school in Connecticut
#201
Posted 2012-December-22, 08:46
11,000 homicides by gun
187,000 deaths in hospitals from medical errors.
medical errors amount to 18-45% of Total US health-care spending.
Another study, conducted by John Goodman and associates of the National Center for Policy Analysis in Dallas, TX and also reported in the April, 2011 Issue of Health Affairs, reported that medical errors cause as many as 187,000 deaths in hospitals each year, and 6.1 million injuries, both in and out of hospitals in the U.S. This study estimated that the social costs, in lives lost and disabilities caused, from these medical errors amounted to between $393 Billion to $958 Billion in 2006, equivalent to 18% to 45% of total US health-care spending in that year.
http://www.helpingyo...ased-in-the-u-s
A study reported in the November 25, 2010 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, also confirmed that medical errors in U.S. hospitals are a serious problem. The study, conducted by lead author Christopher Landrigan, M.D., M.P.H. of the Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, and a group of doctors from Harvard Medical School, Standford University School of Medicine, and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, reported that even in places where local governments have made efforts to improve safety of inpatient care, such as in hospitals in North Carolina, the high rate of detected medical errors did not change over a 5-year period between 2002 and 2007
#202
Posted 2012-December-22, 09:16
Right after moving I had to find a new doctor and dentist. The first try in each area was a disaster. I am reasonably happy with the various medical folks I see now, I am very happy with some of them, but there are still some concerns. Pick any profession you want, not everyone in it would deserve recommendation. It's no different in the medical profession.
At any rate, death from medical error strikes me as far more likely than death by some gun toting bad guy.
For other people in other circumstances, the equation changes. Still, overall, it does not surprise me that death by medical error swamps homicide by gun.
#203
Posted 2012-December-22, 13:22
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#204
Posted 2012-December-22, 14:28
kenberg, on 2012-December-22, 07:56, said:
Lapierre's proposal is completely over the top.
I can't conceive of anyone seriously considering adopting this proposal nor do I believe that this was any kind of serious suggestion.
It's possible that he is a complete and utter loon, however, I think its more likely that he is trying to derail the conversation.
If the NRA can switch the conversation away from reasonable gun control measures and get people talking about "How stupid Wayne LaPierre is" they win.
#205
Posted 2012-December-22, 14:41
- billw55
#206
Posted 2012-December-22, 15:04
From wikipedia: "A United States Secret Service study concluded that schools were placing false hope in physical security, when they should be paying more attention to the pre-attack behaviors of students. Zero-tolerance policies and metal detectors "are unlikely to be helpful," the Secret Service researchers found. The researchers focused on questions concerning the reliance on SWAT teams when most attacks are over before police arrive, profiling of students who show warning signs in the absence of a definitive profile, expulsion of students for minor infractions when expulsion is the spark that push some to return to school with a gun, buying software not based on school shooting studies to evaluate threats although killers rarely make direct threats, and reliance on metal detectors and police officers in schools when the shooters often make no effort to conceal their weapons."
I wonder if LaPierre is aware of the study.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#207
Posted 2012-December-22, 15:16
blackshoe, on 2012-December-22, 15:04, said:
Just google Columbine armed guard, this was the first hit.
"On April 20, 1999, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed 12 students and one teacher at Columbine. On the scene that day was Neil Gardner, an armed sheriffs deputy who had been policing the school for almost two years.
As a CNN report describes, Gardner was eating lunch when he got a call from a custodian that he was needed in the schools back parking lot. A few minutes later, he encountered Harris and the two exchanged gunfire. Harris was not hit and ran back inside the school. At that point, Gardner called for additional units to respond to the south parking lot of Columbine High School. While he was on the radio calling for assistance, five other Jefferson County deputies already were on their way, arriving only minutes after the first report of a female down at Columbine High School. Later, Gardner saw Harris again, through a broken window. Once again, he fired. Once again, he didnt hit him."
- billw55
#208
Posted 2012-December-22, 15:47
mike777, on 2012-December-22, 08:46, said:
11,000 homicides by gun
187,000 deaths in hospitals from medical errors.
medical errors amount to 18-45% of Total US health-care spending.
One of the ways that the ACA saves money over the long haul is by taking measures to reduce costly medical errors. While there are many facets to this, there are a couple of major milestones that you can read about here: Key Features of the Affordable Care Act, By Year
Quote
IMPROVING QUALITY AND LOWERING COSTS
Linking Payment to Quality Outcomes. The law establishes a hospital Value-Based Purchasing program (VBP) in Traditional Medicare. This program offers financial incentives to hospitals to improve the quality of care. Hospital performance is required to be publicly reported, beginning with measures relating to heart attacks, heart failure, pneumonia, surgical care, health-care associated infections, and patients’ perception of care. Effective for payments for discharges occurring on or after October 1, 2012.
2015
IMPROVING QUALITY AND LOWERING COSTS
Paying Physicians Based on Value Not Volume. A new provision will tie physician payments to the quality of care they provide. Physicians will see their payments modified so that those who provide higher value care will receive higher payments than those who provide lower quality care. Effective January 1, 2015.
Getting medical costs down has many elements, but these provisions are important. As a life-long business person, I know from experience that pay incentives can increase quality significantly.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell
#209
Posted 2012-December-22, 18:25
---Standford University School of Medicine, and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, reported that even in places where local governments have made efforts to improve safety of inpatient care, such as in hospitals in North Carolina, the high rate of detected medical errors did not change over a 5-year period between 2002 and 2007
I see at a local govt level it did not work.
Interesting experiment to use federal taxpayer money to private hospitals and doctors to reduce medical errors.
We worry about "too big", but the biggest error-prone centralized top-down institution in the world is the US Gov. It is getting bigger
It would also be interesting to see the public's reaction to headlines such as 20 school children killed by medical errors over the weekend.
#210
Posted 2012-December-22, 19:20
mike777, on 2012-December-22, 18:25, said:
#211
Posted 2012-December-22, 19:48
nige1, on 2012-December-22, 19:20, said:
or in this case the effects are greater than ten times more dire!
11k compared to 180K
good point but how many of us want to fly with a pilot or airline who keeps crashing by accident or mistake.
For some reason we seem less skeptical when it comes to medical care.
We seem "domain dependent" in our skepticism.
Homicide by gun is one issue but death by medical error seems to not grab the media or politicians.
Perhaps this is because of the "illusion of control" we become domain dependent.
#212
Posted 2012-December-22, 20:08
mike777, on 2012-December-22, 19:48, said:
For some reason we seem less skeptical when it comes to medical care.
We seem "domain dependent" in our skepticism.
Homicide by gun is one issue but death by medical error seems to not grab the media or politicians.
Perhaps this is because of the "illusion of control" we become domain dependent.
Personally, I was raised with the understanding that sick people sometimes don't get better.
I was also lead to believe that "not getting shot" was a standard part of the educational experience.
#213
Posted 2012-December-22, 20:40
Fluffy, on 2012-December-22, 04:24, said:
Actually I think a lot of religious people would happily agree that they sometimes make decisions based on faith rather than logic, and in fact they would condemn what they see as the potential amorality of basing decisions on logical or utilitarian basis.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#214
Posted 2012-December-22, 21:06
Where is the skepticism based on science not on what you believe?
I would just like to see the same skepticism that is directed toward Bishops or guns directed towards medical errors which frankly affects more of us in our daily lives in terms of relevence and consequences.
I am not suggesting you should not be skeptical of Bishops, religion, or guns just medical errors more so at it affects your daily life to a much greater degree.
#215
Posted 2012-December-22, 21:32
mike777, on 2012-December-22, 21:06, said:
A key difference is in intent. No one wishes to see children, or anyone, die from gunshots or medical errors, or any other cause..
Errors come in degrees and types. An emergency develops, medical personnel address it as best they can but they choose wrongly, the patient dies. A tragedy. Sometimes the person making the error should be held responsible in that they were careless, or sleepy, or drunk, or something. Other times they were just wrong. It happens.
I have not died from a medical error. But I have certainly seen medical errors. I'll be 74 next week, anyone my age who has not seen a medical error just has not been paying attention. The first MD I chose after my move was a moron. I could put it more kindly, but only by forsaking accuracy. I need better than that, but I don't expect infallibility. I expect good knowledge, good judgment, good communication. After that, if we also have good luck, that would really be nice.
It just is not the same thing to speak of errors alongside intentional killing.
But sure, reducing errors would be very good.,
#216
Posted 2012-December-22, 21:38
mike777, on 2012-December-22, 21:06, said:
Where is the skepticism based on science not on what you believe?
I would just like to see the same skepticism that is directed toward Bishops or guns directed towards medical errors which frankly affects more of us in our daily lives in terms of relevence and consequences.
I am not suggesting you should not be skeptical of Bishops, religion, or guns just medical errors more so at it affects your daily life to a much greater degree.
Familiarity breeds contempt
Like it or not, people get inured to the everyday and the mundane.
Sorry that the world isn't perfect.
Better get used to it.
#217
Posted 2012-December-22, 21:39
kenberg, on 2012-December-22, 21:32, said:
Errors come in degrees and types. An emergency develops, medical personnel address it as best they can but they choose wrongly, the patient dies. A tragedy. Sometimes the person making the error should be held responsible in that they were careless, or sleepy, or drunk, or something. Other times they were just wrong. It happens.
I have not died from a medical error. But I have certainly seen medical errors. I'll be 74 next week, anyone my age who has not seen a medical error just has not been paying attention. The first MD I chose after my move was a moron. I could put it more kindly, but only by forsaking accuracy. I need better than that, but I don't expect infallibility. I expect good knowledge, good judgment, good communication. After that, if we also have good luck, that would really be nice.
It just is not the same thing to speak of errors alongside intentional killing.
But sure, reducing errors would be very good.,
ty thanks for your reply...
As you noted I did not say they are the same thing.
Clearly medical error caused many more deaths.
I called for science over what you may believe
I called for skepticism directed towards medicine.
But sure, reducing errors would be very good.,
We Agree!
#218
Posted 2012-December-22, 21:41
I did say illusion of control.
The illusion of control is the tendency for people to overestimate their ability to control events, for instance to feel that they control outcomes that they demonstrably have no influence over.[1] The effect was named by psychologist Ellen Langer and has been replicated in many different contexts
http://en.wikipedia....sion_of_control
#219
Posted 2012-December-22, 21:45
mike777, on 2012-December-22, 21:41, said:
I did say illusion of control.
The illusion of control is the tendency for people to overestimate their ability to control events, for instance to feel that they control outcomes that they demonstrably have no influence over.[1] The effect was named by psychologist Ellen Langer and has been replicated in many different contexts
http://en.wikipedia....sion_of_control
Seems to me that you are the one arguing that we need to control medical errors while the rest of us are suggesting that you learn to accept it...
#220
Posted 2012-December-22, 21:48
but if I need to just accept 187,000 deaths by medical errors....that is one argument with no skepticism presented by some posters.
If we dont have control over much including medical issues and I agree we dont, perhaps inaction will reduce medical errors in less agressive cases...anyway just a thought.