I have two refrigerators.
The full size, expensive version, sits in the usual location
in the kitchen. The small black one
rests idly in the basement. Excluding
this morning, of course, when I dragged it up the steps and begrudgingly coaxed
it back into action. Let me explain.
Six months ago my old refrigerator started acting up. Somewhere around year five, it’s motors groaned,
its coolers moaned, and all the sudden the food started to smell. So I called the repairman and hundreds of
dollars later, it worked like a dream.
Until it didn’t.
The repairs held for all of a week. I called the repairman back. And we danced this dance a few more
times. In the meantime, I ran out to the
local appliance store and bought a mini fridge to store my food.
I lived out of that little black fridge for weeks while
workmen came and went. Every time one
problem was fixed, another popped up.
Eventually I bit the bullet, returned to the appliance store and brought
a brand new, state of the art, full sized refrigerator to replace the old.
I happily returned the black fridge to the basement and
thought little about it again. For six
months my new appliance worked exactly the way it should. The ice bucket was always full. Each zone maintained the correct temperature. I had separate drawers for the fruits,
vegetables, and dairy.
I thought I was truly on the pathway to appliance nirvana
when the unexpected happened. I awoke
one morning to fine a horrible sound coming from my brand new
refrigerator. Hours later it was
dead. My ice cream melted and my
vegetables wilted.
I called a different repairmen who showed up promptly, and
fixed the problem in short order. Money
well spent, or so I thought, until the same exact scenario played itself out
forty-eight hours later.
Another trip to the basement, and the little black
refrigerator has once again taken up residence in my kitchen.
This experience is nothing new. I can’t count how many times a television has
broken, an Ipad has malfunctioned, or a dishwasher latch has busted. Each time I dutifully call an expert who
sometimes gets the job done. But often
the repair unravels or the machine is
deemed DOA and unable to be fixed.
This often makes me wonder why we expect so much out of our
doctors. The human body is far more
complex than any electronic. The number
of moving parts measures in the millions.
And god knows how personal psychology plays into the range of pathology.
And for the most part, us doctors, get it right. Eighty to ninety percent of the time. Day after day, year after year.
I wish I could get this kind of service with my appliances.
1 comment:
Not knowing due to the complexities of the human body vs being wrong or making potential life altering mistakes are like comparing apples to oranges. We only trust Drs. that are comfortable admitting " I don't know" at this point. A cut and copy from NPR(http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2013/09/20/224507654/how-many-die-from-medical-mistakes-in-u-s-hospitals) below which better reflects patient expectations: "An estimate of 440,000 deaths from care in hospitals "is roughly one-sixth of all deaths that occur in the United States each year," James wrote in his study. He also cited other research that's shown hospital reporting systems and peer-review capture only a fraction of patient harm or negligent care.
"Perhaps it is time for a national patient bill of rights for hospitalized patients," James wrote. "All evidence points to the need for much more patient involvement in identifying harmful events and participating in rigorous follow-up investigations to identify root causes."
Dr. Lucian Leape, a Harvard pediatrician who is referred to the "father of patient safety," was on the committee that wrote the "To Err Is Human" report. He told ProPublica that he has confidence in the four studies and the estimate by James."
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