Middleton K, Clarke E, Homann S, Naughton B, Neely D, Repasy A, Yarnold P R, Yungbluth M, Webster J R
Department of Medicine, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL 60611.
Arch Intern Med. 1989 Aug;149(8):1809-12.
One hundred sixty-two consecutive adult autopsies (87 of subjects over age 65 years and 75 of subjects aged 23 to 64 years) performed at a university hospital were studied retrospectively by six internists to determine (1) if diagnostic errors were quantitatively or qualitatively different between the two age groups; (2) if the underlying causes of error (divided into nine categories) were different or age related in any way between the two groups; and (3) any aspects of care that related age to clinical outcome. We found the frequency of major clinical/autopsy discrepancies to be similar to those in previous studies (35%), but in only 7% of cases were these likely to have affected therapy/outcome. Ther was no difference in the frequency of major discrepancies between age groups. There were significantly more "unexpected" minor discrepancies in the older patients, probably related to the multiplicity and complexity of their problems, but these would have affected therapy/outcome in only 1 (3%) of 37 cases. The most common causes of 136 clinical "errors" in 151 autopsies were, in order of frequency: a diagnostic "blind spot," a conscious decision not to pursue a clinical finding (not a real "error"), failure to account for a symptom or sign, atypical presentations, and inadequate follow-up of abnormal laboratory findings. There were no differences between the geriatric and adult groups in terms of frequency or cause of the errors. We conclude that (1) there is no difference in the diagnostic accuracy regarding cause of death between geriatric and nongeriatric patients in the acute hospital environment, and (2) closer attention to basic knowledge and clinical skills and a special focus on judgment and reasoning skills, utilizing autopsy findings among other things, will lead to even further improvement in clinical care at all ages.
六名内科实习医生对一所大学医院进行的162例连续成人尸检(65岁以上患者87例,23至64岁患者75例)进行了回顾性研究,以确定:(1)两个年龄组之间的诊断错误在数量或质量上是否存在差异;(2)两组之间错误的潜在原因(分为九类)是否存在差异或与年龄有任何关联;以及(3)护理中与年龄相关的临床结果的任何方面。我们发现主要临床/尸检差异的频率与先前研究相似(35%),但这些差异仅在7%的病例中可能影响治疗/结果。年龄组之间主要差异的频率没有差异。老年患者中“意外”的轻微差异明显更多,这可能与他们问题的多样性和复杂性有关,但在37例病例中,这些差异仅在1例(3%)中可能影响治疗/结果。在151例尸检中的136例临床“错误”的最常见原因按频率依次为:诊断“盲点”、有意识地决定不追查临床发现(不是真正的“错误”)、未考虑症状或体征、非典型表现以及对异常实验室检查结果的随访不足。老年组和成人组在错误频率或原因方面没有差异。我们得出结论:(1)在急性医院环境中,老年患者和非老年患者在死因诊断准确性方面没有差异;(2)更加关注基础知识和临床技能,并特别注重判断和推理技能,利用尸检结果等,将进一步改善各年龄段的临床护理。