Rhode Island Hospital fined $150K in wrong-site surgery
Hospital Fined
Rhode Island Hospital is fined $150K for a wrong-site surgery.
Published: November 3, 2009
PROVIDENCE—Rhode Island’s largest hospital was fined $150,000 and ordered to take the extraordinary step of installing video cameras in all its operating rooms after it had its fifth wrong-site surgery since 2007, state health officials said Monday.
Rhode Island Hospital, the teaching hospital for Brown University’s Alpert Medical School, was fined a second time for wrong-site surgeries, state health director David Gifford said. The hospital also was fined $50,000 after brain surgeons operated on the wrong part of the heads of three patients in 2007. Gifford said his department has issued only two fines - both to Rhode Island Hospital.
“I think the pace of progress there is not what it should be,“ Gifford told NBC 10. “I think if you want to move along faster, you sometimes have to raise eyebrows.“
Gifford sent a letter and order to hospital CEO Timothy Babineau on Monday.
Babineau said in a statement that the hospital was committed to reducing medical errors and had been taking steps to improve patient safety.
But he also requested a meeting with state officials to discuss the sanctions, saying he was disappointed that the Health Department had not incorporated into its order separate recommendations from the Joint Commission Center for Transforming Healthcare. A hospital spokeswoman, asked to elaborate, said she did know what those recommendations were.
The latest incident last month involved a patient who was to have surgery on two fingers. Instead, the surgeon performed both operations on the same finger. Under protocols adopted in the medical field, the surgery site should have been marked and the surgical team should have taken a timeout before cutting to ensure they were operating on the right patient, the right part of the patient’s body and doing the correct procedure.
Gifford said the surgical team marked the wrist, rather than each finger, and the surgeon did not mark the site himself. The team did not take a timeout before the second surgery. When they discovered the error, they checked with the patient’s family to see if they should perform the surgery on the correct finger. When they did the surgery on the correct finger, they also did not do a timeout, something Gifford called “amazing” given that they had just made such a serious error.
The order includes a provision that the hospital must assign a clinical employee who is not part of the surgical team to observe all surgeries at the hospital for at least one year. The person will monitor whether doctors are marking the site to be operated on and taking a time out before operating to ensure they’re operating on the proper body part.
It requires the surgeon to be involved in marking the surgical site.
The order also gives the hospital 45 days to install video and audio recording equipment in all its operating rooms. Every doctor will be taped performing surgery at least twice every year, although it will be left up to the hospital whether to tell surgeons when they are being monitored, he said.
The purpose is to use it as a monitor and a training tool, he said.
“Professional athletes do it all the time,“ he said.
Gifford said he had never heard of another state health department ordering a hospital to install video cameras in its operating rooms, something he said surgeons should welcome.
“You know what? They should be open to that. Clearly there’s a culture of making mistakes, so if they’re hesitant to have someone to look over their shoulder, that says to me that we’re doing the right thing,“ he said.
The hospital will get permission from patients or their families before any recording.
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Reader Reactions
why u being rude ibd ? my comment wasn’t toward
Posted by los on November 04, 2009 at 1:16 pm
if i ever require medical help , please fly me out of state to mass general
How about you just fly away anyway.
if i ever require medical help , please fly me out of state to mass general
http://safesurgery4u.com/Page_4_Malpractice_.html
sorry her’s the site.
THis it the 5th (count them) ...5th incident at RIH.
In june a state wide system was initiated to avoid such a thing and yet it happens again.
I am not sure about licensing but perhaps closing the operating rooms for a week (lost revenue. hosptial has to pay or reassign staff, doctor goes on supervised surgical staff) might be more helpful.
Attached is a listing of malpractice/wrong site surgeries.
NO hospital is immune to this. Kent had 3 minor things in one month involving the radiology dept (not operating room), Miriam has had equally bad events.
I once read to make one medication error it takes about 57 separate steps from the time the order is written to the time the patient gets the medication. I suspect to have a major operation there are many many more steps.
Last fine for RIH was 50,000.
I’d suggest asking the surgeons to pool together their money…or have the hospital fine the surgeon for the amount of the fine.
THis is so common at RIH…yet everyone thinks it’s the meca!
even the research team are morons they walk around with a piece of paper in their hands and accomplish squat that whole hospital should be under investigation totaly incompetence
a FINE!! The Doctor should be terminated! He is the big kahuna. He went to medical school. He’s got the degree and makes the $$$$$. Fire his a$$. ugh!
they must be in competition with kent the hack county hospital
They should take the money from the head of Surgery’s salary to pay this fine.
I agree, lmh. If 3 wrong site BRAIN surgeries weren’t enough to correct the neglecting of protocol (that is what this is), will it take an amputation to wake them up?
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