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1 .This is Scientific American 60-Second Health. I'm Katherine Harmon. Got a minute?
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2 .Surgeons call them "never events," because they are supposed to never happen:
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3 .things like leaving a piece of equipment in someone or removing the wrong body part.
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4 .But despite major efforts to reduce medical errors, these "never events" still occur more than 4,000 times each year in the U.S.
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5 .That finding is in the journal Surgery.
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6 .Researchers sifted through thousands of malpractice claims.
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7 .They found surgeons leave a foreign object inside at least 39 patients each week.
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8 .And wrong procedures or incorrect site surgeries each occur 20 or more times per week.
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9 .Such incidents are obviously preventable.
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10 .Checklists and equipment counts are supposed to take place in the operating room.
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11 .Even if you're comatose when going under the knife, you can have a conversation with your doctor beforehand to make sure everyone knows what operation is scheduled.
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12 .And feel free to ask for a permanent marker drawing on your body.
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13 .So that the surgeon is greeted with an inked note that says something clear,
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14 .such as, "Take Out T his Kidney."
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15 .Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American 60-Second Health. I'm Katherine Harmon.
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