This
Four-Part Series Explores Quality of Health Care in
the United States;
Startling Statistics Underscore
Chaotic Conditions Within the American Health Care
System
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2006
Crosskeys Media ®
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As many as 98,000 Americans die in hospitals each
year of preventable medical errors. One million more
are injured. In fact, medical errors kill as many people
per year as breast cancer, HIV-AIDS and car accidents.
These and other equally startling statistics underscore
the chaotic conditions within the American health care
system. Remaking American Medicine . . . Health Care for the 21st Century explores the quality
crisis and the innovative solutions being undertaken
by providers, patients and their families to transform
the care provided by the institutions on which we all
depend.
Each program examines critical health care issues
facing Americans today including patient safety, medical
and medication errors, hospital-acquired infections,
family-centered care and effective management of chronic
disease. Rather than assign blame for the failings
in health care, Remaking American Medicine offers solutions
by showcasing the stories of individuals and institutions
who are working to ensure better health care for everyone.
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2006
Crosskeys Media ® |
“We wanted to present detailed and emotionally
engaging profiles of people like Dr. Donald Berwick,
founder of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement,
who are struggling to fix our broken health care system,” said
Frank Christopher, series executive producer. Remaking
American Medicine is their story, told through the
eyes of doctors, nurses, administrators and patients,
showing their struggles, their setbacks and their
victories. We call these people and their institutions
'Champions of Change.'”
“Creating
Remaking American Medicine has been an extraordinarily
enlightening project due largely to the individuals
and institutions we’ve met
along the way. These people and the institutions they
work for really are champions. They’ve taught
us that while there are serious problems in our health
care system, solutions are being sought. Everyone has
a stake in health care, which is why we adopted the
phrase for the campaign, ‘It’s your health
... you call the shots.’ Consumers must be active
partners with their caregivers in order to ensure quality
health care,” concluded Christopher.
Remaking American Medicine website
Silent
Killer
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2006
Crosskeys Media ® |
The first
program, Silent Killer, sets the stage for the issues
that are explored throughout the series. The program
highlights the efforts of Sorrel King, whose 18-month-old
daughter died at one of the most respected hospitals
in the world, Johns Hopkins. King has gone from grieving
victim to engaged activist, partnering with Johns Hopkins
to make safety a top priority at the institution.
Sorrel has
joined forces with Dr. Berwick to save 100,000 lives
in American hospitals, the nearly equivalent number
of people who die each year from medical errors,
according to the Institute of Medicine. Notes Dr.
Berwick, “What
we need is outrage. We need the public to say, ‘No,
I don’t want a health care system at any price,
let alone close to two trillion dollars, which is going
to hurt me when it tries to help me.’”
First Do No Harm
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2006
Crosskeys Media ® |
First
Do No Harm takes a critical look at the impact
of medical errors and patient safety in two hospitals,
and follows the efforts of physicians who are challenging
their colleagues to live up to their oath to “first
do no harm.” In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
Chief of Medicine Dr. Richard Shannon is confronting
an epidemic of hospital-acquired infections that
are shattering the lives of their victims.
In New Jersey,
Hackensack University Medical Center is engaged in
an effort to completely transform the way the institution
delivers care. The imperative for this change is
dramatically illustrated in First
Do No Harm through the needless suffering of
89-year-old Anna Terrano, a victim of a medication
error at Hackensack. Information technology is now
being used to prevent patients like Terrano from being
harmed by the care they receive.
The
Stealth Epidemic
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2006
Crosskeys Media ® |
Remaking
American Medicine then moves to the challenge of
treating chronic diseases that affect nearly 100
million Americans. The Stealth Epidemic examines
the human and economic costs of effectively managing
diabetes, heart disease and other chronic conditions
that consume nearly 70 percent of all health care
resources. The episode examines the groundbreaking
efforts in two very different communities — Los
Angeles and Whatcom County in the state of Washington — that
are fundamentally transforming the physician-patient
relationship. These initiatives offer a glimmer of
hope for patients struggling with their chronic conditions.
As medicine continues to become more and more technologically
sophisticated and the systems that deliver medical
care become increasingly complex, the relationship
between providers and patients and their families is
more important than ever.
Hand in Hand
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2006
Crosskeys Media ® |
The final
program, Hand
in Hand, tells the story of
patients and families who have formed a unique bond
in a teaching hospital in Augusta, Georgia.
The story
of Daniel Moretz and his family is especially compelling.
Daniel was born with serious heart disease and has
had numerous medical procedures, culminating in a
heart transplant. Throughout his illness and many
hospitalizations, his mother, Julie, vowed to be by
Daniel’s side, something not easily achieved
in a hospital. But through Julie’s efforts and
the insistence of other families, the Medical College
of Georgia Health System in Augusta has transformed
itself into a nationally recognized facility where
partnership among patients, their families and providers
has become the guiding vision.
“The media is filled with tragic stories of
medical errors and innocent victims who have been killed
by the health care system,” says co-executive
producer Matthew Eisen, who has been working with Frank
Christopher on the series for five years. “What
we wanted to do was tell inspiring stories of a wide
variety of people — consumers, health care providers,
policy-makers — who are transforming systems
of care. Our goal is to show what is possible when
people confront the problems head-on, and work together
to reduce harm and save lives.”
To help
accomplish this, an outreach campaign managed by
Devillier Communications, Inc. was developed to engage
major health care groups at the national and local
level. “We have 46 national partners and
hundreds of local groups including PBS stations, Quality
Improvement Organizations, consumer groups, health
care providers and businesses participating. With their
help, we are creating awareness about health care quality,” said
Christopher.
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