MacMusic  |  PcMusic  |  440 Software  |  440 Forums  |  440TV  |  Zicos
doctors
Recherche

South Korea Turns To Surveillance As 'Ghost Surgeries' Shake Faith In Hospitals

mercredi 18 mai 2022, 09:00 , par Slashdot
After scandals in which doctors let unsupervised assistants operate on patients, South Korea is becoming one of the first to require cameras in operating rooms. The New York Times reports: Ethicists and medical officials, including those at the American College of Surgeons, have cautioned that surveilling surgeons to deter malpractice may undermine trust in doctors, hurt morale, violate patient privacy and discourage physicians from taking risks to save lives. The Korea Medical Association, which is opposed to the new mandate, has lobbied to limit its impact. But supporters of the law said the move would help protect patients, build the public's trust in doctors and provide victims of medical malpractice with evidence to use in court.

'People are dying in operating rooms,' said An Gi-jong, an advocate for patients. 'We can't rely on doctors to solve problems on their own anymore.' About five patients have died from ghost surgeries in the past eight years, he said. They include Kwon Dae-hee, a college student in Seoul who died of a hemorrhage in 2016 after jawline surgery. His mother, Lee Na-geum, who obtained footage of his operation and reviewed it hundreds of times, found evidence that the operation had been botched because parts of it had been conducted by an unsupervised nursing assistant. Ms. Lee, 62, who has held a public vigil denouncing ghost surgeries since her son's death, said in an interview: 'Once the cameras are installed, your lies will be exposed if you're a ghost doctor. Cameras reveal truth.'

Under the new law, hospitals performing surgeries on unconscious patients must install video cameras in their operating rooms. If a patient or a relative requests that a surgery be filmed, the hospital must comply. Doctors can refuse for certain reasons, such as if a delay in the operation would put the patient's life at risk, or if the filming would significantly impede residents' training. The recorded footage can be viewed for criminal investigations, prosecutions, trials, medical disputes or mediation.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://science.slashdot.org/story/22/05/18/0212237/south-korea-turns-to-surveillance-as-ghost-surge...
News copyright owned by their original publishers | Copyright © 2004 - 2024 Zicos / 440Network
Date Actuelle
ven. 29 mars - 15:29 CET