Sunday, August 30, 2009

ABILENE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER AND ABILENE REPORTER NEWS

I RECEIVED AN EMAIL FROM A LADY LIVING IN DALLAS, TEXAS WHO WAS VERY THANKFUL FOR THIS WEBSITE. SHE HAD HER OWN EXPERIENCES AT ABILENE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER AWHILE BACK WHICH SOUNDED ALL TOO FAMILIAR. IT IS A SHAME THIS HOSPITAL IS ALLOWED TO CONTINUE OPERATING WITH SUCH HORRIBLE STAFF AND PHYSICIANS.
ONE THING WE HAVE ACCOMPLISHED IS FORCING ONE PHYSICIAN TO LEAVE THIS AREA. DR. JOHN GULLETT PACKED UP AND LEFT SHORTLY AFTER HIS LIES AND OTHER PATHETIC BEHAVIOR WAS MADE PUBLIC. HOPEFULLY WE CAN FORCE THE OTHERS TO LEAVE IN THE FUTURE.
THE ABILENE REPORTER NEWS CONTINUES TO DISREGARD WHAT IS HAPPENING IN THEIR OWN BACKYARD WITH ABILENE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER. IT IS NO SECRET ARMC PAYS THE ARN ALOT OF MONEY FOR ADVERTISING SO IT IS UNDERSTANDABLE. AT LEAST ARN IS NOT GETTING ONE CENT FROM ME.
THANKS FOR ALL THE EMAILS OF ENCOURAGEMENT.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

IT HAPPENS MORE OFTEN THAN WE REALIZE





Crucial medical records 'concealed' after deaths at Texas hospital‏


http://www.khou.com/news/local/houstonmetro/stories/khou090504_mp_medical-records-missing.1d7cb82f.html
Comments 57 Recommend 60
Crucial medical records 'concealed' after deaths at local hospital
10:27 AM CDT on Tuesday, May 12, 2009
By Mark Greenblatt / 11 News Defenders
HOUSTON -- The death of a loved one is unbelievably hard to bear, especially when it is sudden and unexpected.
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It is perhaps even harder when the patient is in the hospital for a supposedly minor condition.
When something like this happens, the first place people often look is at the patient’s medical record. This is the official history of your health and treatment.
However, a three-month KHOU-TV investigation has found evidence of what may be a national problem when it comes to medical records. It seems that some nurses, doctors and administrators have concealed, faked and even destroyed these documents when trouble happens.
Linda Carswell says she knows all about it.
She claims she often wakes up in the middle of the night, trembling and alone. She thinks about her husband, Jerry, and the 33 years of romance and marriage they shared together.
“(I knew) after the first kiss, I guess,” Carswell said. “He was definitely a romantic.”
As a high school coach, Jerry Carswell helped mentor students and develop some of them into professional athletes, like NFL star Bert Emanuel, who would later call Carswell the “best coach ever.”
But one morning, things took an abrupt turn.
“He woke up and told me that something was wrong,” Carswell said.
The couple visited Christus St. Catherine Hospital for what seemed like a minor problem to them.
“They diagnosed it pretty quickly. It was a kidney stone,” Carswell said.
Jerry decided to stay at St. Catherine’s for a few days, hoping for the stone to pass. Eventually, he sent his wife home.
“(He said) there's no reason for you to stay here. I’ll be fine,” she said.
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Early the next morning, the phone rang. Linda says a representative from the hospital asked her to come there immediately because an emergency had developed.
Within minutes of her arrival, her life changed forever.
“The nurse looked at me and said, ‘your husband is dead.’ Just like that,” Carswell recalls. “I said, ‘What? What happened? What happened?’”
Rickey Dorriety says he is asking the same question now.
His wife of more than 30 years, Melissa, checked into Christus St. Catherine for diabetes problems. He says he, too, saw no signs to make him worry.
“We were told Melissa was going home the next morning,” Dorriety said.
The next morning, he and his son stopped at the bagel store so they could deliver breakfast to Melissa.
When they walked into her room, Dorriety says he and his son discovered something horrible.
“I said, ‘Come on, wake up sleepy head.’ And nothing happened. She had a tear running out of her right eye,” Dorriety said.
Soon after, Melissa Dorriety died.
“She won't be able to hold her future grandson,” Dorriety said. “That...that hurts so bad.”
Dorriety filed a lawsuit against Christus St. Catherine to look for answers. But after his attorney subpoenaed for Melissa’s medical documents, Dorriety's attorney claims an important document came up missing.
It was the nurse’s worksheet showing Melissa’s condition, including the original medical notes made about her.
Nearly one year later, after KHOU-TV contacted Christus St. Catherine to ask about both the case and the missing document, the missing worksheet finally showed up.
“It’s a hospital system that apparently thinks they can get away from being held accountable,” Dorriety’s attorney Jim Perdue said. “That may be one thing in an isolated legal case, but not when you see it happening again and again and again.”
There is also the case of Sharon Rogers.
After she died at Christus St. Catherine, a malpractice suit was filed. But a section of her vital sign records during critical hours of her care could not be found.
We asked Pat Iyer, a former nurse and an expert consultant on medical records, about the cases. She says the hospital should know to preserve and maintain all medical related documents after an unexpected death.
“That information should be saved for future use and looked at,” Iyer said.
KHOU also found evidence of similar accusations regarding various hospitals around the country. These hospitals have no affiliation of any kind to the Christus organization.

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In one landmark case, a surgeon in New Jersey removed the wrong lung from a patient. He then changed the medical record afterwards, so it appeared he had in fact taken out the correct lung.
In fact, New Jersey has criminalized altering or destroying medical records, but in Texas, there is no such law.
KHOU also discovered the Texas Department of Health could not find a record of investigating a single allegation related to concealing or tampering with medical records at any hospital in the state.
The Department of Health declined an on camera interview with KHOU to explain more, but did write this in an email: “We have not had any formal regulatory investigations about that topic in recent history.”
It makes Linda Carswell feel like the system is set up to protect hospitals, not patients.
“I knew something had happened that they weren't telling me,” she said about the hospital.
She also says she wanted the public medical examiner to do an autopsy on her husband’s body, but was told by the hospital that the medical examiner declined her request.
“I believe Harris County would have done the kind autopsy that would have looked for reasons for his death,” Carswell said.
Carswell agreed to let Christus have another hospital do the exam instead, but she says later she discovered that other hospital was also owned by Christus. She also didn’t get a complete autopsy like she wanted.
She also claims that a sample of her husband’s body fluids disappeared, after she says she asked for them to be saved. She says they were fluids which could have been tested.
Next, she says she learned that Harris County officials could not find any record of Christus ever calling them to perform her husband’s autopsy.
The worst news, though, came nearly two years after Jerry had been buried.
“They had kept, secretly, Jerry’s heart,” Carswell says.
After Carswell filed suit, under sworn questions, the autopsy doctors said they had removed her husband’s heart and stored it in a container.
But when the questioning turned to who knew about the decision to remove the heart, the doctor admitted that they didn’t tell Carswell they were taking out the organ.
“I don't recall telling anyone,” said the doctor.
Recently, a judge issued a rare $250,000 sanction against Christus St. Catherine’s, ruling that the hospital “improperly concealed the heart tissue of Jerry Carswell in a Christus pathology laboratory.”
The sanction further said the hospital also concealed blood samples, and determined that Linda Carswell’s case against the hospital had been “severely prejudiced” due to the “improper concealment of critical physical evidence.”
The Christus health organization and its attorney declined an on-the-record interview with KHOU-TV, but did give this statement:
“We are deeply saddened whenever a family loses a loved one to disease and illness. Our hospital is committed to fulfilling our mission and serving our community by providing high quality, compassionate health care to our patients. While we wish we could fully respond, we think it best to handle such delicate, complex matters in an appropriate venue where the facts and full context can be carefully deliberated.”
WATCH THE VIDEO:
http://www.khou.com/video/index.html?nvid=358311
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http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl?id=2009_4686410
Houston Chronicle Tue 01/06/2009
Sanctions against Katy hospital upheld / Wife of coach suing over how his body was treated after his deathBy BRIAN ROGERSStaff
Almost five years after the death of a former state champion track coach, an appeals court has upheld a Harris County judge's $250,000 sanction against the Katy hospital where he was admitted for treatment of kidney stones.
The judge fined Christus St. Catherine Hospital, saying officials there withheld evidence in a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of Jerry Carswell. Attorneys of the family also have accused the hospital of hiding Carwell's heart.
Houston's 1st Court of Appeals upheld the sanctions last week. The hospital could appeal the ruling to the Texas Supreme Court.
Christa Clifton, a spokeswoman for Christus St. Catherine, declined to comment on the matter because it remains in litigation.
Attorneys for the hospital did not return calls from the Houston Chronicle on Monday.
Carswell, whose Langham Creek High School team won the state title in 1997, died Jan. 22, 2004, at age 61.
He was in the hospital for two nights for treatment of kidney stones but died after being injected with narcotics, according to court documents.
"He was supposed to come home that morning," said his widow, Linda Carswell.
She is suing for wrongful death and breach of contract in connection with how her husband was treated after his death, said her attorney, Carl Shaw.
Although Texas law caps a wrongful death lawsuit at $250,000, Carswell could be awarded millions if jurors want to punish the hospital for breach of contract, Shaw said.
Carswell said the most difficult part of the case was discovering 18 months after filing suit that her husband had been buried without his heart.
"I've been shocked at the lengths a hospital will go to to cover up a death that is their fault," Carswell said. "Hospitals are institutes that we trust. To see what has been done here, the complete lack of care, has been devastating."
Shaw said the heart was removed during an autopsy at another Christus hospital. He said he expected hospital experts to tell jurors that Carswell died from heart problems, "even though he never had any problems with his heart before."
The heart has yet to be returned to Carswell.

About Me

Abilene, Texas, United States
My name is Gary Reed and I live in Abilene, Texas. In 2007, my mother was in Abilene Regional Medical Center. She and her family had repeatedly instructed the physicians and hospital staff NOT to give a specific drug (procrit)to her as it was the cause of her being there in the first place. However, she was injected with the drug again, sent to CCU, and never recovered. Since then, I have met with numerous other families who have reported similiar experiences with Abilene Regional Medical Center. For one year, I have attempted to dicuss this with ARMC staff and physicians and they have refused. I have also spoken with the attorney for the hospital in Houston, Texas. He admitted there were problems at the hospital and they would be contacting me soon to discuss these issues. It never happened. I will share as much information as possible here. Some I will not share at this time. If you or someone you know has experienced problems with this hospital, please contact me at: gnr99a@hotmail.com