cover image Unaccountable: 
What Hospitals Won’t Tell You and How Transparency Can Revolutionize Health Care

Unaccountable: What Hospitals Won’t Tell You and How Transparency Can Revolutionize Health Care

Marty Makary, M.D.. Bloomsbury, $28 (320p) ISBN 978-1-60819-836-8

We demand accountability from Wall Street and the White House, yet are shockingly reluctant to demand it from our hospitals, laments Makary, a Johns Hopkins surgeon and professor of health policy, in this urgent call for doctors and hospital administrators to ditch their dangerous culture of secrecy. Lifting the veil on the existing wealth of data from hundreds of hospitals’ rates of infections, surgical complications, and other negative patient outcomes, he argues that making those statistics public would force low performers to fix their problems and compete far more effectively rather than waste money on ad campaigns. Moreover, every patient should routinely be able to see a hospital’s re-admission rate; its surgical or treatment complication rates; its “never happen” events, like surgery on the wrong side of a patient; its safety-survey scores from its own workers; its volume of operations and treatments; and its programs to streamline access to patient records. For a noteworthy example, Makary dishes that one patient boasted that his surgeon operated on President Reagan—but had no clue Reagan suffered from complications caused by an improperly placed central-line for IV fluids and medication. This thought-provoking guide from a leader in the field is a must-read for M.D.s, and an eye-opener for the rest of us. Agent:Glen Hartley, Writer’s Representatives LLC. (Sept.)