Medical Errors

Complaints Surge About Crumbling Artificial Hips

As researchers scramble to assess the health dangers of flawed artificial hips, the federal government has received a flood of new complaints about the devices. An analysis by The New York Times reveals that the Food and Drug Administration has been deluged with more than 5,000 reports since January about several types of so-called metal-on-metal hips. That is more than ... Read more »

Medical Malpractice Claims Usually Come Up Empty, Study Says

Each year, about one in 14 doctors gets sued for malpractice, but only one claim in five results in a settlement or other payout, according to the most comprehensive study of these claims in 20 years. While the findings might suggest that most of these claims are meritless, authors of the study in the New England ... Read more »

More Children Hospitalized With Antibiotic-Resistant Skin Infections

Serious skin infections that resist antibiotics are hospitalizing more and more children. A new federal report found that 71,900 children spent time in the hospital in 2009 for serious skin infections. That reflected a rate of 9.4 cases for every 10,000 children, up sharply from a rate of 4.5 cases per 10,000 in 2000. The ... Read more »

Denver Clinic Faces $3.2 Million in Fines for Unauthorized Scans of Patients

A Denver clinic faces $3.2 million in state fines for conducting CT scans on patients without orders from a licensed doctor. Colorado health officials, in a news release, said the Denver office of Tinley Park, Ill.,-based Heart Check America conducted the scans on about 150 people every week. It exposed them to “potentially unnecessary radiation doses ... Read more »

Chinese Hospitals Often Reject AIDS Patients, Study Finds

Hospitals in China may be routinely refusing to treat AIDS and HIV patients because of fear and ignorance about the disease. Reuters, citing a study by the United Nations International Labor Organization, said these patients commonly are shunned by health care workers even for ailments unrelated to AIDS. The conclusions were based on interviews conducted ... Read more »

Report Finds Spate of Emergency Room Closings in Poor Areas

Emergency rooms in the United States have closed at an alarming rate over the past 20 years, particularly those serving lots of poor patients, says a new report in the Journal of the American Medical Association. From 1990 to 2009, the number of hospitals with emergency rooms in urban and suburban areas declined from 2,446 to ... Read more »

Doctors Overuse Brain Scans in Children’s ER Visits, Study Finds

Children rushed to the hospital after a knock on the noggin may wind up receiving a CT scan that they don’t need, exposing them to unnecessary doses of radiation. As HealthDay News reports, that issue is raised by a study in the journal Pediatrics that reviewed more than 40,000 emergency room visits of children with ... Read more »

Study Suggests Autism More Prevalent Than Previously Thought

Autism and related conditions might be far more widespread than previously thought. As the Los Angeles Times reports, a groundbreaking study of South Korean children found that 2.6 percent — one out of every 38 kids — suffer from from autism spectrum disorders, which can range from severe autism to more mild disorders such as ... Read more »

Medical Societies Throw Doors Open to Industry Money

Despite widespread concerns about the potential influence of drug and medical device company money on doctors, societies that represent specialists continue to take in lots of Big Pharma cash. As ProPublica reports, the Heart Rhythm Society provides a leading illustration of the practice. It pulls in millions off of its role as the gatekeeper between ... Read more »

Study Finds Surgery Benefits Younger Prostate Cancer Patients

Men stricken with prostate cancer before the age of 65 often might be better off undergoing surgery to remove the prostate gland rather than waiting to see how the disease develops. As the Associated Press reports, a study led by Swedish researchers has found that the so-called “watchful waiting” approach — which calls for holding ... Read more »