Posted On: September 28, 2008

Hospital Patients: Know The Color of Your Bracelet

Hospitals have long used color-coded bracelets as shorthand to communicate patients' needs to doctors and nurses. For instance, a purple bracelet might indicate that a terminally ill patient does not wish to be resuscitated in the event of heart failure.

Now there is a movement to standardize bracelets, preventing confusion when a health care worker moves from one hospital where (for instance) yellow bracelets mean "do not resuscitate" to another where they indicate an allergy to peanuts.

Bracelets have other pitfalls--for instance, a patient might not wish to advertise a certain desire or condition to visiting loved ones. And children have a tendency to take them off and trade them with each other.

The important thing, if you or a loved one is staying in a hospital, is to know what the colors of your bracelets mean and be prepared to tell doctors and nurses about it. If a doctor or nurse comes up to you or your loved one and begins doing something you don't understand, do not hesitate to ask about it--not only is it good for you to know these things in general, but they may be acting on a misinterpretation of the colored bracelet.

Bookmark and Share

Posted On: September 8, 2008

The Biggest Risks You Face in the Hospital

Forbes Magazine has an informative article on the frequency of hospitals making mistakes while caring for patients, pointing out that 1.5 million Americans fall victim to such errors every single year.

Some of these errors occur through sheer carelessness: for example, 100,000 people a year die from "superbugs," bacteria that are resistant to available antibiotics. Infections from these superbugs can frequently be prevented by hand-washing. Yet other errors are the system's fault and not the fault of any individual. They occur because of overcrowding and the consequent inability of doctors and nurses to spend sufficient time with each patient.

The article also cites an Auburn University study showing that hospitals administer the wrong drug one time out of five. The dosage of the drug is another common source of error. A famous recent example of a drug error is from last November when actor Dennis Quaid's newborn twins were given 1,000 times the intended dose of the blood-thinner heparin. Luckily the hospital detected the error before permanent damage was done.

What is the bottom line? There are no magical solutions, especially since most of these problems are systemic. As a doctor quoted in the article says: "If you're sick, the best way to avoid getting sicker is to take charge of your care." Asking questions and being unafraid to make demands is the most any individual patient, or their loved ones, can do to reduce risk of error.

Bookmark and Share