Miscommunication Between Health Workers Puts Patients At Risk Regularly
By Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
TUESDAY, April 15, 2025 -- Miscommunication between hospital staff regularly puts patients at risk, a new study says.
Poor communications between health care workers contributed to 25% of hospital incidents that put patients’ safety at risk, researchers reported April 14 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
What’s more, miscommunication was the sole cause of patient endangerment in 1 out of 10 cases, researchers found.
These cases included medication errors and medical errors that resulted in health-threatening events or near-misses, researchers said.
“Poor communication is a substantial cause of patient safety incidents,” concluded the research team led by Jeremy Howick, a professor at the University of Leicester Medical School in the U.K.
“Our findings highlight the crucial need for health care professionals to develop and maintain effective communication skills to foster strong relationships with their peers and their patients,” the team added.
On average, about 1 in every 20 patients is exposed to preventable harm in health care, researchers said in background notes.
For their paper, researchers pooled results from 46 prior studies involving nearly than 68,000 patients from Europe, North and South America, Asia, Africa and Australia. The studies were published between 2013 and 2024.
Results showed that poor verbal, written, electronic and non-verbal communication was a factor in a quarter of cases where patient safety was threatened.
In one instance, a doctor accidentally shut off a heart medication drip while trying to silence a beeping pump, researchers said. The doctor failed to tell a nurse the drip was stopped, and the patient subsequently developed a dangerously high heartbeat.
In another case, a patient died after a nurse failed to tell a surgeon that the person was experiencing abdominal pains following surgery and had a low red blood cell count, which indicated internal bleeding.
The undetected hemorrhage that killed the patient could have been prevented, researchers said.
More research is needed to figure out why such poor communication exists, and how it can be improved to protect patients, researchers said.
“Health care professionals seeking to enhance their own communication skills may be guided by published reports of communication interventions designed to improve patient safety,” researchers wrote. “These interventions offer standardized approaches to verbal communication between health care professionals, and between health care professionals and patients.”
However, more research is needed "to optimize and develop such interventions further, and to identify which interventions are most effective at improving patient safety,” researchers added.
Sources
Disclaimer: Statistical data in medical articles provide general trends and do not pertain to individuals. Individual factors can vary greatly. Always seek personalized medical advice for individual healthcare decisions.
Source: HealthDay
Posted : 2025-04-16 00:00
Read more

- Diet Drinks, Processed Foods Might Increase Type 2 Diabetes Risk
- Total Hip Replacement Recovery: Everything You Need To Know
- Graph Neural Network Can Detect Epileptogenic Focal Cortical Dysplasia
- Chest CT Scans Can Help Diagnose Pneumonia
- Rare Red Meat Allergy Linked To More Tick Species
- ACC: Colorectal Cancer Tied to Higher Risk for Cardiovascular Death
Disclaimer
Every effort has been made to ensure that the information provided by Drugslib.com is accurate, up-to-date, and complete, but no guarantee is made to that effect. Drug information contained herein may be time sensitive. Drugslib.com information has been compiled for use by healthcare practitioners and consumers in the United States and therefore Drugslib.com does not warrant that uses outside of the United States are appropriate, unless specifically indicated otherwise. Drugslib.com's drug information does not endorse drugs, diagnose patients or recommend therapy. Drugslib.com's drug information is an informational resource designed to assist licensed healthcare practitioners in caring for their patients and/or to serve consumers viewing this service as a supplement to, and not a substitute for, the expertise, skill, knowledge and judgment of healthcare practitioners.
The absence of a warning for a given drug or drug combination in no way should be construed to indicate that the drug or drug combination is safe, effective or appropriate for any given patient. Drugslib.com does not assume any responsibility for any aspect of healthcare administered with the aid of information Drugslib.com provides. The information contained herein is not intended to cover all possible uses, directions, precautions, warnings, drug interactions, allergic reactions, or adverse effects. If you have questions about the drugs you are taking, check with your doctor, nurse or pharmacist.
Popular Keywords
- metformin obat apa
- alahan panjang
- glimepiride obat apa
- takikardia adalah
- erau ernie
- pradiabetes
- besar88
- atrofi adalah
- kutu anjing
- trakeostomi
- mayzent pi
- enbrel auto injector not working
- enbrel interactions
- lenvima life expectancy
- leqvio pi
- what is lenvima
- lenvima pi
- empagliflozin-linagliptin
- encourage foundation for enbrel
- qulipta drug interactions