From: "Karma Rasa Deva"
To: AM-GLOBAL
Subject: Be Careful About Doctors & Hospitals
Date: Sun, 15 Jan 2012 12:45:38 +0000
Baba
== BE CAREFUL ABOUT DOCTORS & HOSPITALS ==
Note: Including in this email is an article about Iatrogenic
Disease, i.e. a disease caused by doctors. This article is of great
value to all.
Namaskar,
In today's medical industry, profit is the motive not service. Because of this so many problems crop up.
Usually helpless patients think doctors are going to serve them and do
what is best for their well-being. Practically speaking, that is not
what happens.
The majority of doctors are businessmen. Profit is their main motive.
Those good days are gone when the welfare of the patient was the aim.
That service motive is gone. Now a different era is upon us. This is
well-documented in the following article.
Many of us will visit a doctor's office or perhaps have to have surgery
one day. In that case, we should be fully aware of the potential
outcomes, and not have blind faith in such doctors.
ARTICLE APPENDED BELOW
Appended below is a scientific, detailed report that reveals the
shocking number of patients who become sick and diseased due to the
medical care they are receiving. This phenomenon is called: Iatrogenic
disease (a disease caused by doctors). It is the 3rd most fatal disease
in the US.
BABA'S WARNING
In His teachings Baba Himself makes the following statement.
Baba says, "There is no doubt that the majority of those who
die while under the care of doctors die due to incorrect diagnoses and
wrong prescriptions." (Human Society Part 1, Various Occupations)
Thus Baba warns us that entering under a doctor's care can itself be the cause of death.
BABA'S STORY:
DOCTOR WOULD NOT GIVE THE MEDICINE
Finally, we should all keep in mind Baba's below story which reveals the motive and mentality of majoroity doctors.
Although there are some good doctors, it is rare.
Baba says, "I once saw with my own eyes a well-educated doctor snatch a
bottle of medicine from the hand of a female patient who had offered
twelve instead of fourteen annas for the medicine, saying, “Must I wait
till you bring me the two annas from your house? When I was studying in
medical college, would the college authorities have allowed me to
continue studying had I paid my monthly fees in arrears?” As she was an
uneducated rural woman, she could not fully understand what he was
saying. But with that humiliating rejection, she had to return home
weeping without the bottle of medicine. Although this incident took
place a long time ago, it remains indelibly etched on my mind." (Human
Society Part 1, Various Occupations)
The above story is indeed a shocking portrayal of one doctor's greedy
dealing with a helpless and poor patient. In today's capitalist system,
where profit not service, is the driving force, the medical industry is
terribly affected. Money, not patient care, is the rallying cry.
READ THE BELOW ARTICLE
For your awareness and education, please review the following article.
This will better prepare you for dealing with doctor and hospitals.
Respectfully,
Karma Rasa
Iatrogenic Disease:
The 3rd Most Fatal Disease in the USA
Ronald Grisanti D.C., D.A.B.C.O.,M.S.
Iatrogenic Disease is defined as a disease that is caused by medical treatment.
Read major headlines around the globe on this serious disease.
How Prepared are You to Not Become a National Statistic?
If a Jumbo Jet crashed and killed 280 people everyday... 365 days a
year... year after year... would you be concerned about flying??
Would you question the Federal Aviation Administration? Would you
demand answers??
Think about it!
Close to 100,000 people dying every year from plane crashes?
Sounds Ridiculous??!!
Well think again. What if you were told that over 100,000 people are
killed and over 2 million people maimed and disabled every
year...year after year from modern medicine...would you believe it??
Well these may be my words...but read the following articles from
the most respected medical journals and institutions (Journal of the
American Medical Association, Harvard University, Centers for
Disease Control, British medical journal The Lancet, New England
Journal of Medicine and national news (New York Times, Washington
Post, CNN, US World Report) and you be the judge.
Writing in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA),
Dr. Starfield has documented the tragedy of the traditional medical
paradigm in the following statistics:
* The term iatrogenic is defined as "induced in a patient by a
physician's activity, manner, or therapy. Used especially to pertain
to a complication of treatment." Furthermore, these estimates of
death due to error are lower than those in a recent Institutes of
Medicine report.
If the higher estimates are used, the deaths due to iatrogenic
causes would range from 230,000 to 284,000.
Even at the lower estimate of 225,000 deaths per year, this
constitutes the third leading cause of death in the U.S.
Dr. Starfield offers several caveats in the interpretations of these
numbers:
First, most of the data are derived from studies in hospitalized
patients.
Second, these estimates are for deaths only and do not include the
many negative effects that are associated with disability or
discomfort.
Third, the estimates of death due to error are lower than those in
the IOM report. If the higher estimates are used, the deaths due to
iatrogenic causes would range from 230,000 to 284,000.
In any case, 225,000 deaths per year constitutes the third leading
cause of death in the United States, after deaths from heart disease
and cancer.
Even if these figures are overestimated, there is a wide margin
between these numbers of deaths and the next leading cause of death
(cerebro-vascular disease).
Another analysis concluded that between 4% and 18% of consecutive
patients experience negative effects in outpatient settings, with:
- 116 million extra physician visits
- 77 million extra prescriptions
- 17 million emergency department visits
- 8 million hospitalizations
- 3 million long-term admissions
- 199,000 additional deaths
- $77 billion in extra costs
The high cost of the health care system is considered to be a
deficit, but it seems to be tolerated under the assumption that
better health results from more expensive care.
However, evidence from a few studies indicates that as many as 20%
to 30% of patients receive inappropriate care.
An estimated 44,000 to 98,000 among these patients die each year as
a result of medical errors.
This might be tolerable if it resulted in better health, but does
it?
Out of 13 countries in a recent comparison, the United States ranks
an average of 12th (second from the bottom) for 16 available health
indicators.
More specifically, the ranking of the U.S. on several indicators
was:
- 13th (last) for low-birth-weight percentages
- 13th for neonatal mortality and infant mortality overall
- 11th for post-neonatal mortality
- 13th for years of potential life lost (excluding external causes)
- 11th for life expectancy, at 1 year for females, 12th for males
- 10th for life expectancy, at 15 years for females, 12th for males
- 10th for life expectancy, at 40 years for females, 9th for males
- 7th for life expectancy, at 65 years for females, 7th for males
- 3rd for life expectancy, at 80 years for females, 3rd for males
The poor performance of the U.S. was recently confirmed by a World
Health Organization study which used different data and ranked the
United States as 15th among 25 industrialized countries.
It has been known that drugs are the fourth leading cause of death
in the U.S.
This makes it clear that the more frightening number is that doctors
are the third leading cause of death in this country, killing nearly
a quarter million people a year.
These statistics are further confused because most medical coding
only describes the cause of organ failure and does not identify
iatrogenic causes at all.
In their study, Leape and his colleagues examined patient records at
hospitals throughout the state of New York. Their 1991 report found
that one of every 200 patients admitted to a hospital died as a
result of a hospital error.
That number of deaths is the equivalent of what would occur if a
jumbo jet crashed every day; it is three times the 43,000 people
killed each year in U.S. automobile accidents.
"It's by far the number one problem" in health care, said Leape, an
adjunct professor of health policy at the Harvard School of Public
Health.
Researchers such as Leape say that not only are medical errors not
reported to the public, but those reported to hospital authorities
represent roughly 5 to 10 percent of the number of actual medical
mistakes at a typical hospital.
"The bottom line is we have a system that is terribly out of
control," said Robert Brook, a professor of medicine at the
University of California at Los Angeles.
"It's really a joke to worry about the occasional plane that goes
down when we have thousands of people who are killed in hospitals
every year." Brook's recognition of the extent of hospital errors is
shared by many of medicine's leaders.
Care -- not treatment -- is the answer. Drugs, surgery and hospitals
become increasingly dangerous for chronic disease cases.
Facilitating the God-given healing capacity by improving the diet,
exercise, and lifestyle is the key.
Effective interventions for the underlying emotional and spiritual
wounding behind most chronic disease is critical for the reinvention
of our medical paradigm. These numbers suggest that reinvention of
our medical paradigm is called for.
World-Wide News On Medical Mistakes:
Study Slams Medical Error Rate in Nation
Philadelphia Inquirer
A panel of the National Academy of Sciences, in a highly critical
report, yesterday called for a major national effort to reduce
medical errors by developing a mandatory reporting system and asking
Congress to establish a center to study them.
The 220-page report, written by a 19-member committee of the
Academy's Institute of Medicine, set as a goal a 50 percent
reduction in the nation's "stunningly high rate of medical errors"
within five years.
It estimated that errors from medical treatment kill up to 98,000
people in U.S. hospitals every year and characterized the problem as
among the nation's leading causes of death and injury.
Several members of the committee said in interviews yesterday that
the report was intended as a loud call to action for the health-care
industry, which it said has not acted swiftly enough to address the
causes of errors.
"What it says is 'enough already,' " said Lucian Leape, a committee
member and adjunct professor of health policy at the Harvard School
of Public Health. "It's a matter of holding people's feet to the
fire and stop talking about errors and start doing something."
Medical Mistakes Often Unreported
Detroit News
Based on a recent report by the Institute of Medicine, which
estimates 36 error-related hospital deaths per 100,000 people, 3,534
Michiganians died last year due to medical mistakes.
Patients reported 2,027 complaints about health care organizations
to the state, but Tom Lindsay, director of the Michigan Bureau of
Health Services, said those likely represent just a fraction of the
mistakes.
Medical Mistakes
New York Times
The NEW YORK TIMES reported that 5% of people admitted to hospitals,
or about 1.8 million people per year, in the U.S. pick up an
infection while there. Such infections are called "iatrogenic" --
meaning "induced by a physician," or, more loosely, "caused by
medical care."
Iatrogenic infections are directly responsible for 20,000 deaths
among hospital patients in the U.S. each year, and they contribute
to an additional 70,000 deaths, according to the federal Centers for
Disease Control CDC). The dollar cost of iatrogenic infections is
$4.5 billion, according to the CDC.
National Patient Safety Foundation
A new poll from the nonprofit National Patient Safety Foundation
(NPSF) finds that 42 percent of people say they've been affected by
physician errors, either directly or through a friend or relative.
If the survey of roughly 1,500 people accurately represents the
general public, it could mean that more than 100 million Americans
have experience with medical mistakes.
More alarming, according to the survey, is the fact that in one out
of three cases the error permanently harmed the patient's health.
Dr. Leape is a board member of the NPSF, which was founded by the
American Medical Association in June of this year to improve health
care safety.
AMA leaders say it's time to bring the issue out into the open,
rather than living in constant fear that any admission of error will
launch a flood of malpractice lawsuits.
Leape's own research has shown that the tally of medical mistakes
made each year could reach 3 million, with total costs as high as
$200 billion.
The survey found that 40 percent of the people who had experienced a
medical mistake pointed to misdiagnoses and wrong treatments as the
problem. Medication errors accounted for 28 percent of mistakes.
And 22 percent of respondents reported slip-ups during medical
procedures.
Half of the errors occurred in hospitals, and 22 percent in doctors'
offices.
What Causes Errors
When asked what may have caused their doctors to make such errors,
patients cited carelessness, stress, faulty training and bad
communication.
Three out of four believe the best solution to the problem would be
to bar health care workers with bad track records.
But Leape disagreed, arguing that punishment simply encourages
people to cover up their errors. "We need to shift emphasis away
from individuals," he said. "Errors are not the disease, they're the
symptoms of the disease."
Instead, he said, poorly designed health care systems may be largely
to blame. Doctors and nurses often work double shifts, making them
more prone to error. And in this age of computer technology, Leape
noted, the hand-written drug prescription should be a relic of the
past.
Medical Mistakes: A Legal and Ethical Dilemma
for Doctors and
Patients (CNN)
Experts say medical mistakes occur all the time, and doctors often
fail to tell patients about them. A recent report estimates that up
to 98,000 patients a year die from medical errors.
Deaths in England Due to Medical Errors up 500%
Audit Commission
About 1,200 people died in public hospitals in Britain last year
because of mistakes in prescribing and administering medicine,
according to a report published by a government watchdog group.
Outlined in a report by the Audit Commission, the errors included
administering the wrong medicine - in one case, a breast cancer
patient was given the sleeping drug Temazepam instead of the cancer
drug Tamoxifen - to giving out the wrong dosage of the right drug,
to unknowingly prescribing a drug that caused a fatal reaction.
The death toll was five times higher than that in 1990, according to
the report. In addition, the thousands of patients who survive
medicine-related mistakes each year invariably become sicker,
requiring more treatment that create an extra expense for the
National Health Service, the report said.
"The health service is probably spending $725 million a year making
better people who experienced an adverse incident or errors, and
that does not include the human cost to patients," said Nick
Mapstone, an author of the report.
"The number of drugs is increasing, the effectiveness - and
therefore often the toxicity - of drugs is increasing, the number of
people on multiple medications is increasing, and that increases the
risk of interaction," Dr. Pickersgill told the BBC.
A number of highly publicized cases of drug-related error in recent
months has brought home the problem. In one case, a cancer patient
was prescribed and administered a drug at 1,000 times the
recommended dose, according to the report.
In another case, at Queen's Medical Center in Nottingham, a
teenager, who was a cancer patient in remission, fell into a coma
and died after an anticancer drug was mistakenly injected into his
spine.
"The recent events at Queen's Medical Center illustrate how day-to-
day pressures can lead to acknowledged best practice being ignored,"
the report said.
Jackie Glatter, a spokeswoman for the Consumers' Association, which
lobbies for patients' rights, said: "The report shows there is a
strong need for detailed and clear patient information about
treatments and medicines - not just in hospitals, but also when
people are taking medicine at home."
Deaths from Medication Errors on Increase
CNN
Deaths caused by medication mistakes more than doubled between 1983
and 1993, according to findings published in the British medical
journal The Lancet on Saturday.
The study by a research team at the University of California at San
Diego found that the sharpest increase in deaths was among
outpatients.
Deaths from accidental poisoning by drugs and other medicines
climbed from 851 to nearly 2,100. Of those, outpatient deaths
increased from under 200 to just under 1,500.
By 1993, outpatients were 6.5 times more likely to die from
medication mistakes than inpatients.
The report was based on death certificates, and it was unclear
whether the deaths were caused by a medical professional's error or
patient error.
Drug Reactions Kill an Estimated 100,000 a Year
CNN
Adverse reactions to prescription and over-the-counter medicines
kill more than 100,000 Americans and seriously injure an additional
2.1 million each year, researchers say.
Such reactions -- which do not include prescribing errors or drug
abuse -- rank at least sixth among causes of death in the United
States, behind heart disease, cancer, lung disease, strokes and
accidents, according to a report published in this week's Journal of
the American Medical Association. The report was based on an
analysis of existing studies.
"Serious adverse drug reactions are frequent ... more so than
generally recognized," the researchers said.
Researchers at the University of Toronto examined 39 studies and
estimated that an average of 106,000 deaths at U.S. hospitals in
1994 were due to bad reactions to drugs.
Medical Mistakes Triple All Gun Deaths
For years, the American Medical Association, hospitals, medical
magazines and various other health care groups have been beating the
drums for more gun laws.
And some of us have pointed out their chutzpah, since -- according
to the official figures, the National Center for Health Statistics,
more than twice as many are killed every year in medical accidents
than in gun accidents.
Yesterday, an independent report from the Institute of Medicine, an
arm of the National Academy of Sciences, said the number of deaths
from medical mistakes every year may total 98,000 -- about three
times the number of deaths due to accidents, homicides and suicides
with firearms.
The study says medical mistakes may cost the nation as much as $29
billion a year and may be the fifth highest cause of death -- behind
heart disease, cancer, stroke and lung obstructive lung diseases.
That 98,000 total is over twice as many as die in auto crashes each
year.
Nursing Mistakes Kill, Injure Thousands
Tribune Staff Writer
Overwhelmed and inadequately trained nurses kill and injure
thousands of patients every year as hospitals sacrifice safety for
an improved bottom line, a Tribune investigation has found.
Since 1995, at least 1,720 hospital patients have been accidentally
killed and 9,584 others injured from the actions or inaction of
registered nurses across the country, who have seen their daily
routine radically altered by cuts in staff and other belt-tightening
in U.S. hospitals.
Blunders By Doctors Kill 40,000 People a Year In Britain
Medical error is the third most frequent cause of death in Britain
after cancer and heart disease, killing up to 40,000 people a year -
about four times more than die from all other types of accident.
Provisional research figures on hospital mistakes show that a
further 280,000 people suffer from non-fatal drug-prescribing
errors, overdoses and infections.
The victims spend an average of six extra days recovering in
hospital, at an annual cost of £730m in England alone.
A pilot study investigating the issue - the first attempt to measure
the problem in Britain - shows that one in 14 patients suffers some
kind of adverse event such as diagnostic error, operation mistake or
drug reaction.
Charles Vincent, head of the clinical risk unit at University
College London, who is leading the study, has pioneered efforts to
examine the extent of clinical errors in Britain.
His team has so far concentrated on two London hospitals. The first
data from one hospital showed that 32 out of 480 patients in four
different departments were victims of hospital mistakes.
Vincent's estimate of 40,000 deaths comes from studies showing that
3-4% of patients in the developed world suffer some kind of harm in
hospital. For 70% of them the resulting disability is short-lived,
but 14% subsequently die.
"It is a substantial problem," Vincent said. "There is a need to
find out the true extent of error, what kind of things are going
wrong and the cost." He believes the death rate may be even higher
than indicated by the preliminary figures.
Britain's death rate is comparable to that in America, where
recommendations in a report produced by the Kellogg Foundation three
weeks ago are likely to result in the creation of a new federal
agency to protect patients from medical error.
The report drew on studies that examined the records of 30,195
patients and found a 3.7% error rate. Of those injured, 14% died.
Researchers concluded that 70% of the errors - and 155,000 deaths -
were avoidable.
Department of Health officials are now examining a proposal for a
£1.2m three-year national study of 20 hospitals and 10,000 medical
records to establish exactly how these avoidable deaths occur and
how to prevent them.
Drugs and Medical Errors Killing 1 of Every 5 Australians
British Medical Journal November 11, 2000
In a recent emailed response to the British Medical Journal (BMJ),
Ron Law, Executive Director of the NNFA, in New Zealand and member
of the New Zealand Ministry of Health Working Group advising on
medical error, offered some enlightening information on deaths
caused by drugs and medical errors.
He notes the prevalence of deaths from medical errors and also from
properly researched and prescribed medications in Australia and New
Zealand, which serves as a reminder to us that the US is not alone
in having this problem.
He cites the following statistics and facts:
Official Australian government reports reveal that preventable
medical error in hospitals is responsible for 11% of all deaths in
Australia, which is about 1 of every 9 deaths.
If deaths from properly researched, properly registered, properly
prescribed and properly used drugs were added along with preventable
deaths due to private practice it comes to a staggering 19%, which
is almost 1 of every 5 deaths.
New Zealand figures are very similar. According to Mr. Law:
start quoteMore than 5 million people have been killed by Western
medical practice in the past decade (Europe, USA, Canada, Australia,
and NZ) and 20 million killed or permanently maimed. Sounds like a
war zone, doesn't it? end quote
-- Ron Law, Executive Director of the NNFA and member of the New
Zealand Ministry of Health Working Group
Put another way, the equivalent of New Zealand's second largest city
(Christchurch) has been killed by preventable medical error and
deaths from properly researched, properly registered, properly
prescribed and properly used drugs in Australasia in the past decade
and its biggest city Auckland either killed or permanently maimed.
Put another way, more than 5 million people have been killed by
Western medical practice in the past decade (Europe, USA, Canada,
Australia, and NZ) and 20 million killed or permanently maimed.
Sounds like a war zone, doesn't it?
Put another way, the economic impact of deaths due to preventable
medical error and deaths from properly researched, properly
registered, properly prescribed and properly used drugs is
approximately $1 trillion over the past decade.
He notes that only 0.3% of these deaths are properly coded and
classified in official statistics as being attributed to these
causes.
For those who want to know more about the state of today's medical industry...
== CHEATS IN MEDICAL BUSINESS ==
One of the main tragedies that has befallen society in this era of
extreme capitalism is that the practice of medicine has become a
business.
Today, doctors are no longer doctors and patients are no longer
patients. Instead, doctors have become businessmen trying to
maximize their profit - no longer is the welfare of the patient
their main interest; and patients have become targets of
exploitation - no longer are they viewed as sick people in need of
care.
Such is the sorry state of the medical profession these days.
Certainly there are always exceptions but this is the overwhelming
trend these days, as evidenced by the articles noted above.
MEDICINE STARTED AS A SERVICE INDUSTRY
In earlier times doctors were revered for their
compassion. To enter the field, doctors would take an oath to
work for the welfare of humanity. In turn, people truly felt
that they could trust their lives in the hands of doctors. The
doctors looked upon patients with a compassionate eye; in turn,
the common people viewed doctors with deep regard, deservedly
so.
After all, a patient is not in a position to make their own
decisions; they depended upon their doctor. And this worked fine
because the doctors were guided by a service mentality.
Baba says, "Doctors: The convenience of the patient must be
given more consideration than your own." (CC-2, Society, Point
#25a)
Now all that has changed. Doctors feel that they paid huge
tuition to attend medical school and now it is their right to
earn exponentially more money even at the cost of the well-being
of the patient; and patients feel that they can no longer trust
their doctor - let alone afford the treatment.
Baba says, "No matter what country you belong to, tell me
honestly, how many doctors can you really trust and respect?"
(Human Society-1, Various Occupations)
So the situation has really deteriorated wherein patients bear
the terrible burden, both medically and financially. Surgeons
recommend surgery that is not needed just to earn extra income;
doctors perform and order far more tests than are needed in
order to produce a bigger bill and earn a commission from the
lab; medical professionals become paid advocates for drug
companies and "push" particular medicines on their patients;
indeed, there are many aspects of medicine that have become
tainted.