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"Poor transitional care is a huge, huge issue for everybody, but especially for older people with complex needs," said Alicia Arbaje, an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore. "The most risky transition is from hospital to home with the additional need for home care services, and that's the one we know the least about."
QuoteWhile the study is too small to draw broad conclusions on error rates or safety, it still highlights the value of parents speaking up when something seems amiss with their child's care
Quote"A parent knows their child better than any member of the health care team does, stands by their bedside and plays an active role in their child's health care delivery throughout their hospitalization and after discharge, and often has a sense when something is not right,"
Quote"The first thing I said to the Kings was that I was terribly sorry," says Dover. "In those days, that was not fashionable. We told Tony and Sorrel we would find out exactly what had happened, we would communicate what we found and we would do our best to make sure it never happened again."
Quote"These events created a moral moment where we had to make a choice," says Peter Pronovost, director of the Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality. "It was: Are we going to openly address our shortcomings? Or are we going to hide behind our brand and say all is well? Leadership stood up and said, 'We need to start talking about this.'"
QuoteThe current entries cover medication errors, delayed diagnoses, incorrect use of an intravenous line, and other problems that harmed, or could have harmed, a patient. Each article describes an error, how it came to light, and the steps taken to prevent it from happening again. When possible, it also includes comments from the patient who was on the receiving end of the error, and possibly his or her family members. The patient story is pivotal because it lets care providers understand how mistakes affect the lives of patients and their family members.
QuoteIf an error occurs once, it could easily happen again – unless it is reported. This is why we believe it is critical that staff speak up about all errors, even those that are caught before they reach a patient. When we are made aware of an error, we have the opportunity to examine what went wrong and change our systems to prevent future errors.
QuoteI saw doctors and hospital officials cover up records, lie, not tell the patient and family what happened. I've seen fractures in the health care system, a lack of patient safety, and human nature and arrogance causing people to circle the wagons.
QuoteBut everyone tries to not discuss what went wrong, to not expose themselves to a medical-legal situation or litigation. I think the self-interest of all the different groups has such control over who is supposed to do the regulation that there is just enough regulation for the public not to create a riot.
Quote from: LinksEtc on July 28, 2015, 08:33:41 AM
As far as I'm concerned, the patient experiences in this thread suggest under-addressed safety issues in how allergic symptoms following OFCs are handled by medical professionals.
QuoteIn the aftermath of a serious error, an organization faces strong external pressures (e.g., from the public, from customers, from regulators), as well as internal pressures (e.g., the need to understand its causes and address its consequences) to learn from the mistake and avoid future similar ones.
QuoteOver time, though, several processes promote gradual forgetting
QuoteIt looked like concentrated epinephrine for an intramuscular injection, but she hooked up the syringe to my IV.
QuoteI was angry about the errors I perceived: medication administered via the wrong route, a decision to extubate too early, the use of restraints without a way to "call" for help, a bed that was not elevated, an inexperienced provider intubating a complicated patient.
QuoteAs a patient (and family), we are much more vocal about my care. We try to balance advocating without offending
QuoteWe're dedicating an entire day at #MedX to patient safety. Because patients deserve better. trib.al/78KUPvK pic.twitter.com/haoGpAJyri
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harm reduction
Quotedesign thinking
Quoteepatient engagement
Quotesafety needs
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80-year-old Eunice Richardson died after a nurse and registrar failed to check warnings on her MedicAlert bracelet, and was prescribed treatment that caused an allergic reaction.
QuoteMatthew was 7 when the next life-threatening scrape took place. He was in the hospital already for stomach surgery, and his mother put up a sign in his room regarding his allergy, she put a bracelet on her son and she told all the doctors, nurses and attendants.
It was the fortified whey in his hospital orange juice that got him.
QuoteEmergency physician Brian Goldman, host of CBC's White Coat, Black Art, wants to lift the
cloud of shame when medical mistakes are made, so they can be openly discussed and not be repeated by other physicians.
Quote1/2 It's often said that we learn from our mistakes. But often not so true! athenahealth.com/leadership-for....
QuoteWe teach doctors about these cognitive weaknesses — anchoring, confirmation bias, and patterning — but we tell them that they are unlikely to recognize that they are happening. Instead, we need them to buy into systems of group behavior that protect them from themselves.
QuoteSomeone asked us for a study that showed the power of transparency. This one from the @theNPSF is pretty clear: npsf.org/?shiningalight---
QuoteDefining transparency as "the free flow of information that is open to the scrutiny of others," this report offers sweeping recommendations to bring greater transparency in four domains: between clinicians and patients; among clinicians within an organization; between organizations; and between organizations and the public. It makes the case that true transparency will result in improved outcomes, fewer medical errors, more satisfied patients, and lowered costs of care.
QuoteA failure of providers to respond appropriately to the suffering that they have caused, a sense of abandonment, disrespect, a failure to listen, secrecy, long-term psychological and financial consequences were all key elements of the patients' reports in the study. There was also a strongly expressed desire for openness and transparency, a long-standing aspect of the culture of healthcare worldwide that is too often lacking and that has led to calls for a statutory duty of candour or similar disclosure processes.
QuoteYet, too often, this is seen as something to be 'handled' with a degree of wariness, or even worse, simply to be acknowledged with ritual expressions of regret rather than seeing it as part of the overall process of learning.
QuoteMy blog on the @ProPublica #SurgeonScorecard. Problems? Yup. Worth it? Absolutely. @marshall_allen @charlesornstein
blogs.sph.harvard.edu/ashish-jha/the...
QuoteBecause the choice wasn't between building the perfect report card and building the one they did. The choice was between building their imperfect report card and leaving folks like Bobby with nothing.
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OK, this really has to stop.
I've written countless articles about the failure of doctors to listen to their patients. Whether that
failure comes from judgement (they're "just" an addict, they're "just" depressed, they're "just" malingering) or from arrogance (I know best, what would they know, I have the medical degree) I honestly believe it is the single most dangerous factor in our healthcare system.
Quotewhy it has become so difficult for so many doctors and patients to communicate with each other
QuoteA neurosurgeon has been indicted on assault charges over surgeries he allegedly botched.
Quote Propublica didn't control for the fact that some doctors are fixers. They have a habit of taking on very complex patients or very difficult cases with inherently higher complication rates.
QuoteWhat Propublica is saying to the thousands of surgeons in their database, who've spent their entire adult lives in the sciences, is that we — an upstart of journalists — are so good at science that we don't need your peer-review.
QuoteA number of experts and other folks have criticized the methodology used by ProPublica to indicate the relative rate of complications for surgeons across America.
QuoteThere is a rigorous methodology available for evaluating surgical outcomes. It is from the American College of Surgeons, and it is called NSQIP.
QuoteThe article quite reasonably described concerns about individual surgeon performance, about transparency and the difficulties in normalizing data and interpreting results, and about the "captain of the ship" approach to surgery in both its faults and its benefits.
QuoteThe methods, as usual, will be the most hotly contested portion of the study.
QuoteHow about, rather than b**** about patients who want to serve up UX (User Experience) data on their clinical teams, you use your keyboard to help create some clarity on quality reporting that can be understood BY. AVERAGE. HUMANS.
QuoteThe physician responsible for prescribing Zomig never apologized or even checked in on her progress. Like many medical error cases, blame was pointed in many directions but little was ever done to properly correct and learn from the situation. It is horrific enough for a family to lose a loved one or watch a loved one's life be destroyed by a preventable error, but that it continues to happen day after day, year after year, all across the country should be enough for this nation to demand better.
QuoteGuided by experts, ProPublica calculated death and complication rates for surgeons performing one of eight elective procedures in Medicare, carefully adjusting for differences in patient health, age and hospital quality. Use this database to know more about a surgeon before your operation.
QuoteNow that the scorecard is public, any expert who would like weigh in on our approach should send comments to: scorecard@ProPublica.org.
QuoteThe issue of patient safety has been at the forefront of American health care since 1999, when the Institute of Medicine released "To Err Is Human," a landmark report on the startling frequency of medical errors.
QuoteBut since then, medical errors haven't abated — recent studies estimate that at least 200,000 patients a year die in hospitals from preventable errors and complications related to their care, which would make patient harm the nation's third-leading cause of death.
Quote15. Aren't you worried the complication rates will be misunderstood by members of the public?
Online ratings have become a fact of modern life. Sites rate everyone from doctors to plumbers to massage therapists. Consumers are becoming increasingly savvy about using the Internet to do research on important decisions. We don't think it's beyond their intellectual abilities to understand and use Surgeon Scorecard.
QuoteHere's my concern. There are unnecessary surgeries and preventable complications. There are also necessary surgeries and unavoidable complications. Will their analysis of the data set distinguish between the two or is this just raw data?
QuoteWill the ProPublica data set control for diabetes, obesity, pre-operative infection, use of oral steroids and the thousands of risk factors that contribute to complication rates?
Quote@daviesbj @DennisG_Shea @charlesornstein @ashishkjha @jdimick1 I worry this would encourage unscrupulous drs/hosp to cherry pick their pts
Quote"Do you know a child with a heart problem here?" asked the stranger.
"Yes. My daughter," McCarthy answered, and explained what had happened to Layla.
"You need to get her out of here," the stranger warned.
QuoteThere's an infection hospitals can nearly always prevent. Why don't they? vox.com/2015/7/9/89059... @sarahkliff w/help of @AHCJ fellowship---
QuoteA similar divide exists in modern medicine, when it comes to patient harm — especially for patient harm from central line infections. There are hospitals in the United States that view some level of central line infections as a sad but inevitable effect of putting thousands of these tubes into patients' bodies each year. And then there are other hospitals that see each central line infection as a failure that requires investigation and better preventive techniques in the future.
In other words, there are car crash hospitals and there are plane crash hospitals.
QuoteAviation and medicine are two professions where the hierarchy that exists can make it particularly difficult for those lower down the pecking order to speak out.
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He said: "It's quite unusual, a lot of people just back down after the first time you're not acknowledged. She was told quite bluntly to be quiet."
Quote from: LinksEtc on June 22, 2014, 02:25:52 PM
Tweeted by @hhask
"Nursing professor's studies suggest ethics problem"
http://koin.com/2014/07/31/nursing-professors-studies-suggests-ethics-problem/QuoteIn Krautscheid's view, her students were putting their relationships with doctors and senior nurses ahead of their responsibilities to their patients.
"How do we teach courage?" Krautscheid asks. "How do we teach backbone?"Quote"It's easier just to go along and get along, and when you drill down on that through one-on-one interviews, what they tell you is, 'I have to keep working with these people, and it seems to be part of the culture that this is OK,'" Krautscheid says.