1. Reassuringly expensive – A commentary on obstetric emergency training in high-resource settings
- Author
-
Carl P. Weiner
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Obstetric emergency ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Training (civil) ,Unit (housing) ,Pregnancy Complications ,Resource (project management) ,Obstetrical emergencies ,Pregnancy ,Acute care ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Medical emergency ,Emergencies ,business ,Limited resources - Abstract
The pathophysiologic origins of obstetrical emergencies are complicated and may well be influenced by events prior to conception. Such problems are not likely to be resolved soon, and in the meantime, high resource countries simply cannot afford to divert more and more money to litigation and the costs of preventable morbidities for either mother or child. It is long past time we tackled these acute care problems where most first occur-the Maternity unit. It is reasonable to ask whether hospitals (and society at large) are getting what they believe they are buying? Training to satisfy a regulation without improving patient outcome functionally erects one more barrier to the pursuit of optimal patient outcomes. And if current hospital training is not improving outcomes, why continue squandering limited resources and precious lives? In this monograph, I focus on training programs for the management of obstetrical emergencies.
- Published
- 2022
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