Not exact matches
MRSA Action UK does not however support
or agree with Professor Mark Baker's comment in today's media that NICE is considering bringing antibiotics into the existing bonus scheme for GP's not to prescribe these drugs, this is both
wrong and immoral as some patients will always require
treatment for infections, it is the clinical need that needs to be ascertained and the correct
diagnosis determined and appropriate
treatment given that needs to be correct.
Diagnostic errors involve several types of missed opportunities to make a correct and timely
diagnosis; a
diagnosis may be missed completely, the
wrong one may be provided,
or diagnosis may be delayed, all of which can lead to harm from delayed
or inappropriate
treatments and tests.
What that means for patients is their conditions are overlooked, they receive a
wrong diagnosis,
or no
diagnosis at all and miss out on needed
treatment.
If you
or a member of your family has suffered as a result of a
wrong medical
diagnosis or poor
treatment contact our friendly and approachable team today.
Inaccurate readings obtained through failure to use the proper technique lead to the
wrong diagnosis, which may result in unnecessary
or inappropriate
treatment and follow up.
Instead of focusing on
diagnosis and symptom etiology as a foundation for
treatment - a traditional approach that implies, at least on some level, that there is something «
wrong» with the client - ACT therapists begin
treatment by encouraging the client to accept without judgment the circumstances of his
or her life as they are.
When mental health professionals make the
WRONG diagnosis concerning the pathology of attachment - based «parental alienation» as incorrectly being the product of the child's oppositional - defiant behavior
or as being caused by the problematic parenting of the targeted - rejected parent, this leads to incorrect and entirely ineffective
treatment, and the patient (i.e., the child's healthy development and the child's healthy loving relationship with a normal - range and affectionally available parent) dies as a direct consequence of the misdiagnosis by the mental health professional.