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Recent Articles

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Doctors Operated on the Wrong Baby after Pre-Op Mix-up

February 12, 2016 By Angelina Stapp

"Doctors Operated on the Wrong Baby after Pre-Op Mix-up "

A family from Tennessee wants to file a lawsuit against the surgeons who performed unneeded surgery on their child.

BEACON TRANSCRIPT – No one said that a doctor’s life is in an easy one when you literally spend half your life in training and the other half catching up with the latest trends in disease. And, eventually, this tight schedule can take its toll on you. Perhaps it was fatigue or sheer carelessness, but the facts remain the same. The doctors operated on the wrong baby after pre-op mix-up.

A couple from Tennessee is on the verge of filed a full-fledged malpractice lawsuit against the doctors in charge of their son’s case. According to Jennifer Melton, Nate’s mother, and the child involved in this unfortunate case, she and her husband, Domonique Harper, brought in their son for a routine consultation. Little did they knew about what was about to happen.

According to the mother’s testimony, the day after Nate was born, the doctors decided to submit the type to major surgery. However, the procedure was meant for another child, one who was suffering from a congenital defect.

The procedure in question is called a frenectomy or tongue clipping. In some cases, the tissue connecting the mouth and the tongue (lingual frenulum) can be too tight. Usually, if this connective tissue is too tight, the child might have a problem eating and speaking. Furthermore, the birth defect could induce discomfort in mother while breastfeeding.

Basically, during this procedure, the lingual frenulum is either surgically removed or repositioned, as to offer the patient’s tongue a freer degree of movement. In most cases, the procedure is painless, and it can even be performed without the need for general anesthesia. For this end, the surgeons often employ the use of a high-powered laser, which is capable of making precise incisions.

But, in some cases, the doctors need to do some major reconstructions in order to correct the birth defect.

The doctors operated on the wrong baby after pre-op mix-up. Both parents cannot explain why their baby had to the subjected to this kind of surgical procedure, given the fact that the baby’s tongue was perfectly normal, thus not needing reconstructive surgery.

All the events in questions have transpired at the Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughter in Tennessee. Moreover, the enraged mother also declared that she and her husband had not been consulted on the procedure.

Presently, we cannot but speculate on the baby’s general conditions. However, concerning the mix-up mishap, it would seem that the hospital’s board will be questioned regarding the necessity of the surgical intervention.

Clint Kelly, the family’s lawyer, said that the conduct is inexcusable and that the guilty parties will face some severe charges.

Photo credits:www.wikipedia.org

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: couple from Tennessee, doctors, frenectomy, lawsuit, mix-up, OR, surgery, tongue clipping

Doctors Prefer to Die at Home

January 20, 2016 By Clayton Meason

"Doctors delivering a baby"

One of the studies show that 63% of doctors die in a hospital, as opposed to 72,4% of general population.

BEACON TRANSCRIPT – The latest study published in the JAMA journal of Medicine concluded that doctors prefer to die at home. It seems that the medical staff is far less inclined to resort to extreme medical procedures and prefers to spend the last days at home in peace, rather than in post-op care.

Doctors prefer to die at home, or at least 4 percent out of the general medical population. The study showed that the percentage of medically schooled patients that die in the hospital is 28 percent, as compared to the 32 percent of the normal population that do not have any connection to the medical field. Also, only 25 percent of doctors opt for surgery before dying, as opposed to 27 percent normal population. The numbers also differ when it comes to ICU admittance, doctors being present in the Intensive Care Unit in a total of 26 percent, and the general population 28 percent.

The numbers shouldn’t come as a shock, says Joel Weismann, the lead author of the cited study and deputy director and scientific officer in chief at the Boston’s Women Hospital and the Center of Public Health and Surgery at Brigham. The doctor explains that medical personnel has to deal with death on a daily basis and the perspective of facing one’s one death in the hospital is actually worse than dying. Most of the doctors prefer to die at home, surrounded by their loved ones.

Because of their profession, they know the odds better than any other patients would, they know how to make difficult decisions, to have a certain operation that could save their life, or end it. In most of the cases, they realize that the procedures they might undergo at the hospital would only prolong their imminent death, and thus make it, even more, painful so they chose to stay at home, or they refuse the extra surgery.

Another study that analyzed data from the Census Bureau of the United States came to the same conclusions as Dr. Weismann. It seems that out of a total of 411,243 patients, out of which 815 were medical doctors, and 2,635 had some sort of medical training and worked in the health profession, but were not doctors and 15.308 were people with a degree in higher education, physicians had the smallest percentage of deaths in the hospital.

According to the data that was published in JAMA, 63 percent of doctors died on hospital premises, followed by the second category, those who had medical knowledge, with 65.4 percent, people with higher education came to a total of 66 percent and the general population 72, 4 percent.

Both of studies showed evidence that doctors prefer to die at home. Maybe medical experience makes them more cynical, or maybe it brings them more to peace with the perspective.

Image source: www.wikimedia.org

Filed Under: Health Tagged With: deaths, doctors, doctors die at home, how doctors die, JAMA journal, survey

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