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Diagnostic Errors in Hospitalized Adults Who Died or Were Transferred to Intensive Care

Andrew D. Auerbach, Tiffany Lee, Colin C. Hubbard, Sumant R Ranji, Katie E. Raffel, Gilmer Valdés, John Boscardin, Anuj K. Dalal, Alyssa Harris, Ellen Flynn, Jeffrey L. Schnipper, David Feinbloom, Bethany N. Roy, Shoshana J. Herzig, Mohammed Wazir, Esteban Gershanik, Abhishek Goyal, Pooja Chitneni, Sharran N. Burney, Janice Galinsky, Sarah Rastegar, Danielle Moore, Carl T. Berdahl, Edward G. Seferian, Krithika Suri, Téa Ramishvili, Deepak Vedamurthy, Daniel Hunt, Amisha S. Mehta, Haritha Katakam, Stephanie A. Field, Barbara Karatasakis, Katharina Beeler, Allison M. Himmel, Shaker M. Eid, Sonal Gandhi, Ivonne M. Pena, Zachary S. Ranta, Samuel D. Lipten, David Lucier, Beth Walker-Corkery, Jennifer Kleinman Sween, Robert W. Kirchoff, Katie M. Rieck, Gururaj J. Kolar, Riddhi S. Parikh, Caroline Burton, Chandrasagar Dugani, Kwame Dapaah-Afriyie, Arkadiy Finn, Sushma B. Raju, Asif Surani, Ankur Segon, Sanjay Bhandari, Gopi J. Astik, Kevin J. O’Leary, A. Shams Helminski, James Anstey, Mengyu Zhou, Angela Alday, Stephanie A. C. Halvorson, Armond Esmaili, Peter Barish, Cynthia Fenton, Molly A. Kantor, Kwang Jin Choi, AndréW. Schram, Gregory W. Ruhnke, Hemali Patel, Anunta Virapongse, Marisha Burden, Li-Kheng Ngov, Angela Keniston, Preetham Talari, John Romond, Sarah E. Vick, Mark V. Williams, Ruby Marr, Ashwin Gupta, Jeffrey M. Rohde, Frances Mao, Michele Fang, S. Ryan Greysen, Pranav Shah, Christopher S. Kim, Maya Narayanan, Benjamin J. Wolpaw, Sonja Ellingson, Farah Acher Kaiksow, Jordan Kenik, David G. Sterken, Michelle E. Lewis, Bhavish Manwani, Russell W. Ledford, Chase J. Webber, Eduard E. Vasilevskis, Ryan J. Buckley, Sunil Kripalani, Christopher Sankey, Sharon Ostfeld‐Johns

2024JAMA Internal Medicine87 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Importance: Diagnostic errors contribute to patient harm, though few data exist to describe their prevalence or underlying causes among medical inpatients. Objective: To determine the prevalence, underlying cause, and harms of diagnostic errors among hospitalized adults transferred to an intensive care unit (ICU) or who died. Design, Setting, and Participants: Retrospective cohort study conducted at 29 academic medical centers in the US in a random sample of adults hospitalized with general medical conditions and who were transferred to an ICU, died, or both from January 1 to December 31, 2019. Each record was reviewed by 2 trained clinicians to determine whether a diagnostic error occurred (ie, missed or delayed diagnosis), identify diagnostic process faults, and classify harms. Multivariable models estimated association between process faults and diagnostic error. Opportunity for diagnostic error reduction associated with each fault was estimated using the adjusted proportion attributable fraction (aPAF). Data analysis was performed from April through September 2023. Main Outcomes and Measures: Whether or not a diagnostic error took place, the frequency of underlying causes of errors, and harms associated with those errors. Results: Of 2428 patient records at 29 hospitals that underwent review (mean [SD] patient age, 63.9 [17.0] years; 1107 [45.6%] female and 1321 male individuals [54.4%]), 550 patients (23.0%; 95% CI, 20.9%-25.3%) had experienced a diagnostic error. Errors were judged to have contributed to temporary harm, permanent harm, or death in 436 patients (17.8%; 95% CI, 15.9%-19.8%); among the 1863 patients who died, diagnostic error was judged to have contributed to death in 121 (6.6%; 95% CI, 5.3%-8.2%). In multivariable models examining process faults associated with any diagnostic error, patient assessment problems (aPAF, 21.4%; 95% CI, 16.4%-26.4%) and problems with test ordering and interpretation (aPAF, 19.9%; 95% CI, 14.7%-25.1%) had the highest opportunity to reduce diagnostic errors; similar ranking was seen in multivariable models examining harmful diagnostic errors. Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study, diagnostic errors in hospitalized adults who died or were transferred to the ICU were common and associated with patient harm. Problems with choosing and interpreting tests and the processes involved with clinician assessment are high-priority areas for improvement efforts.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineIntensive careIntensive care medicineEmergency medicineMEDLINEIntensive care unitPediatricsMedical emergencyLawPolitical scienceClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsMedical Malpractice and Liability Issues