Doctor’s attitude humanization

This positively affects your patients outcome.

A soon “I’m sorry”, told by the attending physician to his patient when he was mistaken in treatment or advice, could represent less sues, better patient-doctor relationship, help to avoid future mistakes and improves trust of patients in their doctors.

In the US, 98,000 people dies every year by medical mistakes. The doctor who recognizes his own mistake has fewer problems of legal issues.

I didn’t know that 17 american states had the “I’m sorry” law. This sounds very nice to me.

This is why I firmly believe that medical schools have to include more subjects about humanism.

In a study of Richard Gracely, from Michigan University, 60 postop patients went randomized assigned to receive pain killers or placebo pills. He thought that 50 percent of the patients took pain killers and the rest took placebo pills, but the truth was that all of them had placebo pills. Surprisingly, the first 30 patients had fewer paint than the rest and that was just because the possitive attitude that doctor transmitted to his patients when he prescribed them.

2 thoughts on “Doctor’s attitude humanization”

  1. The basic needs of human beings are not only food, shelter and clothing but health care not only during illness but otherwise. The governments and the community spends a huge amount on training a doctor. It is therefore duty of a doctor to use his knowledge and skills for the welfare of the community. But in real life, as soon as one gets medical degree his or her attitude is changed. Mostly he or she use the community to make money sometimes unethically.

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