It's also physically possible to be grossly negligent in your personal actions, regardless of the shortcomings of the environment you've been placed in. Let's not forget none of have that transcript yet, before we start deciding what this case does or doesn't demonstrate.
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My belief is that most organizations (across most industries) don’t offer meaningful supervision to supervisors. I’d be delighted to be proven wrong!
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I can only speak knowledgeably of 1 regulated industry and that was pretty good up to 2nd line, but fell fairly flat once you ventured higher. All too common to find specific supervision skills are not well trained at best, wrongfully assumed to be obvious at worst.
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Consultants are held accountable by: 1. Revalidation 2. Other consultants 3: audit (especially surgery) This has both benefits and drawbacks. Consultants are the true independent practitioners in medicine.
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However ingrained respect for autonomy of others clinical decisions and a reluctance to challenge is still a huge problem for patient safety.
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Yup. That requires knowledge of what the right thing to do actually is.
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Does it require certainty of what the right thing is?
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And there’s the rub. I live by the immortal words of Maya Angelou:pic.twitter.com/PscfaolaeQ
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Non-medical fields are increasingly aware that when the 1st and 2nd opinion talk to each other, outcomes can improve. It’s not to infrequent for the conversation to result in a 3rd opinion that improves on the solo efforts.
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