The BMJ has an excellent short article on the issue BMJ 2012;344:e2898 doi: 10.1136/bmj.e2898. The answer seems to be yes, but the degree to which data manipulation takes place is hotly disputed. Given the pressure on physicians to publish their work, I suppose it’s not so surprising that some medics have been observed cooking their data. It would be naive to think this problem is confined to medicine. However, it’s “reassuring” to see that physicians are as human as the rest of the scientific community. There will be a tendency to view it as an individual problem (i.e., a few rotten apples in the barrel), but it might be more interesting to ask what organisational elements combine to make research misconduct appealing?
Doctors are under increasing pressure. Partly, this is due to the high expectations that people bring to medicine, and partly is due to fact that doctors collude in such expectations. The objective of this blog is review psychological research concerning doctors. The blog should be of interest to anybody interested in the role that psychology plays in the life of doctors.
Friday, 27 April 2012
Tuesday, 24 April 2012
Physicians and Euthanasia
A recent paper in the journal Bioethics [doi:10.1111/j.1467-8519.2012.01968.x]
looks at differences between psychiatrists and physicians with regard to euthanasia.
When controlled for religious
practice, psychiatrists expressed more conservative views regarding euthanasia
than did physicians from other medical specialties. The authors of the research
conclude that the study shows that psychiatrists are well suited to take a
prominent role in evaluating such requests to die and making a decision as to
the relative importance of competing variables. There is no doubt that this
issue is an ethical minefield and one which is sure to exercise energy on both
sides of the argument. It goes to very heart of what we consider to be reasonable
suffering and pain.
Friday, 6 April 2012
UK doc’s rate hospitals poorly
A new survey from the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) found that over a quarter (28%) of consultant physicians surveyed rate their hospital’s ability to deliver continuity of care as poor or very poor. In addition, over a quarter (27%) believe that their hospital is poor or very poor at delivering stable medical teams for patient care and education.
See: http://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/press-releases/quarter-physicians-say-continuity-care-poor-their-hospital
The RCP website doesn’t provide much information regarding the survey, but its shame that we don’t know more about why physicians rate so their hospitals so badly. Is it the organisational culture or the psychological contract? Are the reasons more related to objective or subjective factors?
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
Should doctors and nurses be taught to smile for patients?
The answer seems to be a big NO, according to a recent newspaper report http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2112712/Health-chiefs-blow-10k-telling-staff-SMILE-often.html
According to the newspaper report, the staff felt that the Active Caring for Everyone (ACE) scheme was patronizing. Staff were encouraged to show 'ACE cards' to staff that weren't smiling at patients. The newspaper report doesn't provide too much detail, but is sounds as though the scheme had a 'pop-psychology' feel about it. Indeed, the reaction of the staff may be an interesting example of extreme emotional labour.
According to the newspaper report, the staff felt that the Active Caring for Everyone (ACE) scheme was patronizing. Staff were encouraged to show 'ACE cards' to staff that weren't smiling at patients. The newspaper report doesn't provide too much detail, but is sounds as though the scheme had a 'pop-psychology' feel about it. Indeed, the reaction of the staff may be an interesting example of extreme emotional labour.
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