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ashleyn 2 days ago

Immediately was reminded of another case of a grossly negligent surgeon, Christopher Duntsch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Duntsch

I'm sure I and many other concerned patients and potential-patients are asking; how does something like this even occur? What institutional failures in medicine led to two grossly negligent and incompetent surgeons being given the controls to peoples' lives? What safeguards were neglected at the academic and organisational layers, and what are we doing so that this does not occur again? If institutions are doing their job, no case like this should ever get to the point where a prosecutor needs to stop and clean things up, much less to the first maiming of a patient.

mrguyorama a day ago | parent | next [-]

Oh interesting.

Texas has laws that limit medical malpractice suit judgement amounts. This is because it's a common talking point among the very ignorant in the US that healthcare is expensive because of "Bullshit lawsuits and medical malpractice insurance and that mcdonalds coffee lady".

Texas still doesn't have radically or meaningfully cheaper healthcare than places who have not implemented that scheme.

Also nice to see Greg Abbot personally intervening in the lawsuits (as AG) to ensure that justice was not served.

silexia a day ago | parent | prev [-]

This is what happens when people focus on anything different than pure competence at the job (bedside manner, DEI stuff, etc).

sagarm a day ago | parent [-]

In Florida and Texas? Maybe check to see if your priors are relevant before commenting based on them.