Esther12
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
(more of the Lancet acting as if it's not part of the problem)
Thiis probably isnnt worth posting, but for those of you who have followed the PACE trial and enjoy being irritated by the hypocrisy of Horton and co: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)30351-2/fulltext
The conclusion:
Thiis probably isnnt worth posting, but for those of you who have followed the PACE trial and enjoy being irritated by the hypocrisy of Horton and co: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)30351-2/fulltext
The conclusion:
Apprenticeship, camaraderie, trust, and hierarchy have long been part of medical training and clinical practice. But re-examining the Paterson inquiry report, these qualities clearly also underpinned a system that allowed a doctor to perform procedures that, when examined independently, were clearly harmful. When professionals failed to speak out, they built a web of silence that ultimately was permissive of serious malpractice. In 2013, the GMC introduced a duty of candour, which puts a duty on any clinician involved in a patient's care to be open and honest when harm or near harm occurs. Only through building a system in which hospital management and senior clinicians encourage and demonstrate frank dialogue at all levels, from minor issues to larger problems, will serious cases like Paterson's be avoided again. Will this duty be enough to crack the nebulous dynamics of a doctor's allegiance to their colleagues, the obligation they have to their patients, and the fear and ambition they have for themselves?
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