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#malpractice

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Well-argued case against #NDAs in #medical #malpractice settlements.
medpagetoday.com/opinion/secon

We share information about airline accidents in order to learn from them, improve safety, and save lives. Why not do the same in medical malpractice cases, where settlements now contain #nondisclosure agreements? Share enough info to save lives. The disclosure could omit the settlement amount and the parties could remain anonymous.

www.medpagetoday.comOpinion | Confidentiality Clauses Are Killing PatientsEliminating them is the lowest-hanging fruit in the patient safety movement

DeSantis going way overboard with his statement on malpractice against physicians just for supporting Amendment 4 🤬

“Some of these physicians that are out there pallin’ around with the #Amendment4 people — if they do that in their practice they are committing malpractice in the state of Florida.

They should lose their medical license in the state of #Florida and, honestly, they should be sued to high heaven for medical #malpractice.”

#abortion #fascism #christiannationalism
floridaphoenix.com/2024/10/29/

I have so much sympathy for people in the UK with ME/CFS. It's an awful illness made miles worse by a cabal of physicians, many of them psychiatrists, who insist it's a mental illness in the face of many metric tons of counter evidence.

So glad @georgemonbiot is following this tragic story of a young woman who died after medical disbelief and neglect. Just awful.

Btw, the UK Science Media Centre has abetted these crimes.

#medicine #MEcfs #malpractice #science

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

The Guardian · Maeve Boothby O’Neill died because of a discredited view of ME. How was this allowed to happen?Von George Monbiot

A #Hospital Kept a Brain-Damaged Patient on Life Support to Boost Statistics. His Sister Is Now Suing for #Malpractice.

The lawsuit follows a ProPublica investigation that revealed that the heart transplant team at Newark Beth Israel let pressure to maintain survival rates guide medical decisions.

propub.li/3Bv8hYa

ProPublicaA Hospital Kept a Brain-Damaged Patient on Life Support to Boost Statistics. His Sister Is Now Suing for Malpractice.The lawsuit follows a ProPublica investigation that revealed that the heart transplant team at Newark Beth Israel let pressure to maintain survival rates guide medical decisions.
#News#Lawsuit#Medical

@wi @GossiTheDog +1

I refuse to use #Windows as I consider it at best "professional #malpractice" if not "illegal collaboration with a foreign intelligence service" (see #PRISM & #CloudAct) and "(industrial) #espionage".

  • Where I work, people get fired and face criminal charges for far less infractions than deploying an #infostealer #malware.

IDGAF if this is part of Windows or not, cuz the fact that #Microsoft makes it instead of combatting it as the malware (if not #Govware) it is makes them completely untrustworthy on that front!

Infosec.SpaceKevin Karhan :verified: (@kkarhan@infosec.space)@GossiTheDog@cyberplace.social it's still *the* final nail in the coffin to proclaim #Windows11 can't comply with #GDPR & #BDSG!

House GOP leaders on Sunday unveiled a plan to💥 keep the government funded for three (3) months
-- after Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-La.) opening gambit to avoid a shutdown failed due to opposition from Republicans.

The continuing resolution ( #CR ), which was the result of #bipartisan negotiations in the #House and #Senate, would keep the government funded at current levels through Dec. 20
— setting up a
💥holiday funding fight.

The three-month time frame is shorter than Johnson’s opening offer of a six-month stopgap,
and ❇️the bill notably excludes a Trump-backed measure requiring proof of citizenship to vote.

Republican leaders are aiming to bring the bill up under a regular rule process,
with a #floor #vote on the legislation by #Wednesday,
according to GOP aides.

It would then head to the Senate ahead of the Sept. 30 shutdown deadline.

Johnson warned Republicans against a shutdown in a “Dear Colleague” letter on Sunday.

“While this is not the solution any of us prefer, it is the most prudent path forward under the present circumstances.
As history has taught and current polling affirms, shutting the government down less than 40 days from a fateful election would be an act of #political #malpractice,” Johnson said,

citing a McLaughlin & Associates survey that found❇️ two-thirds of likely voters oppose a government shutdown.

The bill also directs that👉 $231 million to go the Secret Service, which has again come under scrutiny in the wake of an apparent second assassination attempt against former President Trump.

Johnson outlined the legislation to GOP lawmakers in his letter Sunday, saying:
“Since we fell a bit short of the goal line, an alternative plan is now required.”

thehill.com/homenews/house/489

Antwortete im Thread

@cabbey @cjust @cR0w @jerry It's just insulting to me at minimum and should be considered professional #malpractice to use some garbage SaaS solution for comms in anything that wants to be part of a supply chain which gets involved in #NatSec.

  • At this point I'm not shure if anyone at @bsi or @Bundesregierung is even prepared or able & willing to understand the seriousness of the situation, cuz I have the sneaking suspicion all #ITsec in #Germany's Government is fucked up beyond salvageable!
Antwortete im Thread

@brouhaha @mos_8502 @danderson IMHO people using #Govware by #GAFAMs have basically given up on #ITsec, #InfoSec, #OpSec & #ComSec.

  • Which is why I laughed people at [redacted company name] out when they told me they use [insecure communication SaaS solution] to do their comms because at that point their whole mission statement of "making secure comms that #NatSec of [redacted nation name] can rely upon!" got severe #ClownEnergy levels at that point, and I felt like I'd be contributing to their #malpractice if I were to join them...

I’m still in shock over the story of an Alabama man who died after a Florida surgeon removed his liver instead of his spleen.

First things first - you can live without a spleen. You can’t live without a liver. They look nothing the same, are on opposite sides of the body and have different vascular structures.

I find it hard to believe this could ever happen by accident unless the physician was severely impaired or acting out of malice.

Why did no one else in the operating room speak out? Surely everyone in that room knew he was touching the liver as opposed to the spleen.

This - for me - is the most troubling part of this disaster. Hospitals (and especially operating rooms) are not environments that encourage speaking up. They encourage falling in line and not challenging authority. It can make things very unsafe for patients - and it’s one of the reasons I say that a disabled patient should never be left alone in the hospital. They need an advocate at all times.

Unfortunately in surgery you can’t have an advocate. You’re 100% at the mercy of the people in the room. You’re unconscious, paralyzed and in their control. You have to trust them to take care of you. Why didn’t anyone speak up?

I don’t know the answers - and I’m not sure we will ever know. I do know that as patients we have to put our full trust in our medical team - and that’s a hard thing to do when you’ve experienced medical trauma or you hear stories like this.

Hospitals reward people who fall in line and obey the chain of command. Surgeons often have a God like complex and take great offence to anyone (patients, advocates or other staff) questioning their judgement.
So people simply don't question them.

The problem is that some people NEED to be questioned. Chain of command shouldn't matter when a literal life is on the line.
We all make mistakes - it's part of being human. The stakes are just much higher in medicine and especially in surgery

We need to start changing the culture to one of collaboration. Patients should be permitted to be partners in their own care.
Their expertise in their conditions and their body welcomed and listened to.

Other healthcare workers like nurses, social workers, respiratory therapists,
physiotherapists and dieticians should be brought to the table and treated as equals.
They should be encouraged to speak up if they feel their patient may be harmed.

Advocates should be welcomed & encouraged at all steps in the healthcare journey. Too often we hear of disabled patients being separated from their advocate and this should NEVER happen.
We need someone watching out for us at all times - especially if we might be unconscious

In a perfect world I would love to see all chronic illness patients given an advocate at the time of diagnosis. Someone like a disability doula who's job it is to help them navigate the complex medical system, keep them safe from harm and help them adapt to their disabilities

I recognize that's unlikely to be funded anytime soon - but there would be SO much value in a service like that - for patients AND physicians.
Until then - I ask that everyone who works in healthcare remember that your patient is scared, vulnerable and in need of protection

If you see something amiss - say something.
If they're upset - listen to them. Wear a mask for them! If they request a mask be placed on them when they're unconscious ... honour that request.
Don't be the person who violates their trust and bodily autonomy

Lastly - if you're a patient - try and make sure you always have an advocate. I recognize this isn't an option for everyone... but if it's at all possible please have someone with you. If not you could phone or video a friend, ask for social work, nurse manager or chaplain

Anything you can do to get an extra set of eyes and ears in the room will increase odds of a good outcome.
My heart is with the family of the man who lost his life to this reckless mistake & with everyone who's suffered due to a medical error or neglect. We must do better.

I would encourage anyone who questions HOW this can happen to watch or listen to Dr Death - the story of Christopher Duntsch. He was a Texas neurosurgeon who maimed and killed countless patients and the hospitals and medical board allowed it to continue until the legal system stopped him. It’s a chilling tale of how wrong things can go when organizations protect their reputation over their patients.

Full article on the William Bryan’s death here: globalnews.ca/news/10732577/fl

Global News · Man, 70, dies after Florida surgeon removed liver instead of spleen: lawyerVon Kathryn Mannie