Most Popular Stories
- Hospitals lose reimbursement for 'unnecessary' ER visits
- Healthcare jobs will grow the fastest of all industries
- Hospital exec arrested in $116M Medicare scheme
- Online tools, social media ease clinical recruiting, research
- Medicaid cuts loom despite overdue reimbursements
- Docs not always honest with patients
Featured Jobs
-
Electronic Health Records Application Support Manager RN-New Year New Career
Avanti on behalf of Respected Health System - San Francisco, CA -
ICD-10 Revenue Cycle, Manager
Meditology Services - Atlanta, GA -
Epic Ambulatory Beacon Consultant
Meditology Services - NC
Events
- Medical Devices Summit 2012
March 6-7 2012 — The Boston Park Plaza Hotel & Towers, Boston, MA - CIO Healthcare Summit
March 11-14 — Scottsdale, AZ - IHI's Transforming the Primary Care Practice
May 1-3, 2012 — San Diego, CA - 3rd Healthcare IT Innovation Asia
Mar 14-15 2012 — Singapore
Paid Research Reports
- Electronic health records: getting it right first time
- Cloud Computing Adoption In The APAC Life Sciences Industry
- Stakeholder Opinions: Ophthalmology - Leading brands under threat
- Genomics, Proteomics and Metabolomics in Diagnostics: Market landscape, innovative technologies and future outlook
- Healthcare Regulatory Update: The United Arab Emirates
- Point of Care Testing: Evaluating the return to evidence based medicine, novel technologies and the competitive landscape
Free Newsletter
FierceHealthcare is the leading source of healthcare management news for healthcare industry executives. Join 50,000+ healthcare industry insiders who get FierceHealthcare via daily email. Sign up today!
Popular Topics
Editor's Corner
![]()

Since we've gotten such great input recently, I thought I'd use this corner to share a few readers' thoughts. We appreciate how responsive this community is, and want to assure you that we read every comment! Anyway, back to what you have to say...
First, on the extent to which patients should keep alert for potential medical errors:
"In the past 7 years, since my father has been taking anti-epileptic medication, there have been seven instances of documented errors in diagnosis/treatment...As a trained physician-pharmacologist I was fairly quick to pick up the mistake and rectify. I wonder about the fate of other senior citizens who may not have trained family members involved in their care."
- Swaminathan Subramaniam, MD, PhD
Meanwhile, in regards to the question of whether it's ethical for doctors sell products:
"Perhaps these critics can say something for the physicians who continue to labor despite the decreasing compensation for their services and the increasing cost and risks to practice. Personally, if I am offered products that I think will help me, I have no objections; I will have to pay anyway wherever I get it; right there at the physician's office will save me the trip elsewhere."
- Anonymous
Finally, in response to a report that found that pre-op briefing can lower surgical errors:
"It is an absolute no brainier. It is nice that the John Hopkins surgeons have learned to talk with their assisting staff before procedures… Some nurses are so scared of the senior surgeons that they fail to ask pertinent questions like 'what is wrong with this patient? What are you planning to do during surgery? What am I expected to do to get things right?' Unless the doors of communication are opened wide and clearly written history pertinent to the procedure is on the chart, no surgery or procedure should take place. There is nothing routine about medical or surgical procedures. There is a risk of things going wrong all the time."
- Narayanachar S. Murali
We always welcome feedback, whether or not you agree with what we have to say, so I encourage you to keep the thoughts and ideas coming. You're an amazing group. Thank you for making FierceHealthcare a success with your interest and involvement! - Anne
Related Stories
- Medical errors could be exposed with appeals court decision
- Blame-free culture means more error reporting
- Hospital mistakes kept secret
- IOM to monitor patient safety risk in health IT
- Hospital staff coordinates to reduce noise, improve satisfaction
- Providers don't report errors, fearing embarrassment, trouble
- New resident duty hours to cost teaching hospitals $1.3B
- Hospitals use new ER strategies to reduce errors
- Physician-nurse communication better in small teams
- Child's wrong-eye surgery emphasizes importance of pre-surgery 'time out'
Home
| Subscribe | Advertise | Mobile Edition | RSS |
Privacy
| Site Map
| Editors | List in Marketplace | Supplier in MarketplaceTHE FIERCEMARKETS NETWORKFierceEnergy | FierceSmartGrid | FierceFinance | FierceFinanceIT | FierceComplianceIT | FierceHealthcare | FierceHealthFinance | FierceHealthIT | Hospital Impact | FierceMobileHealthcare | FierceHealthPayer | FiercePracticeManagement | FierceEMR | FierceCIO | FierceCIO:TechWatch | FierceContentManagement | FierceMobileIT | FierceGovernmentIT | FierceGovernment | FierceHomelandSecurity | FierceBiotech | FierceBiotech Research | FiercePharma | FierceVaccines | FierceBiotechIT | FiercePharma Manufacturing | FierceMedicalDevices | FierceDrugDelivery | FierceIPTV | FierceOnlineVideo | FierceTelecom | FierceEnterpriseCommunications | FierceBroadbandWireless | FierceDeveloper | FierceMobileContent | FierceWireless | FierceWireless:Europe | FierceCable© 2011 FierceMarkets. All rights reserved. |
![]() |
