ReportWire

Tag: Patient Safety

  • Opinion: Are Kids Being Set Up for Medical Abuse?

    Opinion: Are Kids Being Set Up for Medical Abuse?

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    The recent news stories about Dr. Larry Nassar allegedly molesting as many as 125 young girls demonstrate that that we can’t always trust our clinicians. Yet, we live in a society where we too often hear, “No medical professionals wake up in the morning wanting to harm their patients.”

    Child abuse by medical professionals is not common, thank goodness, but it does happen. That’s just one reason why Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy (CPSEA) goes into high schools and encourages young people to open up about their experiences and talk with each other about their patient/clinician relationships. 

    “This should be a relationship of trust where a young person can be treated with respect and dignity. . .”

    Ilene Corina, President, PULSE Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy

    By high school age, children should be prepared to visit their doctor alone. They need to share information that they may not want their parents or another adult to hear. This should be a relationship of trust where a young person can be treated with respect and dignity, can ask hard questions and disclose the most difficult concerns:  depression, sex, drugs etc.

    “I had an early encounter with t­wo sisters who called their doctor ‘creepy’ during a teen discussion about medical care and preparing to see their doctor,” explains Ilene Corina, a patient safety advocate and educator for Pulse CPSEA. “This experience disclosed problems in the relationship so I started teaching patient safety to young people, with the support and guidance of qualified medical professionals.” 

    Other topics Pulse CPSEA addresses with classes as early as middle school are preparing for the doctor’s visit with questions; appropriately and fully explaining symptoms for the best diagnosis; and medication safety. The presentations are fun and interactive and leave classes recognizing the importance of becoming “Informed and Involved” patients.

    To learn more about Pulse CPSEA and its school programs contact Ilene Corina (516) 579-4711 or e-mail icorina@pulsecenterforpatientsafety.org

    Related stories:

    http://abcnews.go.com/US/molestation-victims-coach-lashes-olympic-doctor-nassar-court/story?id=52404442 

    http://www.norwalkreflector.com/Health-Care/2016/12/29/Doctor-accused-of-violently-molesting-raping-1-200-children-recorded-abuse

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/06/us/06pediatrician.html

    Source: Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy

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  • Pulse Center for Patient Safety Marks First Anniversary of Orlando Nightclub Shootings With Art, Film and Memorial

    Pulse Center for Patient Safety Marks First Anniversary of Orlando Nightclub Shootings With Art, Film and Memorial

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    Press Release



    updated: Jun 14, 2017

    On the evening of June 12, 2017 — one year since the worst mass shooting in American history — Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education and Advocacy hosted an event that remembered and honored the people who were killed that night, while providing valuable insights into the well-prepared medical system and people who saved so many who were grievously injured.

    “Patient safety isn’t only about what goes wrong in healthcare; it’s about what goes right, too,” were the sentiments of Ilene Corina, President of Pulse CPSEA as she introduced a film, “ When Tragedy Strikes, Will You Be Prepared? Insights and Stories from Orlando Health at the 28th National IHI Patient Safety Conference.”

    “Patient safety isn’t only about what goes wrong in healthcare; it’s about what goes right, too.”

    Ilene Corina, President, PULSE Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy

    Corina was a guest of the Institute of Health Conference in December and was impacted by the film of five hospital workers sharing their experiences in treating the unexpected rush of injured patients following the tragic events at the Pulse Nightclub in Orlando Florida in the early morning hours of June 12, 2016. The rush of injured came in fast and furious — “36 in 36 minutes” as they explained in the video, and many more after that.

    The evening at the South Nassau Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Freeport began with an art show by Dr. Nichelle Rivers depicting the Stolen Lives Project, which was created to raise awareness and educate the community about the pervasive violence and lack of inclusion towards transgender and gender non-conforming individuals. 

    At the start of the program, the Druumatics, a local drumming group in the West African tradition, began a heartbeat that softly accompanied the entire program.

    The deeply moving film, which emphasized how careful advance planning and countless hours of drills enabled staff at Orlando Health to deal with an unprecedented situation and save dozens of lives, was followed by a ceremony during which audience members read the names and the ages of those murdered, and lit candles in their memory.

    The evening ended with the poem Don’t Stand By My Grave and Weep, read in both Spanish and English to remember that the evening had been a Latin night at the Pulse nightclub.

    At the end of the evening, the heartbeat grew louder until it finally stopped.

    For more information about the Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy, visit www.pulsecenterforpatientsafetry.org. Now preparing programs for the fall; call 516.579.4711.

    Source: Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy

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