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7 January 2003 | Volume 138 Issue 1 | Pages 33-39
Patients usually cannot assess the technical quality of
their care; however, examining a hospitalization through the
patients’ eyes can reveal important information about the quality of
care. Patients are the best source of information about a
hospital system’s communication, education, and pain-management
processes, and they are the only source of information about
whether they were treated with dignity and respect. Their experiences
often reveal how well a hospital system is operating and can
stimulate important insights into the kinds of changes that are
needed to close the chasm between the care provided and the care that
should be provided.
This article examines the case of a patient admitted for ankle
arthrodesis due to severe hemophilia-related arthritis. The
surgery was successful, but the hospital stay was marked by
inefficiency and inconveniences, as well as events that reveal
fundamental problems with the hospital’s organization and
teamwork. These problems could seriously compromise the quality of
clinical care. Unfortunately, most of these events occur regularly in
U.S. hospitals. Relatively easy and inexpensive ways to avoid many of
these problems are discussed, such as reducing variability in
non-urgent procedures and routinely asking patients about their
experiences and suggestions for improvement.
Author and Article
Information
From
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
*This paper was prepared by Paul D. Cleary, PhD, for the Quality
Grand Rounds series. Kaveh G. Shojania, MD, prepared the case
for presentation.
Grant Support: Funding for the Quality Grand Rounds series
is supported by the California HealthCare Foundation as part of
its Quality Initiative.
Requests for Single Reprints: Paul D. Cleary, PhD, Department
of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, 180 Longwood
Avenue, Boston, MA 02115-5899; e-mail, cleary@hcp.med.harvard.edu.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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E. P. Lesho When the Spirit Hurts: An Approach to the Suffering Patient Archives of Internal Medicine, November 10, 2003; 163(20): 2429 - 2432. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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