"When you experience a medical emergency, you expect to be treated by a licensed physician with expertise in your condition. But what happens when you look up from your hospital gurney to find that the doctor has been replaced by a non-physician practitioner with just a fraction of the training and experience? From the co-author of Patients at Risk: The Rise of the Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant in Healthcare, the first book to warn about the systematic replacement of physicians, comes Patients at Risk: Imposter Doctors, an even more frightening expos of patient endangerment at the hands of for-profit corporate entities and healthcare conglomerates. In the two years since Patients at Risk debuted, the use of nonphysician practitioners has skyrocketed. Employment of nurse practitioners is projected to grow by 40% and physician assistants by 28% in the next ten years. At the same time, the employment of physicians and surgeons is projected to grow just 3%. In other words, if you haven t already been treated by a nonphysician practitioner instead of a physician, you soon will be. The disproportionate growth in healthcare providers reflects thirty years of U.S. healthcare policy, as influenced by nonphysician lobbyists and corporate strategists. While corporations and government agencies argue that they have been forced to hire nurse practitioners and physician assistants due to a supposed physician shortage, the truth is far more sinister. Physicians are being systematically fired and replaced by lesser trained clinicians for one simple reason: to make money. Advocates for nonphysician practice claim that there is no need for concern because nurse practitioners and physician assistants are just as good as physicians. They are wrong. Despite over fifty years of scientific analysis of the care provided by nonphysicians, there is no conclusive evidence that nonphysician practitioners can provide safe and effective medical care without physician oversight. In fact, new studies have shown the opposite: that the replacement of physicians puts patients at risk. The book Imposter Doctors exposes the dangers of a healthcare system that increasingly prioritizes profits over patient care. The only cure for today s healthcare crisis is for patients to become informed about who is providing their care. They must know the difference in training and education, and they must demand answers from those who would deprive them of physician-led care"--
People-Based Patient Safety: Enriching Your Culture to Prevent Medical Error
These characters are not encoded in the UPN bar code or printed in the human-readable interpretation of the bar code; however, the complete product or catalog number using these characters may be printed elsewhere on the label or on the ...
The authors of this book have backgrounds in both the medical and legal profession.
The Joint Commission's National Patient Safety Goal 2E (Implement a standardized approach to handoff communications.) is designed to help health care organizations prevent communication breakdowns that result in patient harm.
Nearly half of states require or request the reporting of adverse medical events.
Dr Sarah Baldwin Races To A Boston Hospital With A Young Woman Whose Normal Labour Has Suddenly Become A Matter Of Life And Death.
Medical errors are due most often to the convergence of multiple contributing factors. This second edition of Human Error in Medicine revisits the topic by presenting an expanded consideration of error in health care.