Patients in the United States reported higher rates
of medical errors and more disorganized doctor visits
and out-of-pocket costs than people in Canada, Britain
and three other developed countries, according to a recent
survey.
Thirty-four percent of U.S. patients
received wrong medication, improper treatment or incorrect
or delayed test results during the last two years, the
Commonwealth Fund found.
Thirty percent of Canadian patients reported similar
medical errors, followed by 27 percent of those in Australia,
25 percent in New Zealand, 23 percent in Germany and 22
percent in Britain, the health care foundation said.
"Driven up by relatively high medication and lab or test
errors, at 34 percent, the spread between the United States
and the countries with the lowest error rates was wide,"
Cathy Schoen, senior vice president of Commonwealth Fund,
wrote in the journal Health Affairs, which published the
study on its Web site.
The Commonwealth Fund says its mission is to support
independent research on health care issues.
Researchers, who conducted the poll between March and
June, questioned adults who had experienced some kind
of serious condition that required "intense" medical treatment
or had been hospitalized for something other than routine
pregnancy.
"Overall patient experiences often paint a picture of
no person or team responsible for ensuring that care is
coordinated and continuous, with a focus on patients'
needs," Schoen said.
Patients in the United States reported the highest rate
of disorganized care at doctor's offices -- 33 percent
-- followed by Germany with 26 percent, Canada with 24
percent and New Zealand with 21 percent. Patients in Britain
and Australia reported 19 percent.
U.S. patients also stood out for shouldering more medical
expenses than those in the other countries. More than
half said they did not take their medicines or see a doctor
because of costs.
In the United Kingdom, where health care is subsidized
by the government, 13 percent of patients polled said
they went without care.
Overall, "shortfalls were particularly evident for people
when discharged from the hospital, and for patients seeing
multiple physicians," Schoen said.
Between 700 and 750 adults were surveyed by telephone
in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, and about 1,500
in Britain, Germany and the United States.
The poll's error margin was plus or minus 4 percentage
points in Australia, Canada and New Zealand, 3 points
in Germany and the United States and 2 points in Britain.
Reference Source 89
November
3, 2005