Accountability: Patient Safety and Policy Reform

Cover
Virginia A. Sharpe
Georgetown University Press, 07.09.2004 - 288 Seiten

According to a recent Institute of Medicine report, as many as 98,000 Americans die each year as a result of medical error—a figure higher than deaths from automobile accidents, breast cancer, or AIDS. That astounding number of fatalities does not include the number of those serious mistakes that are grievous and damaging but not fatal. Who can forget the tragic case of 17-year-old Jésica Santillán, who died after receiving a heart-lung transplant with an incompatible blood type? What can be done about this? What should be done? How can patients and their families regain a sense of trust in the hospitals and clinicians that care for them? Where do we even begin the discussion?

Accountability brings the issue to the table in response to the demand for patient safety and increased accountability regarding medical errors. In an interdisciplinary approach, Virginia Sharpe draws together the insights of patients and families who have suffered harm, institutional leaders galvanized to reform by tragic events in their own hospitals, philosophers, historians, and legal theorists. Many errors can be traced to flaws in complex systems of health care delivery, not flaws in individual performance. How then should we structure responsibility for medical mistakes so that justice for the injured can be achieved alongside the collection of information that can improve systems and prevent future error? Bringing together authoritative voices of family members, health care providers, and scholars—from such disciplines as medical history, economics, health policy, law, philosophy, and theology—this book examines how conventional structures of accountability in law and medical structure (structures paradoxically at odds with justice and safety) should be replaced by more ethically informed federal, state, and institutional policies. Accountability calls for public policy that creates not only systems capable of openness concerning safety and error—but policy that also delivers just compensation and honest and humane treatment to those patients and families who have suffered from harmful medical error.

 

Inhalt

Accountability and Justice in Patient Safety Reform
1
WritingRighting Wrong
27
Life but No Limb The Aftermath of Medical Error
43
In Memory of My Brother Mike
49
Error Disclosure for Quality Improvement Authenticating a Team of Patients and Providers to Promote Patient Safety
59
Prevention of Medical Error Where Professional and Organizational Ethics Meet
83
Medical Mistakes and Institutional Culture
99
Missing the Mark Medical Error Forgiveness and Justice
119
Reputation Malpractice Liability and Medical Error
159
Ethical Misfits Mediation and Medical Malpractice Litigation
185
On Selling NoFault
203
Medical Errors Pinning the Blame versus Blaming the System
213
CASES CITED
233
REFERENCES
235
CONTRIBUTORS
263
INDEX
265

Is There an Obligation to Disclose NearMisses in Medical Care?
135
God Science and History The Cultural Origins of Medical Error
143

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Seite 7 - Those obligations are the more deep and enduring, because there is no tribunal other than his own conscience to adjudge penalties for carelessness or neglect. Physicians should, therefore, minister to the sick with due impressions of the importance of their office ; reflecting that the ease, the health, and the lives of those committed to their charge, depend on their skill, attention, and fidelity.
Seite 7 - A physician should not only be ever ready to obey the calls of the sick, but his mind ought also to be imbued with the greatness of his mission, and the responsibility he habitually incurs in its discharge.
Seite 249 - McDonald CJ, Weiner M, Hui SL. "Deaths Due to Medical Errors Are Exaggerated in Institute Of Medicine Report.
Seite ix - Accreditation," which questioned the quality oversight of the accreditation process, and the Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, "To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System," which sounded a national alarm on the prevalence of medical errors in this country.

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Autoren-Profil (2004)

Virginia A. Sharpe is a visiting scholar at Georgetown University and medical ethicist at the National Center for Ethics of the Veterans Health Administration. She is the former deputy director of the Hastings Center. Her books include Medical Harm: Historical, Conceptual and Ethical Dimensions of Iatrogenic Illness and Wolves and Human Communities.

Bibliografische Informationen