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. 2010 Aug;25(8):774-9.
doi: 10.1007/s11606-010-1356-3. Epub 2010 May 29.

A July spike in fatal medication errors: a possible effect of new medical residents

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A July spike in fatal medication errors: a possible effect of new medical residents

David P Phillips et al. J Gen Intern Med. 2010 Aug.

Abstract

Background: Each July thousands begin medical residencies and acquire increased responsibility for patient care. Many have suggested that these new medical residents may produce errors and worsen patient outcomes-the so-called "July Effect;" however, we have found no U.S. evidence documenting this effect.

Objective: Determine whether fatal medication errors spike in July.

Design: We examined all U.S. death certificates, 1979-2006 (n = 62,338,584), focusing on medication errors (n = 244,388). We compared the observed number of deaths in July with the number expected, determined by least-squares regression techniques. We compared the July Effect inside versus outside medical institutions. We also compared the July Effect in counties with versus without teaching hospitals.

Outcome measure: JR = Observed number of July deaths / Expected number of July deaths.

Results: Inside medical institutions, in counties containing teaching hospitals, fatal medication errors spiked by 10% in July and in no other month [JR = 1.10 (1.06-1.14)]. In contrast, there was no July spike in counties without teaching hospitals. The greater the concentration of teaching hospitals in a region, the greater the July spike (r = .80; P = .005). These findings held only for medication errors, not for other causes of death.

Conclusions: We found a significant July spike in fatal medication errors inside medical institutions. After assessing competing explanations, we concluded that the July mortality spike results at least partly from changes associated with the arrival of new medical residents.

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Conflict of interest statement

None disclosed.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Ratio of observed to expected deaths for inpatient medication errors by month, United States, 1979-2006 (with 95% confidence intervals). Unless otherwise noted, error bars in Figure 1 and in subsequent figures were determined using a poisson approximation.
Figure 2
Figure 2
July effect for fatal medication errors by hospital setting, United States, 1979-2006 (with 95% confidence intervals). Error bars were calculated using Daly and Bourke.
Figure 3
Figure 3
July effect for fatal medication errors and for comparison causes of death inside medical institutions, United States, 1979-2006 (with 95% confidence intervals).
Figure 4
Figure 4
July effect by cause of death, for teaching hospital counties and for all other counties, United States, 1979-2004 (with 95% confidence intervals). The mortality dataset identifies only counties with at least 100,000 people; thus “all other counties” may include sparsely populated counties that contain teaching hospitals.

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