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Editor
Not reading and signing letters you have dictated is dangerous
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
This article originally appeared in BMJ USA
EDITOR
For some time I have been unhappy at the number of letters that
I receive unsigned, usually from fellow consultants but more recently
also from general practitioners. After the warm best wishes at the end
of the letter they usually state "Dictated but sent unsigned to avoid
delay"; as we both know, this is almost always totally untrue.
I know many consultants who virtually never sign their letters and, worryingly, never read them after dictating them. To add insult to injury, I recently saw a copy of a letter from a consultant to a general practitioner, unsigned and from the mistakes obviously unread, in which he had the cheek to encourage the general practitioner to send patients for assessment at the private hospital where he worked.
Last year I returned from having spent one month in the United States;
there was
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+