Wachter is Right: Patient Safety is Not the Patient's Job
Wachter's World : Can Patients Help Ensure Their Own Safety? More Importantly, Why Should They Have To?
Double checking the hospital's work should be considered, at best, a short-term countermeasure -- a workaround. It shouldn't be considered the ultimate quality improvement solution.
Dr. Bob Wachter writes about this on his outstanding blog. He's not opposed to patients and families being involved -- he's just skeptical that it really helps. Where is the data? Do hyper-involved patients cause more problems than the avoid?
Read his whole post, but Wachter sums up his thoughts this way:
Patients encountering the healthcare system lack this trust [as exists with airlines], which make relaxation and passivity seem maladaptive, even suicidal. So I completely understand why patients and families would want to do whatever they can to improve their odds of emerging unscathed. I’m just not sure how well the resulting tactics work or how to apply them most effectively. Clearly, this is a testable hypothesis, and it should, in fact, be tested.
In the meantime, while we should support the efforts of patients and families to participate in their own safety when feasible, our primary focus should be on making such hyper-vigilance unnecessary. This one is our bad, not theirs.
Well said.
The patient hyper vigilance should be considered, at best, a short-term countermeasure until better systems can be put in place to protect patients and provide perfect patient care.
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Labels: Healthcare, Patient Safety, Quality, Spear




1 Comments:
100% agree with the post. I can't tell you how many times a doctor has either misdiagnosed my ailment and given me the wrong treatment. Now I'm paranoid about the doctor really looking out for my wellbeing and it's not good for the system to have hyper-vigilant patients like myself because it causes too much churn on the system.
Ankit
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