... and then next week I'll be back to analyzing the medical literature: A stack of interesting new journal articles is threatening to topple and bury my computer.
For the moment, though:
First, the Hearst newspapers chain has conducted a nationwide investigation into medical errors that should be required reading for anyone who wonders why hospitals can't do a better job controlling hospital-acquired infections. It is a 7-part series focusing on the 5 states (New York, Texas, California, Connecticut, Washington) where there are Hearst papers, and hosted on the site of the San Francisco Chronicle. The introductory article says:
From that opening statement, the investigation goes on to explore many patient stories that individually are tragedies and collectively — as we here know all to well — are a scandal.
There is just one notable MRSA story in the mix, the death of a retired hospital president who contracted the bug in his own hospital. But they are all worth reading.
Second, an executive and apparently new writer named David Goldhill has written for The Atlantic a passionate and well-thought out piece on his father's death from a hospital-acquired infection and on what needs to change for such deaths to never happen again. "My survivor’s grief has taken the form of an obsession with our health-care system," he writes:
You may not agree with his conclusions, but it is worth reading through to the end to experience how one intelligent citizen from outside health care understands and attempts to re-think our broken system.