Acknowledgement of “no fault” medical injury: review of patients' hospital records in New Zealand ===================================================================================================== * Peter Davis * Roy Lay-Yee * Alastair Scott * Robin Briant * Stephan Schug Investigations of the epidemiology of adverse events have advanced the safety of patients in hospital.1 These studies, however, were done in tort jurisdictions, where the fear of litigation may have inhibited frank and open discussion.2 New Zealand abolished tort liability in 1972, instead providing an administrative system of compensation without the need to prove fault.3 We analysed data on adverse events in hospitals in New Zealand and the extent to which medical injury is acknowledged in patient records. ## Participants, methods, and results We took data on patient admissions from a representative sample of 13 from the 20 public hospitals with 100 or more beds. The survey population comprised all patients admitted in 1998 (excluding day patients, psychiatric patients, and patients attending just for rehabilitation). We reviewed the records of sampled patients retrospectively in two stages. To qualify as an adverse event, an incident had to have occurred or been detected by a healthcare professional during the sampled admission.1 View this table: [Table1](http://www.bmj.com/content/326/7380/79/T1) Acknowledgement of medical injury in patients' hospital records in New Zealand (n=883*) We defined an adverse event as an unintended injury resulting in disability that was likely to have been caused by healthcare management rather than the underlying disease. We defined an acknowledgement as an annotation in a patient's record indicating or suggesting that healthcare management had caused the medical injury. Of the 6579 admitted patients who were screened according to set criteria (see bmj.com), the records of 4119 were reviewed by doctors using a structured protocol. Doctors judged 883 patients as having unintended injuries and resulting disabilities, and they assessed whether healthcare management had caused these injuries. Reviewers considered whether any note in the medical records indicated or suggested that healthcare management had caused the injuries. After adjusting for sample design, reviewers classified 672/717 (94%) patients with records acknowledging injury as having had an adverse event compared with 81/166 (47%) patients whose records did not have such acknowledgement (relative risk 2.01; 95% confidence interval 1.75 to 2.32). We did similar calculations for subsets of adverse events that occurred in hospital (table). We estimated relative risks using the Mantel-Haenszel method and adjusted for the sample design (stratified cluster). Relative risks were greater for higher impact incidents and for “non-preventable” events. For almost 672/753 (90%) adverse events, an annotation in the patient's record acknowledged medical injury. More than 148/181 (80%) adverse events involving systems failure in hospital were annotated. ## Comment Annotations in patients' records were a good predictor that a medical injury had been caused by healthcare management, regardless of clinical context. Fear of litigation may be an obstacle to reporting error—particularly for high impact, preventable, and systemic events. Our results show that the level of acknowledgement of medical injury in patients' records can be remarkably high in a no fault jurisdiction and strongly predictive of such occurences. Doctors in many countries are discouraged from reporting medical errors,4 yet litigation in tort jurisdictions is becoming more common.5 In no fault jurisictions, the relatively high level of annotation in patient records that we found could provide a basis for more vigorous error reporting. ## Acknowledgments Contributors: PD designed the study and wrote the paper. RL-Y undertook the analysis, advised by AS. RB organised and oversaw the clinical assessments. SS provided technical advice. PD is guarantor. ## Footnotes * Funding Health Research Council of New Zealand. * Competing interests None declared. * ![Graphic][1] Screening criteria are on bmj.com ## References 1. 1.Davis P, Lay-Yee R, Briant R, Schug S, Scott A, Johnson S, et al. *Adverse events in New Zealand public hospitals: principal findings from a national survey.* Wellington: Ministry of Health, 2001. (Occasional paper No 3.) [www.moh.govt.nz/moh.nsf](http://www.moh.govt.nz/moh.nsf) (accessed 25 Nov 2002). 2. 2.Gostin L. A public health approach to reducing error: medical malpractice as a barrier. JAMA 2000; 283: 1742 [CrossRef](http://www.bmj.com/lookup/external-ref?access_num=10.1001/jama.283.13.1742&link_type=DOI) [PubMed](http://www.bmj.com/lookup/external-ref?access_num=10755503&link_type=MED&atom=%2Fbmj%2F326%2F7380%2F79.atom) [Web of Science](http://www.bmj.com/lookup/external-ref?access_num=000086119300037&link_type=ISI) 3. 3.Miller RS. An analysis and critique of the 1992 changes to New Zealand's accident compensation scheme. Maryland Law Rev 1993; 52: 1070–1092 4. 4.Blendon RJ, Schoen C, Donelan K, Osborn R, DesRoches CM, Scoles K, et al. Physicians' views on quality of care: a five-country comparison. 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