For many people, the prospect of getting surgery is already terrifying. However, this prospect is made much more sinister when factoring in a 2015 study from Johns Hopkins Medicine. It suggests that surgical errors are estimated to cause more than 200 thousand deaths in the United States annually.
According to Hopkins Medicine, these surgical errors are called “never” events. They are named so because they are deemed so egregious that they should “never” happen during surgery. “Never” events characterize surgical errors such as operating on the wrong organ, operating on the wrong patient, or administering dangerous anesthesia.
Surgical Errors Take Place With “Troubling Frequency” According to Johns Hopkins Researchers
For many people, the prospect of getting surgery is already terrifying. However, this prospect is made much more sinister when factoring in a 2015 study from Johns Hopkins Medicine. It suggests that surgical errors are estimated to cause more than 200 thousand deaths in the United States annually.
According to Hopkins Medicine, these surgical errors are called “never” events. They are named so because they are deemed so egregious that they should “never” happen during surgery. “Never” events characterize surgical errors such as operating on the wrong organ, operating on the wrong patient, or administering dangerous anesthesia.
For many people, the prospect of getting surgery is already terrifying. However, this prospect is made much more sinister when factoring in a 2015 study from Johns Hopkins Medicine. It suggests that surgical errors are estimated to cause more than 200 thousand deaths in the United States annually.
According to Hopkins Medicine, these surgical errors are called “never” events. They are named so because they are deemed so egregious that they should “never” happen during surgery. “Never” events characterize surgical errors such as operating on the wrong organ, operating on the wrong patient, or administering dangerous anesthesia.