29 min listen
Why Do Doctors Fail?
ratings:
Length:
42 minutes
Released:
Nov 25, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Surgeon and writer Atul Gawande explores the nature of fallibility and suggests that preventing avoidable mistakes is a key challenge for the future of medicine.
Through the story of a life-threatening condition which affected his own baby son, Dr. Gawande suggests that the medical profession needs to understand how best to deploy the enormous arsenal of knowledge which it has acquired. And his challenge for global health is to address the inequalities in access to resources and expertise both within and between countries.
This first of four lectures was recorded before an audience at the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Dr. Gawande's home town of Boston in Massachusetts. The other lectures are recorded in London, Edinburgh and Delhi.
The series is introduced and chaired by Sue Lawley. The producer is Jim Frank.
Through the story of a life-threatening condition which affected his own baby son, Dr. Gawande suggests that the medical profession needs to understand how best to deploy the enormous arsenal of knowledge which it has acquired. And his challenge for global health is to address the inequalities in access to resources and expertise both within and between countries.
This first of four lectures was recorded before an audience at the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Dr. Gawande's home town of Boston in Massachusetts. The other lectures are recorded in London, Edinburgh and Delhi.
The series is introduced and chaired by Sue Lawley. The producer is Jim Frank.
Released:
Nov 25, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Constable and the Pursuit of Nature: Nikolaus Pevsner examines the flowering of English landscape painting in the 18th century. by The Reith Lectures