| Literature DB >> 28683802 |
Hans Flaatten1,2, Guttorm Brattebø3,4, Bjørn Alme3, Kjersti Berge5, Jan H Rosland4,6, Asgaut Viste4, Bjørn Bertelsen7, Stig Harthug5,8, Sidsel Aardal5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The estimated number of in-hospitals deaths due to adverse events is often different when using data from deceased patients compared with that of a population experiencing adverse events.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse events; Death; Hospital
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28683802 PMCID: PMC5501336 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2417-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
List of unnatural causes of death according to Norwegian law
| Death is considered to be unnatural if it was caused by: |
| A. Murder or other trauma to the human body |
| B. Suicide or self-inflicted damage to the body |
| C Accidents including capsizing, burns, avalanche, lightning strikes, drowning, traffic-related incidents |
| D. Occupational accidents |
| E. Error, omission, or accidents related to diagnosis or treatment of disease or trauma |
| F. Use of illegal drugs |
| G. Unknown causes when death has occurred suddenly and unexpectedly |
| H. All deaths occurring in civil or military prisons |
| I. Finding of an unidentified corpse |
This list is the official list of unnatural deaths in Norway (§ 2 Norwegian Regulations 2000–12-21 nr. 1378)
Fig. 1Taxonomy regarding all hospital deaths according to Norwegian regulations
Characteristics of patients who died in the hospital
| Group | N |
Age (years)
|
CCI
|
LOS (days)
| Died in ICU (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All | 1185 | 73.8 (78) | 6.9 | 8.4 | 11.6 |
| Expected | 895 | 74.5 (78) | 7.4 (7.2–7.6) | 9.1 | 8.7 |
| Unexpected | 290 | 71.5 (78) | 5.5 (5.1–5.8) | 8.2 | 20.3 |
| Natural | 218 | 73.5 (79; 77–81) | 5.7 (5.3–6.0) | 8.4 | 18.8 |
| Unnatural | 72 | 66.0 (69; 64–76) | 4.8 (4.0–5.5) | 7.6 | 25.7 |
Patients deaths were classified as expected or unexpected, and as due to natural or unnatural causes. CI confidence interval; CCI Charlson Comorbidity Index; LOS length of stay; ICU intensive care unit
Fig. 2Frequency of deaths according to the hour of the day
Differences in number of deaths according to clinical units
| Units | Number | Age (mean) | LOS mean | SUD (%)# | Un-nat (%)# |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surgical | 235 | 74.5 | 8.4 | 90 (31) | 28 (40) |
| Medical | 349 | 78.9 | 8.5 | 77 (27) | 11 (16) |
| Pulmonary | 150 | 74.3 | 8.8 | 20 (7) | 4 (6) |
| Cardiology | 183 | 73.9 | 5.2 | 74 (25) | 18 (26) |
| Miscellaneous | 268 | 66.2 | 9.6 | 29 (10) | 9 (13) |
| All units | 1185 | 73.8 | 8.4 | 290 | 70 |
LOS Length of stay, days, CCI Charlson Comorbidity Index, SUD Sudden unexpected death, Un-nat unnatural deaths according to Norwegian law. # % of number of deaths in the group
In text: The highest proportion of deaths classified as sudden unexpected deaths and unnatural deaths was found in the Department of Neurosurgery (49 and 26% respectively)
Possible preventable events leading to death
| Age | Event(s) leading to death |
|---|---|
| 85 | Pneumonia, ultrasound guided biopsy. Not monitored. Next night developed signs of septic shock with hypotension, lactate 18 mmol/l and severe hypoxemia. Died. Death probably related to the biopsy. |
| 90 | Isoprenaline infusion with a syringe pump. The hosing lost connection with syringe, and before this was detected the patient development of therapy resistant bradycardia and death. |
| 60 | Admission with suspected endocarditis, not monitored. Had cardiac arrest on ward, resuscitation efforts negative. Died. |
| 64 | Elective surgery for liver metastasis. Perioperative lesion of the liver vein with profuse bleeding. Death on the operating table. |
| 73 | Admitted with tentative diagnosis: urethral stone, and was treated for this. Patient suddenly developed circulatory arrest and died. Post mortem autopsy revealed peritonitis and perforated colon. Error of omission. |
| 80 | Whiple’s operation performed. In recovery room delirious, and a new gastric tube had to be reinserted. This resulted in vomiting and pulmonary aspiration leading to cardiac arrest and death. |
| 77 | Urethral catheter inserted which resulted in profound urethral bleeding and hypovolemic shock. Next day severe sepsis secondary to urinary tract infection. Death. |
| 57 | Iatrogenic opiate overdose postoperatively. Found dead in bed. Probably related to opioid overdose. |
| 68 | Thoracic drain inserted to remove pleural effusion. After several hours development of circulatory shock and anemia. Died. Post mortem exam revealed large amount of blood in thoracic cage. |
| 64 | Postoperative pneumothorax during mechanical ventilation. Insertion of pleural drain resulted in bleeding from an intercostal artery, leading to thoracotomy because of ongoing bleeding. Had a cardiac arrest. ROSC, but severe cerebral injury led to withdrawal of treatment some days later. |
| 80 | Pleural drain inserted. Resulted in bleeding and cardiac arrest. Received anticoagulation drugs. |
| 66 | Cancer pulm. Operated. After surgery airway problems (ET tube) with hypoxemia and hypotension. Did not wake up, and treatment was stopped after 6 days. |
| 60 | Abdominal pain, given ketobemidon. Low body weight. Registered low respiratory rate during next night, nothing was done and patient found dead in the morning. Possible opioid overdose. |
| 81 | Because of delirum given klometiazol (Heminevrin) i.v. One hour later cardiac arrest and with no ROSC. Died. |
| 89 | 17 days in hospital with abdominal pain, no diagnosis made. Patient died. Post mortem revealed gallstone and cholecystitis. Error of omission |
| 86 | Dyspnoe and AMI, given antithrombotic drugs that resulted in profound bleeding and haemorrhagic shock. Death. |
Fig. 3In-hospital survival prior to death in patients whose death was classified as expected versus unexpected