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duplicate, server screwy
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No, the poster I was replying to was banned. And no, this shouldn't even come close to ending a career.do you mean the doc was fired? is fired the same as banned?
also, would a once in a life time f-up like this end the doc's career?
Then in turn, the surgeon should get a chance at being pissed off at the patient for having such a difficult abdomen, right? It's the patient's fault for having all those adhesions and that inflammation, right? I'm almost certain that this wasn't a virgin abdomen with clean anatomy.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.
Uh, how about this one? Yeah, they're technically reporting what happened, but with absolutely no context whatsoever. 100% of lay people reading this are going to think the surgeon is a d-bag, with no further info at their disposal. That is not responsible reporting. When the fundamental interpretation of a story is dependent upon context, you need to supply some context. The local paper could write a different story about every single person who has ever died in my hospital and, with selective reporting, give the impression that every single one was an f-up. "25-year-old man admitted for a routine cholecystectomy, and was planning on going home the next day. Instead, he leaves the hospital in a body bag." This happened a couple weeks ago. Sounds horrible. It's also about 1% of the story, in a case where nobody, including the family, thinks that anything untoward occurred. For that matter, nowhere in that brief story about the Minnesota surgeon is there any indication that the patient even complained about this. I agree he probably did (and another article confirms it, although it doesn't appear the physician was sued thank God), but you just assume it based on the limited info you have. We know a small fraction of this story. The difference is that I realize I know a small fraction of the story and am not about to pass any judgment, whereas you seem to feel satisfied that you know exactly what is going on.Show me one media report that reported cases of sepsis or a medical screw-up inaccurately, painting them as being more frequent, significant, worrisome, or dangerous.
I don't know guys, but if he was operating on my family member, I'd be pissed if he didn't get it right the first time. You've all been pissed off for far less so quit polishing that halo you've implanted on your head and admit the surgeon screwed up.
The complication rate for appendectomies is as high as 18%, with wound infections and intrabdominal abscess formation (not a pretty thing) being the most common.
Accepting this data, would your suppositon be that 18% of appendectomies are "screwed up"?
Um, I said why in my post -- the pain and suffering of a second operation and the complications that came with it. Like it or not, the doctor made a mistake that caused additional pain and suffering for this patient. No one is saying he should be fired, but don't say the family has no right to be pissed.
Whatever he took out presumably at least had a passing resemblance to an appendix, might have fooled lots of people. Just might fool you someday.
Man, sacrament, are you the surgeon in question or something? The issue was brought up and we're all giving our opinions. It's not like someone's hanging the surgeon by his balls. Chill out.
It's just been an extremely quiet shift and I've got nothing better to do.Man, sacrament, are you the surgeon in question or something? The issue was brought up and we're all giving our opinions. It's not like someone's hanging the surgeon by his balls. Chill out.
The ones that are the result of a surgeon's error, yeah. Obviously, sometimes you can do everything right and the patient can still get an infection or something could still go wrong. But in this case, it was a surgeon's error that caused the need for the second operation. He made a mistake. He's human. It shouldn't affect his future career. I'm just saying that some of you act like anyone who dares to say the surgeon made a mistake is an idiot or is anti-doctors or some such nonsense. All we're saying is that it was a medical error and if it was my family member, I'd be angry about it. What's the crime in what I've said?
YYou cannot be mad at the doctor, he made no errors.
Wrong. He made no errors, he made a mistake, big difference. Errors get you sued, the hospital found none of those.
Oh, so the doctor meant to take out fat instead of the appendix? LOL
er-ror
-noun
a deviation from accuracy or correctness; a mistake
Oh and here I thought were were talkign about medicine:
Medical error is an inaccurate or incomplete diagnosis and/or treatment of a disease; injury; syndrome; behavior; infection or other ailment.
I'm gonna go ahead and quote what you posted originally, before you edited it to say something more conducive to your claim:
You wouldn't consider removing fat instead of the appendix an inaccurate treatment? You can argue the semantics here, but you're twisting yourself into a pretzel. Kind of amusing, actually.
Only changed the quote because of the links in the definition, it's basically the same.
I admit you can also have errors without suing, my point was for someone to be angry I would think they consider legal action. And you are not going to sue unless they find a legitimate error made, which as I have said before, they did not.
Just because a person's angry doesn't mean they're going to sue. Do you sue every person you get pissed at?
Just because a person's angry doesn't mean they're going to sue. Do you sue every person you get pissed at?
More of you need to read this part right here. This is your pathologist speaking.I have grossed perhaps a couple hundred appendixes (appendices?) in the past four years, from all age groups. Most of them are easily recognizable, but I have received a few specimens that were extremely inflammed, adhesed, and distorted to the point of being virtually unrecognizable. The amount of attached fat is also highly variable, with some being almost completely encased. Only upon serial sectioning could I surmise the orientation of the appendix within the fat and determine the proximal margin.