In 2000, the Institute of Medical Research (IOM) reported that about 98,000 people died each year (Kohn, 2000). The main cause of this case was medical malpractice. Health care errors in the medical industry is about $ 29 billion (Slonim, LaFleur, Ahmed, and Joseph, 2003). These medical malpractice brought more hospital people, more diagnostic assessment, unnecessary treatment, and more death. Medical error is defined as "planned actions can not be completed as expected, or use wrong plans to achieve the goal" (Kohn, 2000).
Medical Errors Medical errors can be up to 1 person per 25 hospitalized patients; estimated 48,000-98,000 patients die of medical errors each year. This means that more people die from medical errors than car accidents, breast cancer, AIDS. In large educational hospitals, health care errors cost more than $ 5 million per year, preventable health care costs cost from $ 170 billion to $ 29 billion per year. What is medical malpractice or bad judgment? I have never claimed that medical practice is accurate science. In fact, this is very important. Considering the above factors, Indian medical standards seem to be destructive. Since the provision of private medical services based on the Consumer Protection Act (COPRA) in April 1993, the number of medical malpractice lawsuits to doctors has increased rapidly. For example, in Kerala, about 1800 (15%)
Medical malpractice is a departure from an approved clinical practice regardless of whether the provider harms the patient. Medical errors may occur in diagnosis, surgery and prescription. In medical malpractice, the accused is proof of burden, expert witnesses testify to medical service providers (including doctors, inpatients, pharmaceutical companies, dentists, nurses or therapists). Given the risks associated with medical malpractice (fatal and nonfatal) and the associated rise in insurance premiums, medical responsibility is a social problem that greatly affects all people's medical care.