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Duke in the News: March 17, 2003

Anatomy of a Mistake | For Patients, Unpleasant Surprises in Arbitration | Organ-Donation Official: No Policy Violated, and more ...

By Blake Dickinson

Monday, March 17, 2003

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ANATOMY OF A MISTAKE
CBS News, March 17 -- As many as 100,000 people die every year from medical mistakes, yet most of the time, very few people ever know about it. That changed last month when Duke University Hospital transplanted a heart and two lungs into Jesica Santillan -- and admitted it had made a mistake. ... Full story

FOR PATIENTS, UNPLEASANT SURPRISES IN ARBITRATION
New York Times, March 16 -- More and more health care providers are pushing for binding arbitration -- in which an arbitrator or panel of arbitrators unconnected to a case hears arguments from both sides and renders a decision -- to reduce their costs. ... Full story

ORGAN-DONATION OFFICIAL: NO POLICY WAS VIOLATED
(Raleigh, N.C.) News & Observer, Mar. 17 -- Until the Jesica Santillan case, organ procurement agencies never considered it necessary to double-check behind doctors, said Lloyd H. Jordan Jr., executive director of Carolina Donor Services. ... Full story

GLITCHES RIDDLE DATABASE TO TRACK FOREIGN STUDENTS
Chicago Tribune, March 17 -- The computer system intended to track international students as part of the nation's stepped-up security routinely loses sensitive information about foreign students and faculty, according to university officials at Duke and throughout the country. ... Full story

SEGREGATED SCHOOLS STILL ENDURE IN PARTS OF SOUTH
Chicago Sun-Times, March 16 -- According to a Duke University study, private schools still serve as the primary vehicle for educational "white flight" in rural, predominantly black stretches of the South. ...Full story

WEARING GRIEF ON THEIR SLEEVES
St. Petersburg Times, March 15 '“ T-shirts commemorating the deaths of teen-agers are among the latest products in a cottage industry that profits from death, according to Duke professor Karla F.C. Holloway. ... Full story