Friday, August 31, 2012

Nightmare: Arm Surgery Edition

Sometimes, reading other people's accounts of their medical ordeals makes me feel better about my own. Call it schadenfreude if you will, but it isn't like I want them to have a bad experience, rather, I fell like I am not alone in my own bad experiences.

My family has had its share of medical nightmares and terrible experiences with physicians. Sometimes, even under the best circumstances things go wrong. My brother was misdiagnosed when he had a torn knee ligament and wound up destroying his meniscus. He opted to have an experimental surgery to replace the meniscus using a donor one. To make a long story short, an internal staph infection took over and cost my brother more tissue and his knee is now worse off than it had been.

When I read this story in the Washington Post, I couldn't help but think of my brother's issues and his continuing journey. There have been many experiences that have taught me to be an informed patient and, much like this man, I read medical literature to learn as much as possible and stay current with what is happening. I want to have more understanding of my doctor so that we can work together on a treatment plan. This seems only reasonable to me. I think more patients would experience better outcomes if they became more invested in their care.

The author also puts forward some interesting statistics and some ideas for implementing changes in the field of patient safety. I wholeheartedly agree that it is absurd that one can get more information on a $30,000 car than they can on open heart surgery. It is wrong and definitely something I hope changes in my lifetime. What if doctors got outcomes ratings like the health department gives to restaurants. Would that C+ rating make the doctors work harder and make patients think twice? I don't know, but I can't help but think it would increase the accountability. Implementation would be a difficult proposition, though, and I can't say I know what would be best for the measures. I'm sure the AMA and other physicians boards can come up with something... I would really like to see that happen. A girl can dream...

2 comments:

  1. You know I never thought about it this way. It would be nice to have ratings for doctors and procedures. I know hospitals get rated but that seems pretty high level.

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    1. It's quite high level. Quality varies widely with individual doctors. I'm very picky about the training and such that I want my doctors to have, but it really comes down to a willingness to listen. It would be great to know whether or not the doctor who was listening was also truly qualified to provide the care you need.

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