Health care administrators and clinical staff struggle to help patients avoid medical errors and harm. According to a news release from Johns Hopkins Medicine, “250,000 deaths per year are due to medical error” (2016, para. 1). Ethical dilemmas occur and are handled using best practices, centered on national benchmarks, for the prevention of harm, the application of medications, alarms, passive restraints, physical restraints, and the reporting of harm events. Yet even with the best of intentions, care plans, and patient education programs, medical errors continue to be an unsolved dilemma.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (2016) states the following:
The CANDOR process toolkit provides a framework for hospitals to improve their response to unexpected patient harm events. Implementation of all elements of the framework is designed to enhance a number of short, and long-term improvements. In the short term, hospitals will develop processes to improve the reporting and monitoring of adverse events and promote better care for patients through candid, caring communication in the wake of an adverse event. In the longer term, hospitals will experience fewer medical liability claims, improved patient safety outcomes, and improved patient satisfaction scores by engaging patients and families throughout the CANDOR process. (“Introduction” section)
In this week’s discussion, address the following in a minimum of 500 words:
Describe common medical errors involving patient assessment, diagnosis, treatment, discharge, and follow-up care.
Explain how medical errors negatively impact the health care process for patients, caregivers, and health care organizations.
Summarize the application and steps in the CANDOR process regarding improved communications and optimal resolution and the possible reduction in malpractice lawsuits.
Summarize the principle of medical ethics and the physician-patient relationship.
Medical errors remain a significant challenge in healthcare, despite advancements in safety protocols and technology. These errors, occurring across all stages of care, have devastating consequences for patients, caregivers, and healthcare organizations. This discussion will explore common medical errors, their negative impacts, the CANDOR process for addressing them, and the ethical principles underpinning the physician-patient relationship.
Common Medical Errors:
Medical errors can occur at any point in the patient journey. Some common examples include:
Negative Impacts of Medical Errors:
The impact of medical errors ripples through the healthcare system, affecting:
The CANDOR Process:
The CANDOR (Communication and Optimal Resolution) process is a framework designed to improve how hospitals respond to unexpected patient harm events. It emphasizes:
The CANDOR process aims to shift the focus from litigation to learning and improvement. By fostering open communication and offering fair resolution, it can potentially reduce the likelihood of malpractice lawsuits and improve patient satisfaction.
Principles of Medical Ethics and the Physician-Patient Relationship:
The physician-patient relationship is built on several key ethical principles:
These principles are essential for building trust and fostering a therapeutic relationship between physicians and patients. Open communication, shared decision-making, and a commitment to patient well-being are fundamental to ethical medical practice. When medical errors occur, adhering to these principles is crucial for maintaining trust and working with patients to achieve healing and resolution. The CANDOR process aligns with these principles by emphasizing transparency, accountability, and a commitment to patient well-being.