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The Ultimate Criterion For A Hospital “Never Event”

As many of you know, I’ve been pretty upset about the “never events” policy put forward by CMS. That’s because they took a theoretically reasonable punitive rule (Medicare will not pay hospitals for patient care related to gross medical errors, aka “never events,” like wrong-side surgery) and made it far too general (never events include delirium, falls, and any infection – even a cold). It is absolutely impossible to prevent these sorts of things 100% of the time. So how should “never events” be defined?

The Happy Hospitalist nails it:

Can the never event happen at home? If the answer is yes, it cannot be a never event. It is a natural event. Even the criminal events that nobody can foresee are considered never events. Tell me how a hospital can prevent a random crazy family member or hospital guest from going berserk and assaulting an employee or patient. It’s impossible to predict or prevent.


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2 Responses to “The Ultimate Criterion For A Hospital “Never Event””

  1. Strong One says:

    Exactly. A ‘never-event’ can NEVER be 100% preventable.

  2. I’m never coming to this site again. Oops. I guess my never event just failed…

    Never mind…

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