The medical community does a poor job of delivering end-of-life-care and helping patients die. Nor does it do a good job in helping them live, Kenneth Fisher, a physician and primary author of a new book, “In Defiance of Death: Exposing the Real Costs of End-of-Life Care” (Praeger Publishers), told the Kalamazoo Gazette.
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From Medical Economics magazine, more on clinical practice ...
The simple transition of a patient from one caretaker to another represents a gap that is “considered especially vulnerable to error.” As Quality and Safety in Health Care (QSHC), a publication of the British Medical Journal, noted in January, even the most common hand-off — your standard referral from primary care physician to specialist — is not risk-free. As Dr. Bob Wachter says in his blog, “in more than two-thirds of outpatient subspecialty referrals, the specialist received no information from the primary care physician to guide the consultation.”
21st Century Medicine Wrought with Miscommunication and Human Error [Via AlterNet]
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From Medical Economics magazine, more on clinical practice ...