Software glitch may have delayed medical results for hundreds of patients - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:53 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Software glitch may have delayed medical results for hundreds of patients

In total, up to 615 patients could have been affected by the notification delay, between November 2017 and November 2018.

Up to 615 patients could have been affected over the 1-year period, says N.L. government

The error was disclosed by Health Minister John Haggie at a news conference Monday morning. (Katie Breen/CBC)

A software error may have delayed hundreds of patients in Newfoundland and Labrador from getting timely medical results over the last year.

The provincial government revealed the error involving the electronic medical record program at a news conference on Monday morning.

"The error may have delayed physicians and other health care providers in receiving some medical results, which in turn may have delayed timely notification to patients," reads a media release.

The communication breakdown was withTelusHealth's Med Access software, which takes information from the province's electronic medical record system and distributes it to doctors' offices.

615 patients affected

The problem involved medical resultsfor up to 615 patients, provincewide, and happened between November 2017 and November 2018.

Over that time period, the software would have dealt with 1.5 million transactions, meaning roughly 0.0004 per centofresults weren't electronicallyrelayed todoctor's offices. According to the province'sCentre for Health Information (NLCHI), roughly 510 of the 615 cases that weren't relayed happened within the last three months.

Timely results continued to be available for health care providers via paper recordin "the vast majority" of cases, the NLCHIsaid, and doctors and nurse practitioners continued to have access to the provincial electronic medical system.

There was a range of tests that would have been affected, including lab reports, ultrasounds, and X-ray results. But blood work was the most common procedure in which the results would have been delayed, according to Health Minister John Haggie.

Critical results were not affected by the errorbecause the backup plan worked, he said.

"A lab tech will actually pick up the phone and ring whoever ordered the investigation as that result becomes available in the laboratory," he said. "That system worked and we have checked that it worked."

Review ordered

Haggie has ordered a clinical review into the issue.Eastern Health will be looking at all casesflagged by the fault to determine the nature of the delay and what, if any,impact it had on patients affected.

"We have not heard from any of the orderingphysician or nurse practitionersof a clinical problem related to this, so we want to go back and double-check that with this process," he said.

In a statement, TelusHealth referred to the issue as a "coding problem," and saidthe matter was "resolved."

Stephen Clark is the acting president and CEO of Newfoundland and Labrador's Centre for Health Information. (Katie Breen/CBC)

Acting president and CEO of NLCHI, Stephen Clark, saidan algorithm is at fault.He said a new algorithmis now being developed sothis won't happen again.

Haggie said the communication breakdown isn't an acceptable situation and says he issorry it happened.

The important thing from our point of view is to identify if there's been any harm and try andremediatethat- Minister John Haggie

"The important thing from our point of view is to identify if there's been any harm and try andremediatethat," he said. "Second thing is to work on a process to make sure that we are safeguarded against this happening in the future."

At least five provinces have been affected by the issue.

Letters have been sent out to affected patients in this province.

The electronic medical record programwasdesigned for use by physicians and other health care providers. The program is jointly governed by NLCHI, the Newfoundland and Labrador Medical Association (NLMA), and the Department of Health and Community Services.

Read more stories from CBCNewfoundland and Labrador

With files from Katie Breen