2024
Adverse events and perceived abandonment: learning from patients’ accounts of medical mishaps
Schlesinger M, Dhingra I, Fain B, Prentice J, Parkash V. Adverse events and perceived abandonment: learning from patients’ accounts of medical mishaps. BMJ Open Quality 2024, 13: e002848. PMID: 39147403, PMCID: PMC11331972, DOI: 10.1136/bmjoq-2024-002848.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAdverse medical eventsMedical mishapsMedical eventsPerceived abandonmentEnhance patient engagementMixed-methods analysis of responsesPatient safety concernsFeelings of abandonmentOpen-ended responsesCare partnersMedication errorsPatient engagementImpact of adverse eventsMixed-methods analysisPatient accountsVulnerable populationsAdverse eventsUnder-reportingAnalysis of responsesProvidersTherapeutic allianceAttitudinal changeCoding schemaCliniciansRespondents
2002
Not Afraid to Blame: The Neglected Role of Blame Attribution in Medical Consumerism and Some Implications for Health Policy
Rosenthal M, Schlesinger M. Not Afraid to Blame: The Neglected Role of Blame Attribution in Medical Consumerism and Some Implications for Health Policy. Milbank Quarterly 2002, 80: 41-95. PMID: 11933793, PMCID: PMC2690101, DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.00003.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMedical consumerismSubsequent willingnessSerious mental illnessHealth care professionalsPolicy implicationsAdverse eventsWorse outcomesCare professionalsCare practicesMental illnessHealth plansHealth policyBlame allocationExperiences of peopleConsumer attitudesNeglected roleCareConsumer educationAllocationWillingnessIllnessPolicyPolicymakingConsumerism
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