Doctors Interrupted: A Case for Interrupted Doctors during Shift
A current study of Australian professionals showed that the more doctors are interupted the more they become less focus with their task. With this, what is left is patients not taken care of 100 percent.
Over the first quarter of this year and some months of 2009, shortage in both nurses and doctors have been noted by numerous organizations including the American Medical Association and the National Nurses Association to have even expanded to irreversible level. But it had been constantly projected that the numbers will never stay on that kind of slope and will somehow, with great positivity, increase in the coming years as many nursing schools and the immigration system of the country will be producing nurses in medical scrubs. And it is also noted that many Americans are shifting from clerical office to work as nurses in hospitals. Not to mention the job that the new health care bill passed by Congress can make as the law can draw millions of Americans back to their most desired health care services.
Aside from the numbers declining, another study has been published through CNN Online about doctors. This time these professionals in medical scrubs are again on the hot seat but not because of its population but because of some issues concerning their effectiveness during duty. The study does not aim at criticizing the doctors