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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
15 pages in length. The practice of medicine is a business no different from any other industry; when mistakes are made operator, they are both acknowledged and rectified. Most times an apology accompanies the correction, such as with an overcharge at a retail store or an incomplete repair at the mechanics. However, when a health care practitioner makes an error, the corrective measure is not as simple as a refund or redoing the procedure; rather, mistakes are not readily accounted for and even hidden with the hopes no one will find out. The extent to which medical errors can maim or otherwise compromise the patient's quality of life is both grand and far-reaching; that disclosure is not always forthcoming speaks to multitude of personal and legal trouble the responsible party seeks to avoid. Given today's litigious social climate, the propensity for medical errors to remain undocumented is a risk factor that stands to detrimentally impact not only the practitioner but also all those who were even remotely involved, including the hospital or clinic. Weighing this risk while at the same time respecting the patient's ethical right to know the truth presents a dichotomy that may be equally resolved with a simple two-word phrase: I'm sorry. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCMedErrDis.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
an apology accompanies the correction, such as with an overcharge at a retail store or an incomplete repair at the mechanics. However, when a health care practitioner makes an
error, the corrective measure is not as simple as a refund or redoing the procedure; rather, mistakes are not readily accounted for and even hidden with the hopes no one
will find out. The extent to which medical errors can maim or otherwise compromise the patients quality of life is both grand and far-reaching; that disclosure is not always
forthcoming speaks to multitude of personal and legal trouble the responsible party seeks to avoid. Given todays litigious social climate, the propensity for medical errors to remain undocumented is
a risk factor that stands to detrimentally impact not only the practitioner but also all those who were even remotely involved, including the hospital or clinic (Sharpe, 2000). Weighing
this risk while at the same time respecting the patients ethical right to know the truth presents a dichotomy that may be equally resolved with a simple two-word phrase: Im
sorry. "Health care providers must focus on the overriding purpose of disclosure: to provide patients and families complete information about their care. Appropriate treatment decisions and planning require
this level of honest communication. The decision to disclose shouldnt revolve around efforts to avert litigation, but rather around the shared goal of providing patients and families information needed
to make decisions about next actions...Now compelled to disclose, health care providers are learning that the practice may be less detrimental to malpractice outcomes than predicted and that it may
be beneficial to reasonable claim management efforts. In spite of earlier fears, experience is demonstrating that disclosure actually may be viewed favorably by jurors and the community" (Amori, 2006).
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