Abramson, Brown & Dugan Attorneys

Alarm Fatigue and Patient Safety

Posted by Eva Bleich on April 04, 2011

A few months ago, the Boston Globe published a two-part series concerning medical alarms and patient safety.  The Globe investigation focused on the prevalence of medical alarm monitors and how often they are ignored due to a phenomenon known as "alarm fatigue" in the industry. 

According to the Globe report, "They call it “alarm fatigue.’’ Monitors help save lives, by alerting doctors and nurses that a patient is — or soon could be — in trouble. But with the use of monitors rising, their beeps can become so relentless, and false alarms so numerous, that nurses become desensitized — sometimes leaving patients to die without anyone rushing to their bedside. On a 15-bed unit at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, staff documented an average of 942 alarms per day — about 1 critical alarm every 90 seconds."

Alarm fatigue is a real healthcare hazard that has been linked to more than 200 hospital patient deaths in a five year span from 2005-2010.  The Globe's investigation led them to the conclusion that "the problem typically wasn’t a broken device. In many cases it was because medical personnel didn’t react with urgency or didn’t notice the alarm."

Eva Bleich

Contact Eva Bleich:
1-800-662-6230 or evableich@aol.com