Trust deficit growing in healthcare system, say experts

|
Saturday, September 16, 2017
trust deficit growing in healthcare system, say experts
Image for representation purpose only

Chennai: Increasing attacks on doctors and hospitals by relatives of patients and rising number of cases being filed against medical professionals are mainly due to a growing trust deficit in the healthcare ecosystem, said an official on Saturday.

 "There is a growing trust deficit in the healthcare ecosystem in the country. Doctors and hospitals are being attacked by relatives of patients. This would result in doctors avoiding to treat patients," S. Prakash, Chief Operating Officer, Star Health and Allied Insurance Company Ltd, told reporters here.
 
 "Owing to the atmosphere of suspicion, fanned by the media and the prominence given to reporting of medical malpractice lawsuits, the doctors are wary of treating complex cases, lest they are charged with negligence," Prakash added.
 
 He said Star Health and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) would form a first-of-its-kind platform to facilitate discussion and finding ways to address this trust deficit.
 
 "We will hold meetings where public and doctors would interact and discuss the issues, so that a measure of confidence is built. The first meeting will be held soon," Prakash added.
 
 According to J.S. Rajkumar, Chairman and Chief Laparoscopic Surgeon, Lifeline Institute of Minimal Access (LIMA), 53 hospitals have been attacked in the last two years in India.
 
 He added the life expectancy of doctors had come down at a time when the general life expectancy has gone up in the country.
 
 Citing commercialisation in the healthcare industry and waning preference for government hospitals, C.M.K. Reddy, Halsted Surgical Clinic, wondered why ministers -- state or central -- should get themselves treated in private hospitals.
 
 He said if ministers and officials go to government hospitals, the cascading positive effect would be felt by the general people as well.
 
 Prakash said while the insurance sector was highly regulated, the hospitals were not regulated and there was no standardisation.
 
 Rajkumar did agree that some hospitals charge differential rates for diagnostic tests depending on the kind of room a patient had taken.
 
 The officials also agreed that there were black sheep in the medical profession who take commissions from diagnostic labs for prescribing tests and indulging in other malpractices.
 
 Such doctors should be dealt with as per law and that should not spoil the trust people have in doctors and their judgement, the three officials said.

0 Comment

Performing a liver transplant on this three-month-old baby was a deeply gratifying moment in my career 

Surgery has, and continues to fascinate me. I chose a surgical residency due to its immediacy- one can exercise a certain set of skills and be privy to seeing instant resu....

Ophthalmologists can make an early diagnosis of many serious diseases through eye examination: Dr Amod Gupta

 The eye examination is often neglected by primary care physicians. But the fact is eyes act as a diagnostic window, revealing signs of systemic disease before symptoms ap....

This handy, wireless pocket-sized ECG machine can revolutionise cardiac care 

This engineer couple, Neha and Rahul, took up the challenge to make a leadless, portable ECG device themselves....

University of Dundee Research aims to solve Neuropathic Pain mysteries

Researchers at the University of Dundee seek to understand the mechanisms driving neuropathic pain and its intensity in patients, which affects appr....

 

The Research International Conference on Medical, Medicine and Health Science will be held in New Delhi, India on March 25, 2024....