There is a candid moment in Code Black in which McGarry admits to the camera that he needs to help a patient, but is putting it off because he doesn’t want to attend to the mountain of routine paperwork that entails. The film does a good job of showing the demoralizing effects of all the red tape emergency physicians must deal with. In particular, we see how the oppressive burden of paperwork, quotas, and metrics detract from the natural camaraderie of the emergency department.
QUESTION: If you find yourself in an ED and the staff seems rushed, distracted and not caring about you, will you have a better understanding of what they’re dealing with. Please discuss issues with volume, intensity, EMTALA, and (most importantly) the shift of primary care from the physician’s office to the ED.
Yes this is true ,many time a lot of patient received in massive casualties and provide the treatment priority basis and the major concern is documentary work
In emergency health care team followvthe triage system in which provide the care first who required urgent
I understand that situations they provide care first who required
But negligence is not good for profession
Health care provides must take care patient according to needs but not neglect
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