WHO calls for action to reduce patient harm in healthcare

The World Health Organisation has called for urgent action to combat patients’ harm, which causes millions of preventable deaths annually.

As part of the campaign, the organisation said it would host the first-ever World Patient Safety Day on Tuesday.

WHO also called on countries to increase their investments and efforts toward reducing patient harm.

WHO’s official reveals that millions of patients are harmed each year due to unsafe health care worldwide.

The UN agency said the situation results in 2.6 million, mostly avoidable deaths, annually in low-and middle-income countries alone.

According to Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director general, no one should be harmed while receiving health care.

“Globally, at least five patients die every minute because of unsafe care.

“We need a patient safety culture that promotes partnership with patients, encourages reporting and learning from errors, and creates a blame-free environment where health workers are empowered and trained to reduce errors,” he said.

WHO added that four out of every 10 patients are harmed during primary and ambulatory health care, adding that the most detrimental errors are related to diagnosis, prescription and the use of medicines.

“Medication errors alone cost an estimated 42 billion US dollars annually.

“Unsafe surgical care procedures cause complications in up to 25 per cent of patients resulting in one million deaths during or immediately after surgery annually. Patient harm in health care is unacceptable and WHO is calling for urgent action by countries and partners around the world to reduce patient harm in health care.

“Patient safety and quality of care are essential for delivering effective health services and achieving universal health coverage,’’ it stated. It added that investment in improving patient safety can lead to significant financial savings.

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