Covering up a medical error should be a never event. The harm is compounded many, many times.
@DrUmeshPrabhu @l_j0204 @drkimholt @drphilhammond Agreed, not all serious harm can be avoided Umesh. Just the Never Events. Hence the name.
-
-
@C7RKY@DrUmeshPrabhu@l_j0204@drphilhammond they are not 100 per cent avoidable but the aim is to try to get there by continual learning. -
@drkimholt@DrUmeshPrabhu@l_j0204@drphilhammond If not 100%, then well-known safety procedures weren't followed though. The ultimate sin? -
@c7rky@drkimholt@drphilhammond@l_j0204 Nothing is 100% in life except 100% men never get pregnant. -
@DrUmeshPrabhu@drkimholt@l_j0204 Perhaps not, but on@drphilhammond's point, Never events are bad. Covering up harm is bad. Covering up > -
@DrUmeshPrabhu@drkimholt@l_j0204@drphilhammond never events is unforgivable. The excuses run out then - 100% of the time. -
@c7rky@drkimholt@drphilhammond@l_j0204 I agree Never event should never happen but reality is they do. We got to keep on learning -
@DrUmeshPrabhu@drkimholt@drphilhammond@l_j0204 The whole point of a never event is that we've already learned. Applying it is lacking.
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.