
11-12-2004, 06:41 AM
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♦*♥Moderatrix♥*♦
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Join Date: Nov 2001
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-ll- Apology -ll-
How powerful is an apology? I was reading an article about DRs. being trained to apologize now for their mistakes especially when offerring settlement compensation. This in an effort to "do what is right" and to stem off larger law suits. Got me wondering....
Have any of you ever had a DR. apologize for a mistake they made?
Did it make you feel better or cause you to react differently than you would have, had they not apologized?
When my last child was born it was the best day of my life and yet a debacle. The next day the OB/GYN came to my room and apologized for misjudging some things and I could see in his face he was truly sorry. While I was still angry, I saw him as human and realized that while his poor conclusions made a bad situation worse, his expertise and quick thinking resulted in a sucessful resolution to the crisis.
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11-12-2004, 08:14 AM
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1 of 8,213,984,035
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I read of the same topic within the last couple weeks. I have a problem with a course for “Appearing Sincere 101”, especially when motivated by concern about “settlement compensation”.
But I also believe the persons that become medical doctors are among the smartest, most dedicated, hardest working members of our society. I believe they are the most well intended, consistent and conscientious human beings among us. “Human” being the key word . The interface of the diametric legal profession with medicine is not going to further ANY aspect of medical development and care for an imperfect specie being maintained in an imperfect world. 
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11-12-2004, 08:49 AM
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pixie of the wood
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 10,575
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it would depend upon the sincerity of the appology and the nature and severity of the mistake. doctors are human, true, but they can also be arrogant and ignorant.
a little off-topic here...i know this will sound sexist but there have been a few doctors i've delt with that just didn't listen to my concerns, ideas or opinions, dismissed them out of hand as a matter of fact, and they were all male. (let me clarify here that i have seen male doctors that were wonderful, as well) now, i realize they are the experts of the science but i am the expert on my own body, so for goodness sake don't look at me and roll your eyes or scoff as if my remarks are off-the-wall. the most important and beneficial thing a doctor can do is listen and many of them are too busy thinking how far behind they are with their patients (maybe if they scheduled appointments in a more realistic time frame this wouldn't happen) or too busy giving me stats and showing off their command of latin. i am not an insurance claim and i do not appreciate being blown off. the art of doctoring, in general, has been turned into a business and lost it's ancient principle of do no harm. of course they need to make money, i'm not disputing or minimalizing that fact, but maybe if they acted more like humans and less like god's gift they wouldn't get sued at every turn. just maybe some of theses frivilous law suits are a way for patients who feel that they have been not only harmed but also dissed in some way to get some sort of respect back. they are going about it the wrong way, that's true, but in a litigeous society it is the only way they can be "heard".
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11-12-2004, 08:56 AM
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Loungin' Around
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: West Coast
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You know, I just had a female doctor the other day who didn't listen to a damn thing I said. <sigh> I think the art of listening is one they should teach in med school too.
Lil, I am with you. If you apologize and seem sincere, and if the screw-up seems totally possible (no one else could have caught it, and there was no perpetuated stupidity evidenced), then I am likely to forgive. For instance, some mistakes were made inthe hospital by a doctor who emminently caused my grandfather's death. If he would have apologized, I woulda likely forgiven him......cause he insisted he was right, we demanded an autopsy and eventually proved he had made the wrong call.
Cold comfort, though.
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11-12-2004, 09:04 AM
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~*Geeky Girl*~
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: On the farm
Posts: 47,960
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My daughter was born, as was my son, by c-section. After staying the three days after delivery, they released us both on a Friday morning. I was back at the hospital within 12 hours with a temperature of 103. Of course, the doctor and others suspected an infection. For a week, they plied me with high-potency antibiotics through an IV. As I was breastfeeding, they were limited on where they could put the IV, though, as behind the elbows was not an option, and the strength of the antibiotics caused the IVs to fail after no more than 24 hours, more often less than that. After a week of playing "Where can we put the IV now," I was a basket case. They even *mentioned* having to change the IV again, and I would immediately burst out in tears. Never mind the fact that, since she had been released, my daughter could stay in my room but could not go to the nursery to give me any kind of break. Finally, the doctor ordered an ultrasound...and discovered a pocket of blood where the wall of my uterus had ruptured. After draining it, the temperature went away and, two weeks after delivery, I finally went home.
At my first follow-up visit, the doctor did apologize for assuming the more common cause of a temperature post-partum. Somehow, though, it seemed to ring hollow for me. I later moved and had another doctor and, when I told him what had happened after delivery, he told me that he'd heard of things like that happening, so it wasn't totally uncommon and not really preventable. That, for some reason, made me feel better than the doctor who had "caused" it.
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11-12-2004, 10:21 AM
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is not this trim anymore!
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Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: New England
Posts: 21,709
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I've yet to hear an apology from a doctor, dentist or weatherman and have been screwed by all three. I'm not fond of the "these things can happen, it's nothing we can't fix" defense. Especially when their fix is going to cost me even more money. Hell, even my mechanic apologized to me the one time he was wrong, and he made the situation right at his expense.
The best was my eye doctor, who prescribed me reading glasses because I told him the highway signs were looking blurry.  When I went to a different doctor two years later and informed him of my concerns and told him all about my headaches, he said "You have to understand that doctors know everything...all you know is that you can't see." :bang: It was only after I asked him if I needed stronger reading glasses and a seeing eye dog, that he cracked a smile. Dick!
Where was I? Oh yes...my balls. They haven't quite worked right since I got fixed. You'd think someone would say "sorry they hurt" but no...to say sorry means you either admit you missed something or did something wrong. And that paves the way for a lawsuit. That's why they rarely do it.
Tirade over  Please put your seats in their upright position and prepare for landing.
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11-12-2004, 11:17 AM
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Pixie's Resident Reptile
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Central MD, USA
Posts: 21,194
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To me, an apology is largely irrelevant-other than to acknowledge that there is a problem.
I want the problem fixed, at least as fixed as it can be.
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11-12-2004, 11:54 AM
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Loungin' Around
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: West Coast
Posts: 30,587
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WildIrish
Where was I? Oh yes...my balls. They haven't quite worked right since I got fixed. You'd think someone would say "sorry they hurt" but no...to say sorry means you either admit you missed something or did something wrong.
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SOunds like you need some sex therapy for your balls. Maybe you're doing something wrong. I'd be happy to check and see what the problem is.
.......and if you don't enjoy it, I promise to say "I'm sorry." 
__________________
Life is too short not to love and be loved....preferably multiple times in one night.
I think men talk to women so they can sleep with them and women sleep with men so they can talk to them. ~ Jay McInerney
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