Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities

One of the most important ironies of modern health care is that public expectations are rising faster than the ability og health services to meet them. Patients nowadays no longer want to be treated as passive recipients of medical care. Instead, they want to be treated as co-producers or partners a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jahn Kassim, Puteri Nemie
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/26350/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/26350/1/Reducing_Medical_Complaints.pdf
id iium-26350
recordtype eprints
spelling iium-263502012-11-21T05:27:22Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/26350/ Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities Jahn Kassim, Puteri Nemie K Law (General) One of the most important ironies of modern health care is that public expectations are rising faster than the ability og health services to meet them. Patients nowadays no longer want to be treated as passive recipients of medical care. Instead, they want to be treated as co-producers or partners able to manage their illnesses. Thus, it is not surprising that poor communication and failure to take into account patient's perspective are at the heart of most formal complaints and legal actions in Malaysia. The diffuculties of existing complaint procedures in Malaysia have become manifest over the years and this have been accentuated by patients becoming more willing to challenge the decisions of medical practitioners and health service management in court. To reduce the number of complaints and risk of litigation, a more patient centred approach should be adopted. When patients voice their concern by making a complaint or inquiry, this should be seen as a unique source of information for health care services on why adverse events occur and how to prevent them. As well as reducing future harm to patients, better management of complaints should restore trust and reduce the risk of litigation, through open communication and a commitment to learn from the problem. The existing procedures for patients to be heard in Malaysia should be reviewed and incorporate features such as responsiveness, accessibility, impartiality, simplicity, speed and accountability. 2007 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/26350/1/Reducing_Medical_Complaints.pdf Jahn Kassim, Puteri Nemie (2007) Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities. In: The 4th Asian Law Institute (ASLI) Conference "Voice from asia for a just and equitable world", 24-25 May 2007, Depok, Indonesia.
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
topic K Law (General)
spellingShingle K Law (General)
Jahn Kassim, Puteri Nemie
Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities
description One of the most important ironies of modern health care is that public expectations are rising faster than the ability og health services to meet them. Patients nowadays no longer want to be treated as passive recipients of medical care. Instead, they want to be treated as co-producers or partners able to manage their illnesses. Thus, it is not surprising that poor communication and failure to take into account patient's perspective are at the heart of most formal complaints and legal actions in Malaysia. The diffuculties of existing complaint procedures in Malaysia have become manifest over the years and this have been accentuated by patients becoming more willing to challenge the decisions of medical practitioners and health service management in court. To reduce the number of complaints and risk of litigation, a more patient centred approach should be adopted. When patients voice their concern by making a complaint or inquiry, this should be seen as a unique source of information for health care services on why adverse events occur and how to prevent them. As well as reducing future harm to patients, better management of complaints should restore trust and reduce the risk of litigation, through open communication and a commitment to learn from the problem. The existing procedures for patients to be heard in Malaysia should be reviewed and incorporate features such as responsiveness, accessibility, impartiality, simplicity, speed and accountability.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Jahn Kassim, Puteri Nemie
author_facet Jahn Kassim, Puteri Nemie
author_sort Jahn Kassim, Puteri Nemie
title Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities
title_short Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities
title_full Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities
title_fullStr Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities
title_full_unstemmed Reducing medical complaints and ligitation in Malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities
title_sort reducing medical complaints and ligitation in malaysia: turning patients' voices into opportunities
publishDate 2007
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/26350/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/26350/1/Reducing_Medical_Complaints.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T20:39:16Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T20:39:16Z
_version_ 1777409255789297664