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Florida surgeon ‘devastated’ over death of patient after removing liver instead of spleen
(www.theguardian.com)
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And that’s basically it!
Apparently you should have failed your medical board exam. How TF did he pass it?
Reading the report that was posted last time this was discussed it was equally the fault of the hospital as it was the doctors. Apparently he had a bunch of botched surgeries before this one, he was sent to a Continuing Medical Education (CME) program where he failed his evaluation, and he was allowed to take it again after the hospital intervened and he came back to work.
The hospital had reporting systems that nurses and tech were supposed to use to report issues such as these, nobody did even though after they were interviewed they said they had concerns about that specific doctor such as him being late to scheduled operations and other issues. Some nurses stated that they would not bring family to the hospital if they knew that specific doctor was on rotation. The operation where he killed this guy also started late in the afternoon and the doctor didn't perform a splenectomy before this one.
The operation report was also quite surreal. Apparently they started the surgery laparoscopically but then the doctor decided to convert it into a normal surgery because he couldn't see properly. Once they opened the guy the nurses noticed that he had an enlarged colon that was blocking most of the surgical field and this was not mentioned in the post-op report even once. Then the doctor started cutting and caused a hemorrhage that made what visibility there was even worse. He continued the operation and removed what he called the spleen. Most of the operating tech immediately noticed it wasn't the spleen since even an enlarged spleen doesn't usually get over 800 grams. The thing he pulled out was almost 2 kilograms. Also apparently a different surgeon walked into the room and pointed at the organ on the table and asked what that is. The doctor said: "It's the spleen." to which the other surgeon retorted: "That's no fucking spleen" before storming out. Then they sent it to a pathologist which said that he didn't even need to put it under the microscope to see that it wasn't a spleen.
The coroner that did the autopsy of the dead man stated that the spleen was untouched in the place where it should be but the liver has been surgically resected with the surgeon cutting through the portal vein without any evidence of clamping.
Edit: Here is the report if anyone wants to look through it themselves.
https://zarzaurlaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/AHCA-Report-1.pdf
Retaliation is very real in the medical system.
I gave family in the medical industry. They frequently share how hospitals protect expensive doctors/specialists.
Yeah I did technical support for a hospital and everyone was terrified of pissing doctors off because you absolutely would be sided against if they complained about you. I can't imagine how much worse that situation is for the nurses that had to work with them every day.
why was the hospital protecting this guy so much? The fact that Nurses would prevent family members from going to the hospital if this guy was on rotation is telling. He must have a shit ton of info on board members or something.
Honestly no idea. This is his previous history with botched surgery, and the actions taken by the hospital, quoted from the report:
Quotes taken from: https://zarzaurlaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/AHCA-Report-1.pdf starting on page 19.
The only one here I can understand happening is bowel perforation. That can happen, so much so, that they generally waiver you for such things. But we don't know how bad it was and considering his shit surgical history, the patient dying from infection, Fuck this guy.
Because lawyers will now look into his history and the lawsuits will be huge.
Nah, this is normal in the medical world. You think the Thin Blue Line is bad, you should see doctors cover each other’s shit. It’s one of the reasons their insurance is so high.
and throw the nearest nurse under the bus.
This is just medicine
Firing a doctor they hired is a bad look for them, so they try to avoid it at all costs.
I hope they sue the hospital into the ground
I want to hear the nurses’ testimonies at the trial.
There are so many people who are good at their jobs and have imposter syndrome. If anyone should have it, it is probably this person.