Let’s ask Jo! She’ll know!

Q: Whenever the conversation turns to health care, it almost always ends with disturbing stories about medical mistakes. Why is this happening so often?

A: I'm not throwing my hands up, but when we access health care frequently and it is more complex, there are greater opportunities for errors to occur. Utilization has increased dramatically, along with health care technology, provider burnout and dangerous multi-tasking. For example, physicians and nurses spend 25 to 50 percent of their time inputting data. That's a concentration killer. Patient safety is an issue bureaucrats have consistently ignored for decades, so we have almost no useful data on how often it really happens. But based on many other sourcesand common sensewe know a lot about prevention.

 

Patient safety is no accident.

As a consumer or advocate, you cannot take your eye off the ball. Recognize that potentially harmful mistakes can arise from accessing Electronic Health Records (patient misidentification), hands-on care (health care-acquired infections) or diagnosing (distractions and lack of time), to highlight just a few. When you are mindful of what's happening, you add a layer of oversight. Offering multiple patient identifiers, requiring hand washing, providing an up-to-date medical history and getting second opinions come to mind. Be proactive, be engaged, be empoweredand question stuff!

Join me for a FREE class on Prepping for the Perfect Storm!

June 29th, Urbandale, Iowa. CLICK HERE for details.

How about investing one hour in preserving health care access for the rest of your life? Jo has a fix for health care's supply chain crisis. If your organization or community gathering wants to host a thought-provoking and informative program, check out Jo's introductory presentation, “Battling for health care access: Where will you be when the music stops?” Click here for details about Bridges, then contact Jo at JoKline@msn.com to learn if one or more of her info-packed presentations is a good fit.


Click here and visit www.JoKline.net

to learn more about

the Bridges initiative.