There's a simple rule for practising:
don't play faster than you can
So if you make the same errors again and again, it's a sign that you play too fast.
Agreed! I once had a professor tell me, in order to clean up my playing, that I should lower the metronome a click at a time until I could play said passage without false notes and only then should I begin to slowly increase the tempo one "click" at a time (this particular pianist, a laureate of Chopin competition, misses a note about once every ten years).
Now, I don't fully embrace his particular method, as it is rather inefficient (as great as the results may be), but it is true that when mistakes are made, it is often the result of an ineffective movement which cannot be examined and refined except by slowing down.
Like others have said, if you are making mistakes, your practice tempo is too fast!
Best,
ML