You make it sound so simple. Juggle all the usual work complexity, throw in systems issues, staffing and other factors and still take on board all the data and interpret it well.
As it should be, surely? I only worked in a building society in the 80s but we couldn't go home until every penny in the branch was accounted for - and nobody died if we screwed up. I guess I kind of expected at least that same degree of accuracy from medicine. Naively, perhaps.
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The point is that acute medicine has evolved so far and so fast that no one warrants a hospital bed if they’re capable of wielding a teaspoon, and nurses have vastly more complex things to occupy their time than cutlery.
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I had one eye on the fluid charts when I was saying that, rather than the teaspoons tbh... but your point is well made nonetheless.
End of conversation
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