In: Nursing
Our medical systems are broken. Doctors are capable of extraordinary (and expensive) treatments, but they are losing their core focus: actually treating people.
Doctor and writer Atul Gawande suggests we take a step back and look at new ways to do medicine—with fewer cowboys and more pit crews.
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Atul Gawande explores how doctors can dramatically improve their practice using something as simple as a checklist or coaching. Making systems work in medicine is the great task of my generation of physicians and sciences. It's a great task of our generation in all fields. In this speech he given some ideas and thoughts concerning experience from history Dr. Gawada explaining how medicine first started and how many patients were incorrectly being diagnosed and cared for. He opens the idea that medicine has changed a lot throughout the beginning of time. Doctors had many setbacks and many things that should be changed to further improve their practices. He explaining still they have a lot of challenges they face in modern medicine. But holding onto that structure we built around the daring, independence, self sufficiency of each of those people has become a disaster. We have trained, hired and rewarded people to be cowboys. But it's pit crews that we need, pit crews for patients.