rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
The whole system is to blame, so individual blame probably doesn't mean much here. Medical blame is for medical acts in a clinical setting, this is at a higher level, of making decisions that essentially force bad outcomes in clinical settings, but individual practitioners are complying with their instructions, even though it results in harm. There is no equivalent responsibility at those levels, they are making managerial or administrative decisions, not clinical ones.Would this stand more of a chance in countries where they have a " no blame" system for medical mistakes ?
Blame seems to play a huge part in mistakes and cover ups in UK.
The failure was in refusing to acknowledge reality, and prefer quackery instead. There really isn't anything to account for this, hence why things are so broken, medicine just doesn't acknowledge its own faults. It's going to be hard because it's not reasonable to acknowledge this failure while changing nothing. And any change to account for this failure would essentially result in massive systemic reforms that give patients actual enforceable rights. And no one has the appetite for that. The balance of power is meant to be totally one-sided.
Honestly at this point, the odds are far higher that a few years from now a medical AI unblocks all this. Medical institutions are too dysfunctional for this stuff, they have become stagnant and purely careerist. Self-interest above everything. We'd honestly do better just building our own healthcare if we had the resources.