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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090422/ap_on_fe_st/odd_accidental_appendectomy
I wonder if he was a resident???
I wonder if he was a resident???
Have any of you actually ever seen an appendix? It's not always easily identifiable like a liver, heart, or kidney and can look pretty different in different people. I can see where a surgeon might mistake a piece of fatty tissue for the appendix. Though I can also understand why the patient would be pissed about two surgeries and the additional hospitalization.
You do realize that we said the same thing that you did, right?
with that said, if you were the patient or a family member....
Oh I'm sorry, was that copyright infringment? 🙄 Move along.
And you do realize a person can start typing a response and then take a phone call only to return later to finish the response.
Oh I'm sorry, was that copyright infringment? 🙄 Move along.
And you do realize a person can start typing a response and then take a phone call only to return later to finish the response.
Oh I'm sorry, was that copyright infringment? 🙄 Move along.
And you do realize a person can start typing a response and then take a phone call only to return later to finish the response.
In other news apparenlty doctors are human, my god they even make mistakes!!
Maybe that would make too much sense. Then again a rush might take more time than is needed to close the patient, anyway.That doctor's gotta be really embarrassed.
Maybe they should rush the pathology on appendectomies if they're really that hard to do right?
If I was the doctor, I would be so embarrassed.
As for those of you saying the person and family should be pissed, give me a break. No family without ulterior motives is going to be angry, they should understand.
Looking at it from the doctor's side, of course it's easy to say all doctors mistakes. Can't be perfect.
Looking at it from the patient's side, he/she has every right to be pissed and will probably sue. The person went home after the first surgery, had additional pain, the unremoved appendix ruptured (which can be life-threatening), had to undergo a second surgery, and was hospitalized for 11 days. If that was your mom, dad, or family member you wouldn't be very happy.
A simple sorry doesn't cut it. The surgeon is human and did his job the best he could, but the hospital needs better measures to prevent these inaccuracies especially in procedures like this.
You have no clue what you are talking about. So now every hospital should be forced to have a fully functional Path department that can take stats immediately? If you want that kind of care that is on you my friend. Do not blame the surgeon for your poor choice of locations/facilities. You seem to assume all places are going to have infinite monies/utilities, that will never be the case.
Don't worry about it. He got banned.
It's always funny when the media reports some completely run-of-the-mill medical story like it's breaking news, when every single person in the medical profession is reading it thinking to themselves "uh.... yeah?" The local paper ran a story a few months back about a horrible disease called "sepsis" that was running rampant in hospitals. OMG.
Maybe they should rush the pathology on appendectomies if they're really that hard to do right?
They can sue, but they'll lose. Nobody died. No one suffered permanent disability. Bad things happen, especially when you're really sick. The patient can be unhappy, but they're not gonna get rich.Looking at it from the patient's side, he/she has every right to be pissed and will probably sue. The person went home after the first surgery, had additional pain, the unremoved appendix ruptured (which can be life-threatening), had to undergo a second surgery, and was hospitalized for 11 days. If that was your mom, dad, or family member you wouldn't be very happy that their health was jeopardized by something that was preventable.
Ugh, saw that once. She had 7 C-sections, a few incisional hernia repairs, and a few other hernias here and there, and she presented to the ED with an ?abscess/?cellulitis. The CT scan was mortifying.After 58 autopsies I have learned not to be too hasty in judging the apparent screwups of my colleagues. Sure, there are royal screwups, but more frequently there are extenuating circumstances. For all we know this patient had eight C-sections and her abdomen was a festival of adhesions.
(yes, I know he was banned)
As for those of you saying the person and family should be pissed, give me a break. This case is unfortunate no doubt, but to demand perfection in all things medical at all times is the worst part of being a doctor. No family without ulterior motives is going to be angry, they should understand.
I'm pretty sure they aren't billed for a follow up.What about when they get the bill for the second surgery?
Yeah, no kidding, which is exactly why fairly routine events shouldn't be sensationalized. Nobody is going to write a sensible, calm story on sepsis. They're going to write the kind of story that has my mom calling me in a panic, asking if we've been seeing any of that sepsis stuff in my hospital. And they're going to make the surgeon who needed two tries to get the appendix look like an incompetent doofus who just made an unthinkable, bizarre screw-up.Media reports aren't directed at doctors or those in hte medical profession. They're directed at the general public, many of whom are naive about these things.
If this is the person's once-in-a-lifetime f-up, then they are going to enjoy the most spectacular surgical career in the history of cuttin' folks open.also, would a once in a life time f-up like this end the doc's career?
As for those of you saying the person and family should be pissed, give me a break. This case is unfortunate no doubt, but to demand perfection in all things medical at all times is the worst part of being a doctor. No family without ulterior motives is going to be angry, they should understand.
Yeah, no kidding, which is exactly why fairly routine events shouldn't be sensationalized. Nobody is going to write a sensible, calm story on sepsis. They're going to write the kind of story that has my mom calling me in a panic, asking if we've been seeing any of that sepsis stuff in my hospital. And they're going to make the surgeon who needed two tries to get the appendix look like an incompetent doofus who just made an unthinkable, bizarre screw-up.
We're a bunch of relatively well informed pre-meds, med students, and residents and we can't even see eye to eye on physician responsibility and patient advocacy.That's the biggest bunch of bull**** I've read here in a while. If it was my loved one, you bet your ass I'd be pissed about the extra pain and suffering he/she endured because of a doctor's screw-up. Are doctors perfect? No, of course not, and this shouldn't end a career or anything crazy like that, but the fact is that the doctor made a mistake that resulted in a second surgery PLUS complications for his patient. I think the patient and his/her family have every right to be pissed.
So are you actually trying to say that you do not care if the media paints certain events as being more frequent, significant, worrisome, dangerous, etc. than they actually are, so long as in some manner they give the public a vague, or even completely misleading, idea of what is going on? That's awesome.The media isn't there to get your permission to report stories. Yeah, they sensationalize, but they report what's going on. If your mom calls you in a panic, that's a personal problem. Like it or not, this surgeon made a doofus mistake. Is he a doofus? Nope, but he made a doofus mistake and whoever leaked it to the media holds the bag. The media only reported it. They didn't make it happen.
I've been through an anatomy course (granted it was in 2003) and when I saw a radical prostetectomy a couple of week back I confused chunks visceral fat with getting a peak of intestines. Sounds ridiculous, but it really is much harder to figure out what is what when there is blood, fat, and all other sorts of connective tissue all over the place. lolHow many appys have you actually observed? Do you realize that each organ isn't nicely labeled inside the abdomen? Locating landmarks is sometimes difficult in patients and it's not unheard of to have difficulties identifying things...it doesn't make that doctor incompetent, just human.
So are you actually trying to say that you do not care if the media paints certain events as being more frequent, significant, worrisome, dangerous, etc. than they actually are, so long as in some manner they give the public a vague, or even completely misleading, idea of what is going on? That's awesome.
So in the thousands of appendectomies performed annually there's one reported F-up and the solution is to staff frozen sections labs nationwide with 24/7 pathologists.
Sorry, that's just not a very wise use of resources.
After 58 autopsies I have learned not to be too hasty in judging the apparent screwups of my colleagues. Sure, there are royal screwups, but more frequently there are extenuating circumstances. For all we know this patient had eight C-sections and her abdomen was a festival of adhesions.
After the appendix was removed, could the surgeon have examined it to confirm it was the right structure? I've never seen an actual appendix, but I know it's a little pouch of intestinal wall tissue. It seems like it should be possible to figure out what you've removed before closing up the patient.
When's the last time YOU processed a frozen section?C'mon dude, when's the last time you weren't called in for a frozen on an appendicitis case at 2 AM? FFP and platelet requests be damned, we've got an appendectomy to do frozens on!
When's the last time YOU processed a frozen section?
I was reading through your post history and the path forum is HARSH. I thought that pre-meds were an obnoxious bunch.Approximately 3 weeks ago when I was on surgical pathology and an OMFS surgeon sent up 10 separate margins on a SCC of the retromolar trigone of a patient who was undergoing mandibulectomy and right neck dissection.
Or maybe it was earlier that day when I did about 4 or 5 neuro frozens to determine if something was met vs glioma vs lymphoma...
Oh yeah, I've done about two years worth of frozen sections.
EDIT: no worries.
I was reading through your post history and the path forum is HARSH. I thought that pre-meds were an obnoxious bunch.
If I was the doctor, I would be so embarrassed.
That's the biggest bunch of bull**** I've read here in a while. If it was my loved one, you bet your ass I'd be pissed about the extra pain and suffering he/she endured because of a doctor's screw-up. Are doctors perfect? No, of course not, and this shouldn't end a career or anything crazy like that, but the fact is that the doctor made a mistake that resulted in a second surgery PLUS complications for his patient. I think the patient and his/her family have every right to be pissed.
Really? The biggest bunch of bull**** huh? I would like the exact reason why you are pissed. The guy just got really unlucky, nothing else can be said. Doc did nothing wrong that we are aware of and the article makes no mention of lawsuit. So please enlighten us as to why you are furious? Other than at yourself for assuming everything would always be perfect in the world of you and yours.