Count Something
Disease, Global Health, Public Policy Tags: apgar, apgar score, atul gawande, better, breast cancer, childbirth forceps, count something, gawande, Global Health, kevlar, mammography, mop-up, Persian Gulf War, polio, Public Policy, surgical sponges, WHO1 Comment »
This keen piece of advice comes from Dr. Atul Gawande, as espoused in his most recent book, Better: A Surgeon’s Notes on Performance. Gawande is a general and endocrine surgeon at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, MA. Although he is a surgical fledgling, completing his residency in 2003, Dr. Gawande’s insights blossom from his experience in public health issues, at one point serving as a senior health policy adviser for the Clinton administration.1
The thesis of Better is that, while advances in medical technology, new drugs, and the like can lead to an overall healthier humanity, the most effective — and commonly overlooked — way to improve well-being is to make better use of what we already have. When he proposes that everyone in the healthcare community ‘count something,’ he means that evaluation and reevaluation of current methodology and practice are the true keys to success. We must measure ourselves, and then use those measurements to understand where shortcomings occur. He also makes it gravely clear that all doctors are not created equal in their ability to treat patients.
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