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Study: Medical Errors Higher at For-Profit than Not-for-Profit Hospitals
Journal of General Internal Medicine Editorial Cites Cuts in Nursing, Focus on Profits According to a study and editorial released April 19, patients at
for-profit hospitals are two to four times more likely than patients at
not-for-profit hospitals to suffer adverse events such as complications
following surgery or delays in diagnosing and treating an ailment. "This study is another warning for those who would trust hospital care to
the marketplace," said Dr. Gordon Schiff, author of the editorial ("Fatal
Distraction" JGIM, April, 2000). Previous research has found death rates 25 percent higher at for-profit
hospitals than at teaching hospitals and 6 to 7 percent higher than at
non-profit, non-teaching hospitals. In addition, for-profit hospitals employ
fewer nurses, charge higher prices (costing Medicare an additional $5.2
billion annually) and spend a higher percentage of their budgets on overhead. A study published last year in the Journal of the American Medical
Association also found that for-profit HMOs are lower quality than
not-for-profit HMOs on 14 quality measures. Dr. Schiff cited a remarkable study on blood donation by Dr. Richard
Titmuss ("The Gift Relationship"), published three decades ago which found
that for-profit blood centers were less efficient, more costly, and more
dangerous to patients than voluntary, non-profit centers. "Hospital managers and even medical staffs are preoccupied with survival
in the marketplace," said Dr. Schiff. "This preoccupation represents a
"fatal distraction" from the real business of health care -- caring for
patients and improving quality." "We're very concerned that non-profit hospitals will be forced to adopt
the same cost- and quality-cutting measures of the for-profits," continued
Dr. Schiff. "It's much easier to measure money than quality of care." Public non-teaching hospitals also had higher rates of adverse events
than not-for-profit hospitals and teaching institutions, which the study
suggests may be due to insufficient funding during the study period. The
study examined 15,000 patients hospitalized in Utah and Colorado in 1992, and
many small public Colorado hospitals experienced financial losses that year. "The competitive free market described in textbooks doesn't and can't
exist in health care," says Dr. Claudia Fegan, an internist in Chicago and
former medical director of Michael Reese hospital in Chicago. "Seriously ill
patients can't comparison shop or accurately judge quality. We need a
not-for-profit national health system to increase access for the millions of
uninsured, to strengthen our nation's health care safety net, and to improve
quality for all."
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