Health care professionals joined Governor Pawlenty today to inaugurate a new law created to track medical mistakes. The goal of the program is to reduce medical errors in Minnesota and, eventually, help Minnesotans determine which hospitals are doing the best job in preventing mistakes. The Legislature didn't fund the system. But officials hope to find start-up money in the next month and have the program fully operational within two years. The Minnesota law is the first in the nation to embrace standards proposed by the National Quality Forum. Dr. Ken Kizer is the non-profit organization's president and C-E-O. He joined the governor today to praise Minnesota's plan. Kizer says as many as 98,000 people die each year from hospital medical errors, and that Minnesota's new law is an important step in making hospitals safer.