older, rather than current, CT scans first."

December 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Hospital MedicineDischarge FumblesAlan Forster, MD, MSc
Excerpt: "A patient arrives at the ED in acute kidney failure; another patient arrives at the ED profoundly hypoglycemic. Both mishaps were determined to stem from medication errors at the time of discharge."
MedicineA "Weak" ResponseAnna B. Reisman, MD
Excerpt: "Feeling "weak" late at night, a patient calls his doctor's office. The covering physician misses a few clues, which might have prompted a different plan."
Surg/AnesthesiaMark My Limb Dennis S. O'Leary, MD; William E. Jacott, MD
Excerpt: "Despite a "time out" and having his leg marked by the surgeon, a patient comes perilously close to having surgery on the wrong leg. "
Clinical EthicsOverriding ConsiderationsNeil A. Holtzman, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A pregnant woman is offered genetic testing for herself and her husband. Although he declines, the next time he undergoes routine testing, the phlebotomist overrides the consent in the computerized record and runs the test anyway."
Primary CareCarpe Diem (Seize the Day)Allan Krumholz, MD
Excerpt: "At a new patient visit, a man with seizure disorder requests a 'handicapped' license plate due to difficulty walking long distances. To his surprise, the physician explains that he needs to report his seizures to the DMV."

October 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineThin AirDavid M. Gaba, MD
Excerpt: "A dyspneic patient fails to improve after being placed on high-flow oxygen. The respiratory therapist soon discovers why: the patient is mistakenly receiving compressed room air."
Surg/AnesthesiaMoved Too SoonPeter Lindenauer, MD, MSc
Excerpt: "A surgical patient and a neurosurgical patient are scheduled to be moved to different beds, the second taking the first's spot. However, the move is documented electronically before it occurs physically, and a medication error nearly ensues."
Ob/GynLap BurnKay Ball, RN, MSA
Excerpt: "While repositioning the trocar, a surgeon places the laparoscope on a tray sitting on the patient. When she picks it back up, she notices that the drape has melted and the patient has a second-degree burn."
Medical InformaticsElectronic ErrPaul C. Tang, MD
Excerpt: "After an admitting physician bases the dosages of medication on an outdated electronic medication list, the patient's heart nearly stops. "
Risk ManagementHard to SwallowJeffrey Driver, JD, MBA
Excerpt: "Following a swallowing study, a speech pathologist recommends that a patient receive nothing by mouth, due to a high risk of aspiration. However, because the report is misfiled, no NPO order is implemented."

September 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaPoor PrognosisElizabeth B. Lamont, MD, MS
Excerpt: "Following hernia repair surgery, an elderly woman is incidentally found to have a mass in her neck. Expecting the worst, the treating physician recommends palliative care and withdrawal of mechanical ventilation, before biopsy results are in."
MedicineDoctor, Don't Treat ThyselfElin Olaug Rosvold, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "An ill physician arrives at the ED for evaluation of shortness of breath. As it is past midnight and he is the only radiologist around, he reads (and misinterprets) his own x-ray."
Emergency MedCaution, InterruptedRobert L. Wears, MD, MS
Excerpt: "A nurse notices that an IV medication she is about to administer is possibly mislabeled, as it looks like a different drug. However, she is interrupted before she can call the pharmacy and winds up hanging the bag anyway."
Medical InformaticsSecurity LapseDaniel Mason, MD
Excerpt: "A medical student discovers that a hospital's radiology records are accessible via Internet, without any security, and struggles with whether and to whom to report the obvious HIPAA violation. "
RadiologyReaction to DyeRichard Cohan, MD
Excerpt: "Prior to a CT scan, a patient states that he is not allergic to x-ray dye. Soon after injection, he goes into anaphylactic shock. "

July 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Critical CareNovel Drug MisuseDerek C. Angus, MD, MPH; Eric B. Milbrandt, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "Following a motor vehicle collision, a patient is mistakenly given drotrecogin alfa (activated) for organ failure not due to sepsis."
MedicineAllergy to HolterMark V. Williams, MD
Excerpt: "A man sent for a Holter monitor inadvertently arrives at the allergy clinic and receives a skin test instead."
Surg/AnesthesiaBowel PrepDouglas B. Nelson, MD
Excerpt: "Prior to colonoscopy, a woman is found unresponsive after completing her bowel prep regimen."
Emergency MedThe Worst HeadacheJonathan A. Edlow, MD
Excerpt: "A woman presents with a sudden onset headache, felt to be another migraine. However, when her physician follows up with her by phone, the line goes dead. EMTs find her unconscious."
EducationGlucose Roller CoasterBradley A. Sharpe, MD
Excerpt: "A woman hospitalized for CHF (with no history of diabetes) is given several rounds of insulin and D50, after repeated blood tests show her glucose to be dangerously high, then dangerously low. Turns out, the blood samples were drawn incorrectly and the signouts were incomplete."

June 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
PediatricsThe Wrong Shot: Error DisclosureThomas H. Gallagher, MD; Wendy Levinson, MD
Excerpt: "A child is mistakenly vaccinated for hepatitis A, rather than B. Despite forthright disclosure and no evident harm to the child, the father becomes incredibly angry at the providers."
MedicineDangerous DapsoneTom Bookwalter, PharmD
Excerpt: "A woman given is found cyanotic on morning rounds. Her methemoglobinemia is determined to be from a roughly 7-fold overdose of dapsone."
Surg/AnesthesiaListen to the FamilyDarrell Campbell, Jr., MD
Excerpt: "Despite persuasion from a surgical resident that her mother's life was in danger, a patient's daughter refuses consent for surgery on her mother. This was wise, since the procedure was intended for a different patient with the same unusual surname."
Emergency MedLethal VertigoJoseph M. Furman, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "A woman presents to the ED with severe vertigo and vomiting. Over several hours, she is handed off to three different physicians, none of whom suspects a dangerous lesion. Later, an hour after onset of a severe headache, she dies."
Lab. MedicineThe Result Stopped HereMichael Astion, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "Just before leaving for the weekend, a physician orders a test for a communicable infection. Although the result arrives and isolation signs are placed on the patient's door, none of the covering physicians are notified, and the float nurses mistakenly assume the patient is already receiving treatment. "

May 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineToo Tight ControlHaya R. Rubin, MD, PhD; Vera T. Fajtova, MD
Excerpt: "To achieve tight glucose control, a hospitalized diabetes patient is placed on an insulin drip. Prior to minor surgery, he is made NPO and becomes severely hypoglycemic."
Surg/AnesthesiaPrivacy Gone AwryStephen G. Pauker, MD; Susan P. Pauker, MD
Excerpt: "Owing to privacy concerns, a nurse draws the drapes on a 3-year-old child in recovery following surgery, and unfortunately does not realize the child is in distress until loud inspiratory stridor is heard."
Ob/GynDo Me a FavorAnn Williamson, PhD, RN
Excerpt: "An antenatal room left in disarray causes a charge nurse to search for the missing patient. Investigation reveals that a resident had performed an ultrasound on a nurse friend rather than a true "patient.""
Clinical EthicsNo Blood, PleaseBryan A. Liang, MD, PhD, JD
Excerpt: "Understanding that she may lose her life without it, a woman severely injured in a collision rejects a blood transfusion for religious reasons. However, her parents persuade the physicians otherwise, and the woman lives."
Hospital MedicineMissed TBJ. Mark FitzGerald, MB; Dick Menzies, MD
Excerpt: "A woman hospitalized for 3 weeks with a respiratory infection was not responding to broad-spectrum antibiotics. Tragically, she died a few days before test results revealed that she actually had tuberculosis. "

March 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineCrossing the LineJeremy P. Feldman, MD; Michael K. Gould, MD, MS
Excerpt: "A central line placed incorrectly causes a patient to suffer permanent neurologic damage."
Surg/AnesthesiaOR PeepingColin F. Mackenzie, MD
Excerpt: "Video monitors near the operating room reveal a patient's identity, and gossip spreads about a very private issue. "
PediatricsLethal CapDean Schillinger, MD
Excerpt: "A misunderstanding of instructions on how to administer medication leads to an infant choking on a syringe cap."
PathologyAutopsy RevelationKaveh G. Shojania, MD
Excerpt: "A man discharged from the ED is found unresponsive at home the next morning. Autopsy reveals a diagnosis not even considered."
Hospital MedicineFumbled HandoffArpana Vidyarthi, MD
Excerpt: "Due to a series of incomplete signouts, information about a patient's post-operative leg pain and chest discomfort is not conveyed to the primary team. A PE is discovered post-mortem."

Febuary 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineDelay in Initiating Antibiotics Results in Fatal ErrorLisa M. Bellini, MD
Excerpt: "Housestaff evaluate and admit a severely ill patient with lupus, suspect a viral syndrome, and do not initiate antibiotics. Despite discovery of the correct diagnosis in the morning by the attending, the patient dies."
Surg/AnesthesiaEnvironmental Safety in the OR Darren R. Linkin, MD; Ebbing Lautenbach, MD, MPH, MSCE
Excerpt: "Infection Control notices an uptick in post-operative wound infections for patients from one OR team. Environmental rounds reveal "sloppy" practices. "
Ob/GynUndiagnosed Vaginal Bleeding Jeanne Mandelblatt, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A physician who does not accept Medicaid turns away a woman needing evaluation for 2 years of profuse vaginal bleeding. She later presents to the ED, where examination reveals invasive cervical cancer."
Emergency MedX-ray FlipMarc J. Shapiro, MD
Excerpt: "Trusting an incorrectly labeled chest x-ray over physical exam findings, a resident places a chest tube for pneumothorax in the wrong side."
Lab. MedicineTransfusion "Slip"Harold S. Kaplan, MD
Excerpt: "Blood typing tubes for a married couple brought to an ED after a trauma are labeled with the opposite stickers. By coincidence, the wife's blood type was already on file. An alert blood-bank technologist catches the mistake."

January 2004Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Emergency MedCrushing Chest Pain: A Missed OpportunityMark Graber, MD
Excerpt: "A patient with chest pain is incorrectly diagnosed as having had an MI. Although physicians eventually realize the patient had an aortic dissection, it is too late. The patient dies."
MedicineTo Resuscitate or Not?Albert W. Wu, MD, MPH; Peter J. Pronovost, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "A patient receiving end-of-life care, whose code status was DNR, encounters a potentially life-threatening medication error."
Surg/AnesthesiaInadvertent CastrationJ. Forrest Calland, MD
Excerpt: "During a hernia repair, surgeons decide to remove a patient's hydrocele, spermatic cord, and left testicle—without realizing that his right testicle had been removed previously. "
Ob/GynRuptured Heterotopic PregnancyMarcelle I. Cedars, MD
Excerpt: "A pregnant woman arrives at the ED with severe abdominal pain. Concerned about a ruptured appendix, the ED physicians order a CT scan. The obstetrics resident examines her there and is concerned about a ruptured heterotopic pregnancy."
PediatricsTriage Time BombDonna L. Washington, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A triage nurse instructed by a physician to immediately bring a febrile child, who was possibly dehydrated, to the treatment area is stopped by the charge nurse, citing overcrowding. The parents seek treatment elsewhere; upon arrival, the child is in full arrest."

November 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaThe Missing Suction TipEric J. Thomas, MD, MPH; Frederick A. Moore, MD
Excerpt: "A scrub nurse cannot find a missing suction catheter tip, but the surgeon closes the patient. A post-operative x-ray reveals the tip in the patient's chest."
Medicine40 of KTimothy S. Lesar, PharmD
Excerpt: "An unclear verbal order leads to administration of the wrong drug."
Ob/GynWaiting Too LongMark A. Rosen, MD
Excerpt: "Due to the delay in anesthesiology becoming available for an urgent C-section, an infant is delivered with profound neurologic abnormalities."
PediatricsMisread LabelBryony Dean Franklin, PhD
Excerpt: "An infant born with sluggish breathing is given Lanoxin instead of naloxone, and dies of digoxin toxicity."
PsychiatryDon’t PushHerbert Y. Meltzer, MD
Excerpt: "Inappropriate use of IV haloperidol to manage psychosis in an AIDS patient causes polymorphic v-tach ("torsade de pointes"), necessitating a transvenous pacemaker."

October 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Ob/GynThe Other SideCharles Vincent, PhD
Excerpt: "Trusting his memory more than the chart, a surgeon directs a resident to remove the wrong side on a patient with unilateral vulvar cancer."
MedicineLost in the Black HoleRobert M. Wachter, MD
Excerpt: "A missing lab result leads to a 6-month delay in informing a patient about a new diagnosis of HIV."
Surg/AnesthesiaCharcoal Lavage of the LungsRobert S. Wigton, MD
Excerpt: "Misplacement of an NG tube sends charcoal into the lung; the patient dies of complications."
PediatricsTo LP or not LPChristopher P. Landrigan, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "An infant sent to the ED for an LP is mistakenly redirected to the lab for a "blood test"; hours later, at a second ED, he is found to have meningitis."
Family MedicineUrine a Tough PositionTejal K. Gandhi, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "Switched urine specimens lead to a patient receiving the wrong answer about her pregnancy test."

September 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
PediatricsIntubation MishapMatthew B. Weinger, MD; George T. Blike, MD
Excerpt: "An infant acutely desaturates following an ED nurse's premature administration of a paralytic medication."
MedicineShake WellElizabeth A. Flynn, PhD, RPh
Excerpt: "Failure to shake a bottle leads to a toxic level of carbamazepine in a patient being treated for seizure disorder."
Surg/AnesthesiaDid We Forget Something?Verna C. Gibbs, MD
Excerpt: "A patient dies from infection and complications months after surgery; a retained sponge is found at autopsy."
Ob/GynMaking DoLinda D. Bradley, MD
Excerpt: "Following surgical team's makeshift assembly of equipment, a patient undergoing hysteroscopy suffers cardiac arrest on the OR table."
NursingCheck the BagsMary Caldwell, RN, PhD, MBA; Kathleen A. Dracup, RN, DNSc
Excerpt: "A patient given diltiazem rather than saline suffers severe bradycardia requiring temporary pacemaker."

July 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Clinical EthicsCode Status ConfusionBernard Lo, MD; James A. Tulsky, MD
Excerpt: "A patient asks to be "DNR" because she misunderstood a vague discussion of resuscitation."
MedicineBleeding RiskMark A. Crowther, MD, MSc
Excerpt: "Inadequate monitoring and management of warfarin places patient at significant risk of harm."
Surg/AnesthesiaCheck the WristbandMarilynn M. Rosenthal, PhD
Excerpt: "An anxious patient awaiting ambulatory surgery is mistakenly put on the wrong operating table."
Ob/GynFeeling No PainMarilyn Sue Bogner, PhD
Excerpt: "Following hysterectomy, a PCA pump is mistakenly continued in a woman suffering an adverse reaction to morphine, noticed only when her respiratory status set off an alarm."
PediatricsA Little ShuteyeKen J. Farion, MD
Excerpt: "A physician in the ED mistakenly glues a child's eye shut when attempting to close a facial wound with skin adhesive."

June 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaMissed AppendicitisJames G. Adams, MD
Excerpt: "Abdominal pain misdiagnosed in an ED patient leads to ruptured appendix, multiple complications, and prolonged hospitalization."
MedicineInappropriate Antibiotic UseHilary M. Babcock, MD; Victoria J. Fraser, MD
Excerpt: "Antibiotics continued in a patient with no clear source of infection for 3 weeks results in hospital-acquired superinfections."
Ob/GynNot a MiscarriageLee A. Learman, MD, PhD
Excerpt: "A woman was told she miscarried, even though she was still pregnant."
PediatricsXL or Smaller?Eran Kozer, MD
Excerpt: "A boy given an overdose of nifedipine rather than its extended-release (XL) form suffers dangerous hypotension."
PsychiatryThe Dangerous DetourJosh Gibson, MD; David H. Taylor, MD
Excerpt: "En route to x-ray, suicidal patient attempts to hang herself in washroom."

May 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
PediatricsCentral Line ClotAdrienne G. Randolph, MD, MSc
Excerpt: "An infant codes due to pulmonary emboli after a central line flush."
MedicineThe Dropped LungJohn E. Heffner, MD
Excerpt: "A chest x-ray incorrectly read as pleural effusion, rather than lung collapse, leads to iatrogenic pneumothorax following thoracentesis."
Surg/AnesthesiaBloody BP CuffAtul K. Madan, MD
Excerpt: "A blood-soaked BP cuff used on one trauma patient is re-used on the next trauma patient, with no regard to universal precautions."
Ob/GynEctopic or Not?Vanessa M. Givens, MD; Gary H. Lipscomb, MD
Excerpt: "A woman is given methotrexate prematurely for suspected ectopic pregnancy and ultimately has salpingectomy."
PsychiatrySuicidal Man with GunRobert I. Simon, MD
Excerpt: "Suicidal patient who admits having firearm refuses to remove gun from home for nearly 3 months."

April 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
MedicineAnother FallSidney T. Bogardus, Jr., MD
Excerpt: "Delirious and coagulopathic patient with subdural hematomas falls out of bed—twice!"
Surg/AnesthesiaWhich End is Which?Andre R. Campbell, MD
Excerpt: "Laparoscopic colostomy completed in reverse induces total bowel obstruction."
Ob/GynPremature or Overdue?Jackie Thomas, MD; Mary Hannah, MD
Excerpt: "Incorrect dating criteria in a woman late entering prenatal care nearly leads to induction of a pre-term infant."
PediatricsMedication OverdoseRainu Kaushal, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A boy received an overdose of phenytoin due to ambiguous use of abbreviations."
PsychiatryThe 2-Week ItchMichael R. Cohen, RPh, MS, ScD
Excerpt: "Antipsychotic, rather than antihistamine, mistakenly dispensed to woman with bipolar disorder with new urticaria."

Febuary 2003Back to Top 
SpecialtyTitleCommentary by
Surg/AnesthesiaUnexplained Apnea under AnesthesiaPaul Barach, MD, MPH
Excerpt: "A boy undergoing knee surgery stopped breathing after inadvertently being given a paralytic medication instead of an antibiotic."
MedicinePatient Mix-UpKaveh G. Shojania, MD
Excerpt: "A man almost received a medication intended for another patient with the same last name in the same room."
Ob/GynProcedural Mishap: Learning Curve?Verna C. Gibbs, MD; Lucian L. Leape, MD
Excerpt: "A woman required emergency vascular surgery due to a complication during routine laparoscopic tubal ligation."
PediatricsFlying Object Hits MRIJohn Gosbee, MD, MS; Laura Lin Gosbee, MASc
Excerpt: "An infusion pump being used for routine sedation in a child undergoing a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan flew across the room and hit the MRI magnet, narrowly missing the child."
PsychiatryWhen "Psychiatric" Symptoms are NotRichard J. Goldberg, MD, MS
Excerpt: "An elderly man with delusions and progressive neurological symptoms initially attributed to psychosis is found to have metastatic cancer."

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