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    Placeline/People
    City Vaughan
    Country Canada

    New data shows surgical objects left in patients on the rise in Canada

    More than 550 objects were unintentionally left in Canadian medical and surgery patients between 2016 and 2018. The problem appears to be getting worse according to a new released by the Canadian Institute for Health Information. The report says 553 foreign items — such as sponges and medical instruments — were left behind over that two-year period. That’s a 14 per cent increase from five years earlier. It's also more than two times the average rate of 12 reporting countries, including Sweden, the Netherlands and Norway, which had the next highest rates. CIHI's director of emerging issues, Tracy Johnson, said the data only notes how often the mistakes occurred, but not how or why Tracy Johnson, CIHI's director of emerging issues. Tracy Johnson, CIHI's director of emerging issues Johnson said several peer countries, including the U.S., the U.K. and Australia, do not report on cases where foreign objects are left behind, making comparisons difficult The Canadian statistic is based on data provided by hospitals in only nine provinces Canada also had the highest rate of avoidable complications after surgery, including lung clots after hip or knee surgery among the countries studied 
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    Information
    Source name: 
    The Canadian Press
    Unique identifier: CP14676247 
    Legacy Identifier: b9c930fe941914d8983ea166b017f0a9e 
    Type: Video 
    Duration: 1m41s 
    Dimensions: 1920px × 1080px     68.57 MB 
    Create Date: 11/7/2019 7:31:00 PM 
    Display aspect ratio: 16:9 
    Tags
    Canada
    Canadian Institute for Health Information
    CIHI
    foreign objects
    Health
    instruments
    medical
    National
    news
    patients
    surgery
    surgical
    wibbitz