Back to blame: the Bawa-Garba case and the patient safety agenda | The BMJ
"GMC risks reviving a culture of blame in healthcare"
Reviving? I must've missed that.
#bawagarba's educational supervisor quoted? And a paediatrician from Bristol? Really..?http://www.bmj.com/content/359/bmj.j5534 …
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Replying to @C7RKY
It’s more that the precedent decision influences FUTURE potential openness, honesty. That matters to those who’ve experienced lack of transparency - hindering opportunities for access to fair, equitable social healthcare. Avoidable consequences including a worse medical outcome.
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Replying to @kateheydonorg
John Clarke Retweeted John Clarke
I think we agree...https://twitter.com/c7rky/status/956820774534434817 …
John Clarke added,
John Clarke @C7RKYDon't be taken in by claims of 'unintended implications' here, or elsewhere by clinicians. These threats ring very hollow to me. This isn't a threat to START covering up, merely a threat to CONTINUE doing so. Duty of candour is a farce. Court cases are what happen in response. https://twitter.com/jeremy_hunt/status/956566247084347393 …1 reply 1 retweet 1 like -
Replying to @C7RKY
I think that we’re in agreement too. Although I’d add a caveat that just because some of us, have directly suffered through an absence of openness as a cultural healthcare issue, (not limited to NHS); that there are examples of open, honest, care, when good management favours.
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Replying to @kateheydonorg
Always! 'You can see the footprint of the manager in the behaviours of their team' Don't ask me who said it. Can't remember. But there are some good ones out there.
1 reply 1 retweet 3 likes -
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