Friday, August 23, 2013

A Good Way to Cybernetically Harm or Kill Emergency Department Patients ... Via An ED EHR "Glitch" That Mangles Prescriptions

Yet another healthcare IT "glitch" - that banal little word used for potentially life-threatening software defects.  (See the query link http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/search/label/glitch for more examples.)

An EHR/command and control system (including ordering, results reporting, etc.)  for hospital Emergency Departments, Picis Pulsecheck, was recalled by FDA.

Reason?  "Notes associated with prescriptions are not printed to the prescription or to the patient chart."  The data apparently is not being sent to the printer or being stored for future visits.  Instead, data input by clinical personnel, in one of the most risk-prone medical settings, the Emergency Department, is simply going away.

This is reminiscent of the truncation of prescription drug "long acting" suffixes, apparently by a Siemens system, that led to thousands of prescription errors (perhaps tens of thousands) over more than a year's time.  I wrote about that matter, as reported by the news media, at "Lifespan (Rhode Island): Yet another health IT "glitch" affecting thousands - that, of course, caused no patient harm that they know of - yet" at http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2011/11/lifespan-rhode-island-yet-another.html

Regarding the current Picis recall, notes connected with prescriptions can be crucial to the pharmacist or the patient.  Loss of those notes - apparently due to a computer glitch and most likely in this case without the prescribing clinician knowing about it - likely have been going on for some time now, since two software versions (5.2 and 5.3) are affected.

The solution for now?

"Consignees were provided with recommended actions until they receive the necessary update."

In other words, a workaround adding more work to clinicians who now not only have to take care of patients, but in the unregulated health IT market need to (as if they don't already have enough work to do in the ED where chaos often occurs) babysit computer glitches as well - and pray they catch potential computer errors 100% of the time.

Below is the FDA MAUDE recall notice at "Medical & Radiation Emitting Device Recalls", from http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfRes/res.cfm?ID=119832.

At this additional link we find that this FDA recall was "Voluntary: Firm Initiated."  They apparently informed the FDA of the "glitch."

My question is - how did the company become aware of this "glitch"?  Also, were any patients put in harm's way, or injured, as a result of the prescription data loss?




FDA Device Recall Notice.  Click to enlarge; text below.



Class 2 Recall
ED PulseCheck

Date Posted July 29, 2013
Recall Number Z-1814-2013
Product Picis ED Pulsecheck - EMR Software Application - 2125, Software Versions: 5.2 and 5.3. The application stores patient information in a database, and it may analyze and/or display the data in different formats for evaluation by healthcare professionals for informational purposes.
Code Information Software Versions 5.2 and 5.3
Recalling Firm/
Manufacturer
Picis Inc.
100 Quannapowitt Parkway
Suite 405
Wakefield, Massachusetts 01880
For Additional Information Contact Support Representative
781-557-3000
Reason for
Recall
Notes associated with prescription are not printed to the prescription or to the patient chart.
Action Initial customer notifications were sent via email on June 21, 2013 informing consignees of the recall and providing further instruction regarding the software solution. Consignees were provided with recommended actions until they receive the necessary update.
Quantity in Commerce 35
Distribution Nationwide Distribution, including the states of: AK, AR, AZ, CA, CO, DC, DE, FL, GA, ID, IN, MA, MD, MO, NH, NJ, OH, OR, SC, TN, WA, and WV.
Finally, I ask - how did this "glitch" escape the notice of the company before the software was put into production not in just one, but through two sequential versions?

I propose that the lack of health IT regulatory controls due to special accommodation makes thorough software testing less "desirable" by a company (largely due to costs).

Compare that to, say, software regulation in the Federal Aviation Administration:


FAA Aircraft Software Approval Guidelines - available at http://www.faa.gov/documentLibrary/media/Order/8110.49%20Chg%201.pdf.  Click to access.

The FAA document begins:

"This order establishes procedures for evaluating and approving aircraft software and changes to appropriate approved aircraft software procedures."

Software regulation in other mission critical industries like aviation and pharma make the health IT industry and its lack of regulation look pathetic.


-- SS

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

All of the HIT vendors have devices out there whose safety is suspect. After all, there has been zero regulation for safety, efficacy, and usability.

Interesting that the vendor chose to report it to the FDA.

Steve Lucas said...

All hail the computer, for they and the internet are never wrong.

The blind reliance on technology in any field will lead to disaster as shown by this weeks closing of the NASDAC. I am also struck by the continuing theme from fiction writers of catastrophes where technology has rum amok resulting in a return to a time before computers.

We have elevated the machine to a position above the man and words written by a man. We learn that a system that is almost perfect quickly becomes less perfect with increased complexity. The math does not lie.

The computer can be a great tool, but as I was taught decades ago it will take a mistake and multiply it at lightning speed.

Steve Lucas

Anonymous said...

They all say that regulation stifles innovation. Where is the innovation in the device that was recalled?

The recall raises several important matters;

First, obviously Picis thinks of its EHR and ordering system as a medical device.

Second, what did Picis do to get it vetted and validasted for safety and usability prior to selling it?

Third, the device was supposedly "certified" but for what, if there are such flagrant defects?

A sham on the taxpayers and everyone forced to use these dangerous EHR devices.

InformaticsMD said...

Anonymous August 24, 2013 at 8:55:00 AM EDT wrote:

"They all say that regulation stifles innovation."

My wish is that those who say this about healthcare technologies would simply be honest and admit they believe the injuries and deaths caused by unregulated "innovations" are worth it, for the greater social good.

In health IT, IOM admits the levels of injuries and deaths are unknown, so to the admission, the anti-regulation, pro-innovation proponents also need to admit the unknown risk levels are acceptable, also for the greater social good.

As in a point I made at the end of my presentation to the Health Informatics Society of Australia last year (see end of post at http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2012/08/my-presentation-to-health-informatics.html), what they seem to not want to admit to is that innovation without ethics is not innovation, it's human subjects exploitation.

-- SS