Famous last words, from Paul Krugman.
No one is more confident and self-assured than Paul Krugman.
No one speaks with such absolute conviction.
Unfortunately, many readers take depth of conviction as a
sign that someone is speaking the truth. It’s a very old rhetorical ploy, but
it still works.
Everyone should recall Krugman’s by-now famous 2009 dictum
about the British National Health Service:
In
Britain, the government itself runs the hospitals and employs the doctors.
We’ve all heard scare stories about how that works in practice; these stories
are false.
Krugman should know enough not to make declarations of fact
that are so easily falsifiable. then again, being Krugman means never having to admit to error.
Today, not the first time, we draw back the curtain on
the wizard and expose one of his most egregious errors:
The London Telegraph reports on a study performed by the NHS
itself about six months’ worth of horrific surgical mistakes:
Almost
40 NHS patients have undergone surgery on the wrong limb in a six-month period,
according to new official statistics which reveal for the first time a
catalogue of major hospital blunders.
Almost
150 patients suffered from major errors which are so simple and serious that they
are categorised as "never events" between April and September.
They
include 37 patients who had surgery on the wrong site, and 69 cases in which
surgical instruments or swabs were left inside the body.
As though that were not enough, there’s this:
After
wrong site surgery and leaving foreign objects in patients, the most common
major blunder was giving the wrong implant or prosthesis. This occurred 21
times.
There
were five cases of misplaced feeding tubes causing death or severe harm. The
wrong drugs and overdoses were given, and the wrong type of blood transfused,
causing death or severe harm.
Krugman notwithstanding, the scare stories are not all
false.
2 comments:
Paullie "The Beard" Krugman wrong? Quelle horreur!
If the government wants to be a competitor in the market, then its authority and taxation power must be immediately withdrawn. With its special status the government cannot be considered an equal competitor with private enterprise. Furthermore, it has a serious conflict of interest, which undermines its ability to provide oversight.
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