When Doctors Make Mistakes by Pauline Chen
Dr. Pauline Chen writes in the New York Times:
"I called Dr. Colin P. West recently, a practicing general internist and the associate director of the internal medicine residency training program at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. About three years ago, Dr. West and his colleagues published an article in The Journal of the American Medical Association on the effect of errors on physicians-in-training and on the outcomes of their future patients. The researchers found that self-perceived errors not only increased the risk of burnout and depression but also adversely affected subsequent patient care. Over time, young doctors who believed they had made errors in the past felt less and less empathy toward their patients, which then led to an even greater risk of subsequent errors."