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Medical Errors third leading cause of death - 1 in 6 of all deaths


               
2014 Jan 31, 4:07am   2,954 views  16 comments

by Indiana Jones   follow (0)  

Each year, between 98,000 to 440,000 people die unnecessarily from hospital and doctor error.

On the other hand, deaths from flu AND pneumonia) are considered to be the eighth leading cause on a list that doesn't even list medical mistakes.

Don't believe the hype. Please don't get vaccinated for the flu out of fear. Vaccinated persons can still catch the flu.

Instead of "147 Flu Deaths This Season", why don't they blare headlines "Thousands Dying From Medical Malpractice"?

Answer: AMA

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-many-die-from-medical-mistakes-in-us-hospitals/

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5   mell   @   2014 Feb 1, 1:14am  

True, the herd immunity may protect those as well who didn't get vaccinated or can't due to underlying conditions because they are less likely to get infected if less people catch it overall. However, even people who don't get a full outbreak due to vaccinations can be carriers. No specific insights into smallpox, but smallpox was a great success for vaccination due to its very low mutation rate. Same goes for most bacteria-caused serious illnesses such as tetanus or diphteria, but a highly-mutating virus such as the flu virus is a different beast. They may be able one day to cut the vaccine production times to a fraction and can react immediately to mutations and vaccinate "on demand" against the flu with synthetic peptide vaccines which are clearly the future. They will also eliminate the need for preservatives and most adjuvants and reduce risk of contamination and toxic side effects, which will be a game changer not only for flu-vaccination.

6   marcus   @   2014 Feb 1, 1:22am  

Health care topic ? I blame Obamacare.

7   mell   @   2014 Feb 1, 1:24am  

Btw. while I don't get myself vaccinated (yet), I opted for the traditional shot for the youngster. While the modern flu-mist doesn't contain thimerosal (preservative), it is live-attenuated (sheds to others for up to 3 weeks) and as a nasal spray way to close to the blood-brain barrier IMO.

8   Indiana Jones   @   2014 Feb 1, 5:39am  

This is exactly what I am talking about. Get people to be focused on the flu, whether in fear or resistance to the vaccine, and no one focuses
On the fact that hospitals are killing up to 440,000 people a year.

9   elliemae   @   2014 Feb 2, 2:38am  

So, because people are allegedly killed as a result of medical malpractice, it's the fault of the Affordable Care Act? I'm sure that prior to 2014, there were no deaths as a result of medical malpractice.

ugh.

10   Patrick   @   2023 Nov 19, 11:26pm  

https://notthebee.com/article/a-hospital-in-massachusetts-apparently-exposed-more-than-400-patients-to-hiv-and-hepatitis


A hospital in Massachusetts apparently exposed more than 400 patients to HIV and Hepatitis

For 2 years Salem Hospital in Massachusetts was risking exposing people to HIV and hepatitis if they received IV medications in that hospital.

Nearly 450 people were potentially infected thanks to this extreme carelessness.
11   Patrick   @   2024 Jan 3, 5:57pm  

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/01/9-patients-reported-dead-oregon-after-nurse-allegedly/


9 Patients Reported Dead in Oregon After Nurse Allegedly Injected Them With Tap Water Instead of Medication

Police in Medford, Oregon, are investigating a nurse at Asante Rogue Regional Medical Center after several patients died after the nurse allegedly ejected them with tap water instead of their prescribed medication.

NBC affiliate KGW 8 News reported that a nurse assigned to the ICU at Asante Rogue Reginal Medical Center replaced a patient’s fentanyl medication with tap water, which resulted in several patients dying from deadly infections.

Hospital sources told KOBI 5, “Tap water, which isn’t sterile, led to multiple infections of Pseudomonas.”

Dr. Robin Miller, who hosts KOBI’s Docs on Call series, shared, “It could cause sepsis, pneumonia. It could infect all the organs. So it can be a very severe infection.”


Technically not an error, since it was deliberate.

But that's what you risk when you visit ultra-corrupt medical "professionals" these days, as become screamingly obvious when they were screaming at you to get the "safe and effective" death jab which has killed ~20 million people so far.
12   Patrick   @   2024 Jan 18, 5:24pm  

https://mattbivens.substack.com/p/breast-feeding-the-wrong-baby-yes


Consider “Joan Morris”, age 67, who was admitted for evaluation and treatment of a brain aneurysm. She was resting after a procedure when she was abruptly taken off by mistake — over her own protests! — to have invasive cardiac testing followed by placement of a pacemaker / defibrillator.

A root cause analysis described in Annals of Internal Medicine found 17 separate errors had to happen for “Joan Morris” to get the cardiac procedure meant for “Jane Morrison.”
13   Patrick   @   2024 Mar 8, 4:46pm  







14   Patrick   @   2025 Jul 30, 11:53am  

https://sayerji.substack.com/p/do-nothing-the-peer-reviewed-prescription


As I write this in 2025, the American healthcare system consumes $4.8 trillion annually¹—more than the entire GDP of Germany. We have more specialists, more drugs, more procedures, and more sophisticated imaging technology than ever before in human history. And yet, by nearly every meaningful metric, we're sicker than ever. Chronic disease affects 60% of Americans². Mental health disorders have reached epidemic proportions³. And most damning of all: medical errors and correctly prescribed medications have become the third leading cause of death⁴.

The math is staggering. Each year, over 440,000 Americans die from preventable medical errors⁵. Another 128,000 die from properly prescribed pharmaceuticals⁶. That's more than half a million casualties annually from a system designed to heal. To put this in perspective, we lost 58,220 American lives during the entire Vietnam War. Our medical system kills that many people every six weeks.

But here's where the story takes an extraordinary turn. Just as this bloated, dangerous system reaches peak dysfunction, a quiet revolution is emerging from the most unlikely source: peer-reviewed medical journals. Study after study is revealing something that would have been heretical just a generation ago. Sometimes—often, in fact—doing nothing is not just safer than medical intervention. It's more effective.

In 2013, something remarkable happened that should have made front-page news but instead was buried in the medical literature. A National Cancer Institute expert panel dropped what can only be described as an atomic bomb on the cancer industry. They concluded that millions of "cancers" we'd been aggressively treating—including ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and high-grade prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN)—weren't actually cancers at all⁷.

Let that sink in for a moment. These conditions, which had been diagnosed as "breast cancer" and "prostate cancer" in millions of people, were reclassified as "benign or indolent lesions of epithelial origin." In plain English: harmless cellular changes that would never have caused symptoms or death if left alone.

The implications are staggering. A 2012 New England Journal of Medicine study estimated that 1.3 million American women had been wrongly treated for breast cancer over the previous three decades⁸. These women underwent surgeries, radiation, chemotherapy—with all their attendant suffering, disfigurement, and risk—for conditions that weren't actually threatening their lives.

You might expect such a revelation to transform medical practice overnight. You'd be wrong. More than a decade later, the same overdiagnosis and overtreatment continues largely unabated. Why? The answer reveals something profound about how our medical system operates—and why "doing nothing" has become, paradoxically, a radical act.

Follow the money, as they say. The cancer screening and treatment industry generates roughly $156 billion annually in the United States alone⁹. Every mammogram that leads to a biopsy, every biopsy that leads to a lumpectomy, every lumpectomy that leads to radiation—each step in this cascade generates revenue. The average cost of breast cancer treatment can exceed $100,000¹⁰. Multiply that by hundreds of thousands of overdiagnosed cases, and you begin to understand why there's little institutional incentive to embrace watchful waiting.

But the costs aren't merely financial. There's a human price that can't be captured in spreadsheets. When a doctor tells you "You have cancer," something fundamental shifts in your psyche. Studies show that cancer patients have a significantly increased risk of suicide in the first year after diagnosis¹¹. Heart attack rates spike¹². Even when the "cancer" is successfully treated, the psychological wounds often never fully heal.

This is what researchers call the nocebo effect—placebo's evil twin. Where placebo harnesses belief to heal, nocebo weaponizes fear to harm. And modern medicine, with its culture of defensive practice and catastrophic thinking, has become a nocebo delivery system of unprecedented scale.


15   Ceffer   @   2025 Jul 30, 12:01pm  

Seems 'medical error' has become 'medical malice aforethought for profit'.
16   WookieMan   @   2025 Jul 30, 12:10pm  

Ceffer says

Seems 'medical error' has become 'medical malice aforethought for profit'.

ER docs are the only ones I trust. Nurses do most of the work, but they're also morons that pretend like they're a doc when in plain clothes. Nurses are the biggest pill poppers I've ever met.

I just don't trust anyone anymore. I'll hang with people, but I don't trust you at all if I meet up with anyone here ever. Can't live in a way where I actually believe what people are saying. I'll be cordial and interact, I just won't believe what you're saying.

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