Salam kenal untuk teman-teman dimanapun berada,
Menanggapi artikel tersebut, ada yang perlu saya sampaikan. Karena kejadian 
tersebut melibatkan paramedis atau EMT pada pre-hospital setting. Maka saya 
ingin sharing sedikit pengetahuan tentang Prosedur/Juklak/protocol kesehatan. 
Protocol untuk setiap state atau negara bagian sangat variatif penerapannya. 
Ada 50 negara bagian di negara paman sam. Biasanya state protocol tersebut 
tidak diatur dalam satu generalisasi UU melainkan diatur oleh tiap-tiap state 
Department of Health, hanya acuannya yang secara nasional diatur oleh 
Department of Transportation. Kelalaian penanganan pasien atau negligence, 
secara umum harus dibuktikan oleh DA (District of Attorney) :
1.  Duty to act; penanganan standard yang mengikuti acuan state protocol atau 
city protocol. 
2.  Breach of duty; ada kesalahan penerapan prosedur/state protocol pada saat 
penanganan pasien
3.  Damages; ada kerusakan secara mental dan secara fisik baik secara permanent 
maupun temporary
4.  Cause; ada sebab dan akibat, misalnya tidak sengaja menjatuhkan pasien pada 
saat memindahkan pasien dgn menggunakan stretcher ke ambulance.
Jika terbukti bersalah, konsekuensinya bisa berupa hukuman kriminal dan 
pencabutan izin praktek. Jika dibandingkan di Indonesia, saya tidak tahu 
bagaimana penerapannya. Karena pengalaman saya hanya di New York. Jika ada 
pertanyaan, dengan senang hati sayan akan berusaha menjawabnya. Mohon 
informasinya juga untuk standard di Indonesia. Tks.

 
EMT Anwar S Buchari



----- Original Message ----
From: James Maramis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 10, 2008 6:14:58 AM
Subject: [indofirstaid.com]: Fwd: [PerawatS1Unai] Criminalizing Medical Errors


bacaan menarik :)


[www.ems1.com] 

Criminalizing Medical Errors
By Mike McEvoy

Example scenario: While treating a 31-year-old heart failure patient, a 
paramedic mistakenly pushes 4 milligrams of intravenous norepinephrine instead 
of the intended lookalike vial of 1 milligram of bumetanide (Bumex®). The 
patient immediately develops a supraventricular tachycardia, becomes 
hypertensive, and deteriorates into ventricular fibrillation. Resuscitative 
efforts are unsuccessful; the patient is pronounced dead on arrival at the ED. 
After learning of the error from local media accounts, the district attorney 
launches a criminal investigation. A grand jury returns a felony indictment 
against the paramedic involved in the error.

Every medical provider fears making an error that harms a patient. The 
possibility of criminal prosecution adds to those fears — loss of personal 
freedom, property, certification or licensure, and potential loss of 
livelihood. Today, with increasing frequency, human errors in health care are 
being criminalized. The results may have far reaching consequences on the 
practice of medicine, nursing and EMS.

While the public and our legal system seek to blame and punish people who make 
fatal mistakes, health care experts and advocates believe that criminal 
prosecution of medical providers ultimately does far more harm than good. Such 
actions, they argue, will ultimately drive practitioners to stop reporting 
errors, and discourage recruitment and retention of a profession already in 
short supply.

The fact of the matter is that a fatal medication or procedural error could 
happen to any nurse, paramedic, EMT or physician. How then, should these tragic 
circumstances be dealt with? What leads society to criminalize medical 
mistakes? What role can you and I play in affecting how medical errors are 
managed?

Medicine is not the only profession susceptible to criminal indictments for 
mistakes. In September 2006, two U.S. pilots flying an executive jet clipped 
the wings of a commercial airplane over Brazil. The resulting crash was the 
worst aviation accident in the history of Brazil and killed all 154 people 
aboard the 737 airliner.
Criminal charges were later filed against the U.S. pilots involved(1). Like 
health care authorities, aviation safety experts commented that the charges 
would have a "chilling effect … on getting people to come forward and admit 
mistakes. We need to focus not on putting people behind bars, but rather on 
finding out what went wrong and why, and then to prevent its reoccurrence." 
(Kenneth Quinn, Flight Safety Foundation).

'Criminal human error'
History illuminates when and how safety experts and the criminal justice system 
arrived at their present day impasse. Attorney David Marx, writing in The Just 
Culture Community News and Views newsletter(2) , calls this juncture the "birth 
of criminal human error." Marx traces the birth in the U.S. to a 1952 Supreme 
Court decision in the case of Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246.

In December 1948, while deer hunting on an abandoned air force bombing range, 
Morissette salvaged 3 tons of abandoned bomb scrap metal. He did this in full 
view during broad daylight believing it was abandoned, and did not think he was 
stealing.

When the government charged him with theft, his attorneys argued for dismissal 
on the grounds that there was no evil or criminal intent, which they believed 
the law required(3). Justice Jackson, writing for the court, described a 
paradigm shift in defining the word "criminal," which until that time typically 
conjured up images of evil intent or intent to cause harm.
Jackson described how the industrial revolution had introduced powerful, 
complex machines with potential to cause significant harm not previously 
possible except by the hands of man or animal. He pointed out that automobiles 
became an instrument by which human behavior could inflict major damage. With 
the industrial revolution, vast harm became able to be caused from great 
distances. In response, legislatures started criminalizing acts where "evil 
intent" was no longer a necessary element. Criminal negligence was born.

Since the industrial revolution, many types of human error have been 
criminalized, especially where public health or welfare is at stake. Marx 
points out that today's convicted criminals are not all folks with "evil 
intent," but include those who breach a duty to others that our government 
labels "criminal." The Clean Water Act makes polluting waterways criminal. 
People who leave a child or pet in an unattended vehicle during hot summer 
months are likely to face criminal charges.

Unavoidable events
Considering the potential scope of actions that could expose any one of us to 
prosecution, statistics demonstrate a predictable randomness that would 
pronounce such events unavoidable. The only question is which one of us it will 
happen to next. And when egregious harm befalls an innocent victim, human 
nature is to react to the seriousness of the outcome. What firefighter is not 
happy to see criminal charges brought against an arsonist? What medic is not 
pleased to see a drunk driver marched off to jail?

Yet to effectively deal with errors, particularly medical errors, we need to 
suppress our natural reactions and try to ignore outcomes during the time it 
takes to analyze the circumstances that led to the error.

The greater question, as it pertains to medical providers, is why human error 
has become not only a violation of rules and regulations, but a criminal act 
when it threatens the safety of citizens. Are prosecutors becoming overzealous? 
Are lawyers running out of control? Are our elected officials so frustrated 
that they've turned to criminal law to protect society? Or is it perhaps the 
systems we designed and manage that are heading us in this direction? Probably 
no single one of these explanations accounts entirely for where we are today, 
but several will determine where we go in the future.

No one of us is perfect. As human beings, we are destined to make mistakes. The 
Just Culture Organization, working to improve patient safety, believes that 
medical systems often fail to recognize human beings have not one, but two 
"intentions" related to anything we do. But while we acknowledge human 
intention toward the outcome, we frequently overlook human intention toward the 
action or behavior that leads to the outcome.

Undoubtedly, few medical providers intend to hurt their patients — the 
outcomes. But what about their intentions toward their actions? Did the 
paramedic in our opening scenario consciously disregard what he knew to be a 
significant and unjustifiable risk to his patient? If he did, the Just Culture 
model would call that behavior "reckless" and that is precisely the question 
they believe should be applied when considering criminal charges in medical 
errors.

The belief that punishment or criminal charges are unjustified merely because a 
health care provider did not intend to cause harm flies in the face of 
accountability, our legal system and good patient safety.

Provider's intentions
When investigating medical errors, our systems must carefully weigh the 
provider's intentions toward their behavior for recklessness. Regularly, we 
need to look for risky behavior and coach providers to straighten up and fly 
right.

Reckless behavior, on the other hand, should be punished. Yes, you read that 
correctly: some behaviors need to be punished. Perhaps our failure to 
consistently address reckless practices has prompted attorneys, prosecutors and 
legislators to take up our slack themselves.

A highly intoxicated partygoer who chooses to drive themselves home does not 
intend to strike and kill a pedestrian. But when such an incident happens, the 
courts will likely find the behavior — driving drunk — was intended, and 
consciously disregarded a significant risk to others.
Recklessness that harms others is criminal, and society sends the guilty to 
jail. Health care providers should not enjoy special exemption from the rules 
that govern the rest of society.
Our regulatory systems need to do a better job of dealing with providers who 
aren't living up to professional standards. Using the criminal justice system 
to accomplish this should rarely be necessary.

Speaking at the Society of Critical Care Medicine's 2007 Congress in Orlando, 
Lucian Leape, a Harvard physician and founder of the National Patient Safety 
Foundation, told the audience that problem health care providers are not bad 
people but, "our friends and colleagues whose performance poses a potential 
threat to patient safety.

Our failure to insure that all of our colleagues are competent and safe is 
ethically indefensible, and we have to do something about it." Dr. Leape 
continued, "We are the only ones capable of judging and taking action with our 
peers. We have to take the responsibility."

Equally important are our safety systems. Many error investigation models, the 
Just Cause model included, see two inputs for every adverse outcome: the system 
we design around the provider and the behavioral choices they make within that 
system.

Some systems facilitate risky behaviors; others fail to implement safeguards to 
reduce risks. In 1998, a Denver nurse was indicted for criminally negligent 
homicide in the death of a newborn from a dose of penicillin. The Institute for 
Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) investigating the case found more than 50 
deficiencies in the hospital medication-use system contributed to the error(4). 
Had any one of them been corrected, the error would not have reached the infant.

Protecting patients, providers
Safety systems are critical to protect patients and providers. Too often, 
safety nets are lacking or non-existent. Human beings will continue to make 
mistakes. System operators, administrators, manufacturers and regulators own 
responsibility for the environment of care.

When two drugs are packaged in lookalike vials, the department has an 
obligation to prevent potential errors. While we often focus on individuals 
involved in errors, the fire service and EMS community collectively are 
responsible to gather and analyze near miss reports and feedback from the 
streets to improve patient safety. Without strides in meeting that obligation, 
future criminal focus may well take aim at chiefs, administrators, medical 
directors and system operators.

The increasing trend toward criminalizing medical errors is very likely to 
discourage health care providers from reporting errors, hurt recruitment and 
retention, and bring important patient safety initiatives to a screeching halt. 
EMS providers, like our physician and nursing colleagues, need to step forward 
and take a more proactive role in how medical errors are managed.
We need to look for risky behavior before they result in errors, and consider 
whether recklessness contributed to errors that do occur. We must begin to hold 
our systems accountable for their contributions to errors in the environment of 
care. 

Until we manage to convince the public, our legal system and legislators that 
we take mistakes seriously, they will continue attempts to fix our problems 
themselves with legislation, regulations and criminal charges.

Far better outcomes could be had if we, the people who know health care, lead 
change from within. It's time to begin — we owe it to our patients and each 
other.

References:
1. ISMP Medication Safety Alert! Criminal prosecution of human error will 
likely have dangerous long-term consequences. 2007; 12(5):1-2.
2. The Just Culture Community News and Views. The Criminal Edition. Marx, D, 
Cassidy, KM. Eds. January/February 2007.
3. Morissette v United States, 342 U.S. 246 (1952)
4. ISMP Medication Safety Alert! Since when is it a crime to be human? 2006; 
11(23):2.
____________ _________ _________ _________ _
Mike McEvoy is the EMS Coordinator for Saratoga County and the EMS Director on 
the Board of the New York State Association of Fire Chiefs. Formerly a forensic 
psychologist, he is a clinical specialist in Cardiac Surgery and teaches 
Critical Care Medicine at Albany Medical College. Mike is a paramedic for 
Clifton Park-Halfmoon Ambulance, chief medical officer for West Crescent Fire 
Department, past chair and current member of the New York State EMS Council. He 
is the fireEMS editor for Fire Engineering magazine and recently published a 
book titled "Straight Talk About Stress for Emergency Responders." Mike is a 
popular speaker at fire, EMS, and medical conferences and in his free time, is 
an avid hiker and winter mountain climber 

--
Posted By bruder aja to PerawatS1Unai at 7/10/2008 06:33:00 PM
 

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