Do the solutions for global health lie in healthcare? A recent analysis
article in the BMJ [BMJ 2014;349:g5457 doi: 10.1136/bmj.g5457] should be sobering reading for
all of us. The author Jocalyn Clark reminds us to why putting all our money on
healthcare to solve global health problems is doomed to failure. The article
does a fine job in arguing why we need to find creative solutions that
integrate healthcare into the equation. My own take on the piece is that is has
interesting implications for how we train and educate doctors. I will be distributing
copies of it to the clinicians that I teach, and exploring their reactions to
its implications.
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.
Monday, 27 October 2014
Tuesday, 7 October 2014
Safety and quality are not necessarily the same thing!
An excellent article in BMJ Open [Mumford V, et al. BMJ Open 2014;4:e005284.
doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005284] reveals how safety and accreditation
processes can travel in different directions. The study involved a longitudinal
comparative study of hand hygiene compliance and accreditation outcomes in 96
Australian hospitals. The most interesting aspect of the study was that higher accreditation
scores as reflected in hand hygiene rates appears to be confounded by an
accreditation programme that makes it more difficult for smaller hospitals to
achieve high infection control scores. Basically, smaller hospitals (with good
hand hygiene scores) failed to score well on the accreditation programme due to
organizational size. As the authors conclude themselves; “In this study, a
focus on the accreditation results would underestimate the successful implementation
of the hand hygiene policy by smaller hospitals. Conversely, just using hand
hygiene results would underestimate the research and leadership investment in
infection control by larger hospitals.”
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