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  • Resident Duty Hours and Patient Safety: Did The IOM Get It Right?

    The Institute of Medicine just released its long-awaited report on trainee duty hours. It is well researched and balanced, and its recommendations appropriately reflect what we know vs. what we believe. Now the fun begins. Let’s start with a little background, some of it drawn from my book Understanding Patient Safety: Let’s be honest. ...
    Posted to Wachter's World (Weblog) by Bob Wachter on December 6, 2008
  • My Patients Are Dying… And I’ve Never Been Prouder

    I’m on clinical service now and my patients are dying left and right. And I’ve never been prouder of my own care, and that delivered by my colleagues and hospital. When I was in training, a patient’s death was invariably considered a medical failure, and thus an occasion for shame and silence – the Outcome-That-Must-Not-Be-Named. We treated it ...
    Posted to Wachter's World (Weblog) by Bob Wachter on November 27, 2008
  • Today’s New England Journal Hospitalist Study

    Today my pals Peter Lindenauer and Andy Auerbach (and colleagues) published the largest hospitalist outcomes study to date, in the New England Journal of Medicine. It is a rigorous, important piece of work. Let me try to add a bit of context.First, the What’s What. Using the massive database of the Premier system (which Peter has mined to ...
    Posted to Wachter's World (Weblog) by Bob Wachter on December 20, 2007
  • The Surgical Hospitalist

    In an article in this month’s Journal of the American College of Surgeons (with a companion cover piece in the ACS’s Bulletin), four of my surgical colleagues – and this internist, perhaps to add a “cognitive” spin – describe UCSF’s “surgical hospitalist” program. It is an impressive story.When Dr. John Maa and his friends speak of a “surgical ...
    Posted to Wachter's World (Weblog) by Bob Wachter on November 18, 2007
  • No Patient Left Behind?

    While driving into work earlier this week, I heard a wonderful interview with Jim Dierke, principal of Visitation Valley Middle School here in San Francisco. VV is one of the poorest neighborhoods in the city, and this gentleman – who recently won a national middle school “principal of the year” award – has managed to increase attendance rates ...
    Posted to Wachter's World (Weblog) by Bob Wachter on October 9, 2007
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