Category Archives: Health & Welfare IQ Trainwrecks

I am not a number – I’m a human being!

Information Quality professionals (and indeed quality management professionals in general) often recite a mantra that good quality begins at the beginning of a process, that it must be designed in, and that defects need to be fixed as close to the start of the information chain as possible.

A post today on DataQualityPro.com from Dylan Jones highlights the significant truth that lies behind all these statements.

Dylan’s son was born in April. The first thing the State did for him was to slap an identifier on him. The second thing they did (to summarise Dylan’s excellent and forensic post) was to make a mess of linking the local hospital ID to a National patient record.

That error propogated and resulted in the parents of another child over 90 miles away getting an appointment for a medical checkup relating to Dylan’s son. It seems that the efforts made to correct the error Dylan spotted when his son was born haven’t propogated half as fast as the original error.

And that’s the problem. How many other processes and silo’d systems has this error propogated into? How many more times in Dylan’s son’s life will be be confused with another child 90 miles away? What other ‘life-events’ will this error impact? In future, how will he find himself trapped by his number?

Ultimately, Dylan’s son is not a number, he’s a human being.

We recently posted a long Trainwreck on the problems with Google Health due to poor quality information. It is possible that an error like the one affecting Dylan’s son could result in incorrect patient data about Dylan’s son being transferred to this type of electronic patient record. Who would be responsible for the impacts if that information was acted on in haste without Dylan (or Mrs Jones) being there to point out that the information was wrong?

Given that in an Irish hospital in 2003 the medical staff failed to act on an error in an expectant mother’s chart and delivered a baby 39 days prematurely, despite the parent’s insistence that there were errors in the chart, highlights that simple errors in medical records can have significant impacts. That the baby in question died further highlights that these impacts can be catastrophic, which means that the standard of care for quality in medical records needs to be high.

Dylan’s investigations also uncovered some other weaknesses/flaws in patient data quality which are unsettling. We’d suggest you take a look at Dylan’s post for more details on those.

For actual inconvenience and annoyance to Dylan’s family, and for the potential for catastrophic loss or injury, this counts as a definite IQTrainwreck.

Google Health – Dead on Arrival due to duff data quality?

It would seem that poor quality information has caused some definitely embarassing and potentially risky outcomes in Google’s new on-line Patient Health Record service. The story has featured (amongst other places) :

  • Here (Boston.com, the website of the Boston Globe)
  • Here  (InformationWeek.com’s Global CIO Blog)

‘Patient Zero’ for this story was this blog post by “e-patient Dave” over at e-patient.net. In this blog post “e-Patient Dave” shared his experiences migrating his personal health records over to Google Health. To say that the quality of the information that was transferred was poor is an understatement. Amongst other things:

Yes, ladies and germs, it transmitted everything I’ve ever had. With almost no dates attached.

So, to someone looking at e-Patient Dave’s medical records in Google Health it would appear that his middle name might be Lucky as he had every ailment he’s ever had… at the same time.

Not only that, for the item where dates did come across on the migration, there were factual errors in the data. For example, the date given for e-Patient Dave’s cancer diagnosis was out by four months. To cap things off, e-patient Dave tells us that:

The really fun stuff, though, is that some of the conditions transmitted are things I’ve never had: aortic aneurysm and mets to the brain or spine.

The root cause that e-Patient Dave uncovered by talking to some doctors was that the migration process transferred billing code data rather than actual diagnostic data to Google Health. As readers of Larry English’s Improving Data Warehouse and Business Information Quality will know, the quality of that data isn’t always *ahem* good enough. As English tells us:

An insurance company discovered from its data warehouse, newly loaded with claims data, that 80% of the claims from one region were paid for a claim with a medical diagnosis code of  “broken leg”. Was that region a rough neighborhood? No, claims processors were measured on how fast they paid claims, rather than for accurate claim information. Only needing a “valid diagnosis code” to pay a claim, they frequently allowed the system to default to a value of “broken leg”.

(Historical note: while this example features in Larry’s book, it originally featured in an article he wrote for DM-Review (now Information-Management.com) back in 1996.)

“e-patient Dave” adds another wrinkle to this story..

[i]f a doc needs to bill insurance for something and the list of billing codes doesn’t happen to include exactly what your condition is, they cram it into something else so the stupid system will accept it.) (And, btw, everyone in the business is apparently accustomed to the system being stupid, so it’s no surprise that nobody can tell whether things are making any sense: nobody counts on the data to be meaningful in the first place.)

To cap it all off, a lot of the key data that e-Patient Dave expected to see transferred wasn’t there, and of what was transferred the information was either inaccurate or horridly incomplete:

  • what they transmitted for diagnoses was actually billing codes
  • the one item of medication data they sent was correct, but it was only my current BP med. (Which, btw, Google Health said had an urgent conflict with my two-years-ago potassium condition, which had been sent without a date). It sent no medication history, not even the fact that I’d had four weeks of high dosage Interleukin-2, which just MIGHT be useful to have in my personal health record, eh?
  • the allergies data did NOT include the one thing I must not ever, ever violate: no steroids ever again (e.g. cortisone) (they suppress the immune system), because it’ll interfere with the immune treatment that saved my life and is still active within me. (I am well, but my type of cancer normally recurs.)
  • So, it would seem that information quality problems that have been documented in the information quality literature for over a decade are at the root of an embarassing information quality trainwreck that could (potentially) have an affect on how a patient might be treated at a new hospital – considering they have all these ailments at once but appear asypmtomatic. To cap it all off, failures in the mapping of critical data resulted in an electronic patient record that was dangerously inaccurate and incomplete.

    Hugh Laurie as Dr. Gregory House

    Hugh Laurie as Dr. Gregory House

    What would Dr. Gregory House make of e-Patient Dave’s notes?

    e-Patient Dave’s blog post makes interesting reading (and at 2800 words + covers a lot of ground). He details a number of other reasons why quality problems exist in electronic patient records and why :

    • nobody’s in the habit of actually fixing errors. (he cites an x-ray record that shows him to be a female)
    • processes for data integrity in healthcare are largely absent, by ordinary business standards. I suspect there are few, if any, processes in place to prevent wrong data from entering the system, or tracking down the cause when things do go awry.
    • Data doesn’t seem to get transferred consistently from paper forms to electronic records (specficially e-Patient Dave’s requirement not to have steriods).
    • Lack of sufficient edit controls and governance over data and patient records, including audit trails.

    e-Patient Dave is at pains to make it clear that the problem isn’t with Google Health. The problem is with the data that was migrated across to Google Health from his existing electronic patient record.

    Google Health – DOA after an IQ Trainwreck.?

    Medication errors affect 1 in 25 in leading Irish Hospital (or does it?)

    [UPDATE]: To carry home the challenges of managing and measuring the quality of information at times, Beaumont Hospital have issued the following press statement regarding the issue mentioned below (this statement is copied from the comment below).

    STATEMENT BY BEAUMONT HOSPITAL RE OMBUDSMAN’S REPORT
    The Office of the Ombudsman issued a report this morning which highlighted a complaint against Beaumont Hospital regarding the circumstances in which an unprescribed dosage of medication was given to a patient. In her press release, the Ombudsman made reference to an audit of the Kardex system at Beaumont. A figure of 4.3% was given for Kardex transcription errors.

    For purposes of absolute clarity, Beaumont Hospital points out that this audit was of approximately 170 reported medication events over a period of two years. This showed there were seven reports of errors made in the transcription of information between Kardex. This is the 4.3% referred to by the Ombudsman and is not 4.3% of all medications administered. It should also be noted that the audit was not of the hospital’s full Kardex system.

    There are approximately 500,000 prescriptions written in Beaumont each year and approximately 4.5 million administrations of medication under these prescriptions.

    We thank Beaumont Hospital for the clarification presented and gladly publish it in full. The detail contained in the statement from Beaumont Hospital highlights another impact of poor quality information – the negative publicity and causes of concern that can arise from incomplete information made available to the media.

    [/Update] 

    The Irish Times website carries a story this afternoon of the report by the Ombudsman into medication errors in a leading Irish hospital.

    According to the report, Beaumont hospital experienced medication errors in just over 1 in every 25 cases (4.3%) [Note – this figure is clarified by Beaumont Hospital in the update above]  The root cause of this error rate would seem to be the way in which medications and medication instructions are recorded, with key information being recorded manually on patient record cards and certain key data (such as frequency of dosage) occasionally being omitted for a variety of reasons. Furthermore, the transcription of information from patient record cards which have been filled up can lead to errors in transcription, resulting in errors in patient medication.[Beaumont Hospital clarification: “this audit was of approximately 170 reported medication events over a period of two years. This showed there were seven reports of errors made in the transcription of information between Kardex. This is the 4.3% referred to by the Ombudsman and is not 4.3% of all medications administered. It should also be noted that the audit was not of the hospital’s full Kardex system.”]

    Given the implications of incorrect medication, both in terms of injury or death of patients or, at the very least, the increased duration of stay for a patient arising from treatment errors.

    The Institute of Medicine in the US has published figures which show that the cost to the Healthcare system (in 2006 dollars) per incident of medication error was around $8750 per hospital stay. An article on the website FutureHealthCareUS.com quotes other studies which put the cost at just under $6000 per event.

    Given the impact on human health and welfare (up to and including risk of death) and the financial impact on already overstretched healthcare systems, avoidable medication errors count as a definite IQ Trainwreck.

    “Wrong Site” surgery all too common

    Jerrold S. Parker and Herbert L. Waichman, leading US attorneys specialising in protecting victims rights, have come up with a survey of cases on both sides of the Atlantic where surgeons have operated on the wrong side of the body.

    Removal of the wrong kidney is quite common. The most common reason is reading the x-rays from the wrong side. Given that x-rays are produced digitally these days it would be trivial for the manufacturers of the imaging system to include some words on the film that made it obvious which way is up. Mind you, I’m surprised that a cancerous kidney cannot be distinguished by sight once they get in there.

    Leading Private Hospital ordered to cease Breast cancer Services

    The Irish Examiner Newspaper reports today that Barrington’s Hospital, one of the leading private hospitals in the West of Ireland, has been ordered by the Irish Minister for Health to cease all Breast Cancer services on foot of concerns from her Chief Medical Officer and the Health Information & Quality Authority about the

    “adequacy of the management and care of 10 women who attended the breast disease services within the last four years”

    This story is also carried by Ireland’s national broadcaster, RTE.

    The background to this closure is the misdiagnosis of breast cancer in the case of a woman who had been given the ‘all clear’ on two seperate occasions, resulting in a delay of 18 months in starting treatment.

    So, does this count as an IQ Trainwreck?

    1. Information did not meet or exceed expectations – when a hospital test is performed on us we expect the results to support correct and timely diagnosis of illness and enable early and effective treatment. Two incorrect ‘all clear’ results and an 18 month delay in treatment falls short of that expectation
    2. There has been a significant impact on the ‘information consumer’, the patient at the centre of the concerns. Her health has probably suffered further and she and her family have likely experienced much trauma and upset.
    3. There has been a significant impact on the faith people have in the ability of our health care professionals to make us better (or at least no worse).
    4. The Government has stepped in and, as a result, there is now a further curtailment of available services for breast cancer screening in Ireland.

    Yup.. that looks like an IQ Trainwreck to me.

    Any thoughts?

    TB or not TB (with apologies to Shakespeare)

    The Irish Examiner newspaper today carried this story about an American lawyer who was let back into the US despite being red-flagged as a health risk.

    It would seem that he had acquired a particularly nasty drug-resistant form of Tuberculosis – a diagnosis which was confirmed in Europe where he was travelling. He was advised not to travel and to seek treatment. Being a sensible personal injury lawyer with an understanding of duty of care to others who might be harmed by his actions and causal chains in litigation, he jumped on the next flight out.

    Despite warnings from US health officials not to board another long flight, he flew home for treatment, fearing he would not survive if he did not reach the US, he said. He said he tried to sneak home by way of Canada instead of flying directly into the US.

    When he got to the US/Canadian border his passport swipe popped a big red flag that advised the Border guard to restrain him, to prevent him from entering the US and to don a protective mask when dealing with this lawyer. The border guard promptly waved him through, despite the medical advice to hold him and quarantine him, because…

    the infected man seemed perfectly healthy and that he thought the warning was merely “discretionary”.

    While the guard is not a doctor, their future career as a border guard may also be in question (they are currently on ‘administrative duties’). The union representing the guard in question has gone on record saying that “public health issues are not receiving adquate attention and training” within the Dept of Homeland Security.

    The right information was in the right place at the right time. It was accurate. However through a disregard for process the information was without value and the border security process didn’t work as expected. That disregard for process may have had a root cause in a failure of training to either cover the public health issue or a failure of the organisation to emphasise that the role of Homeland Security is to protect against threats – not just terrorist ones.

    Sometimes an IQ Trainwreck just gets you in the …

    Over on the website of Information Impact (Larry P. English’s consulting firm) a list of “Publicly exposed IQ Problems” is maintained. Occasionally we like to pop over and see what Larry’s people have spotted in the media that we might have missed.

    One that got the (male) administrator of this site right in the *ahem* was the story of a US Army veteran who had the wrong testicle removed in a Veterans Administration Hospital. It seems that a chain of small errors resulted in the surgeon confidently and competently removing the wrong gonad. Gonad… I’d goMad.

    The interesting thing on the USA Today blog site is that in the related stories they link to a Washington Post story that says that “wrong site surgery” (in other words accidentally cutting off perfectly functioning body parts or the right part off the wrong person) could be up to 20 times more common than previously thought. However they also link to a press release from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (an American organisation) detailing a study that shows wrong site surgery to be less common than previously thought.

    This contradiction in statistics is itself an IQ Trainwreck – either there is a problem which should be addressed with expidition or there isn’t a problem. The fact that reliable information appears not to be available (perhaps through non-reporting of the issue in some cases) means that the ‘customers’ of healthcare services in the US don’t have information that meets, let alone exceeds, their expectations.

    At least the two reports agree that these errors are preventable.

    Of course wrong site surgery never happens outside the USA. Apart from:

    the Irish man who had his stomach removed in error due to a mix up in tissue samples (no, that is not the set up to a humorous punchline). In this case doctors went to the extent of sending the tissue samples to an outside laboratory to get the diagnosis confirmed before operating (a 21 year old man was diagnosed with advanced stomach cancer). However the defect in the process/information had occured so early in the chain of events that their ‘stop and check’ actions simply confirmed the incorrect diagnosis leading to an extreme result for the young man in question.