SEDATED PATIENT INSULTED DURING SURGERY

shame
Anesthesiologist caught insulting sedated patient

“I wanted to punch you in the face,” doctor said, before joking the patient had syphilis and tuberculosis.

Sitting in his surgical gown inside a large medical suite, a Vienna, Virginia, man prepared for his colonoscopy by pressing record on his smartphone, to capture the instructions his doctor would give him after the procedure.

But as soon as he pressed play on his way home, he was shocked out of his anesthesia-induced stupor: He found that he had recorded the entire examination, and that the surgical team had mocked and insulted him as soon as he drifted off to sleep.

And in addition to their vicious commentary, the doctors discussed avoiding the man after the colonoscopy, instructing an assistant to lie to him, and then placed a false diagnosis on his chart.

“After five minutes of talking to you in pre-op,” the anesthesiologist told the sedated patient, “I wanted to punch you in the face and man you up a little bit,” she was recorded saying.

When a medical assistant noted the man had a rash, the anesthesiologist warned her not to touch it, saying she might get “some syphilis on your arm or something,” then added, “It’s probably tuberculosis in the penis, so you’ll be all right.”

When the assistant noted that the man reported getting queasy when watching a needle placed in his arm, the anesthesiologist remarked on the recording, “Well, why are you looking then, retard?”

There was much more. So the man sued the two doctors and their practices for defamation and medical malpractice and, last week, after a three-day trial, a Fairfax County, Virginia, jury ordered the anesthesiologist and her practice to pay him US$500,000 (NZ$728,000).

The plaintiff, identified in court papers only as “DB” wanted to maintain his anonymity and did not want to comment about the case, said his attorneys, Mikhael Charnoff and Scott Perry.

The anesthesiologist, Tiffany Ingham, 42, could not be reached for comment, and her attorney, Lee Rutland, did not return messages seeking comment. Ingham worked out of the Aisthesis anesthesia practice in Bethesda, Maryland, which the jury ruled should pay US$50,000 of the US$200,000 in punitive damages it awarded.

Officials there did not return a call seeking comment. Ingham no longer works there, an Aisthesis employee said, and state licensing records indicate she has moved to Florida. An anesthesiology practice in Tavares, Florida, said she no longer worked there. Calls to a number believed to be Ingham’s were not returned, and there was not an answering machine or voicemail at that number.
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On the opening day of the trial last week, the gastroenterologist who performed the colonoscopy, Soloman Shah, 48, was dismissed from the case. Court documents state Shah also made some insulting remarks – “As long as it’s not Ebola, you’re OK,” Shah was recorded saying during the rash discussion – and did not discourage Ingham from her comments or actions, which included writing on the man’s chart that he had hemorrhoids, when he did not.

Neither Shah, who did not return a message left at his office, nor the lawyers on either side would comment.

The lawyers also would not discuss whether Ingham or Shah faced disciplinary action from the Virginia Board of Medicine. No actions are listed against either on the board’s website.

The jury awarded the man US$100,000 for defamation – US$50,000 each for the comments about the man having syphilis and tuberculosis – and US$200,000 for medical malpractice, as well as the US$200,000 in punitive damages. Though the remarks by Ingham and Shah perhaps did not leave the operating room in Reston, experts in libel and slander said defamation does not have to be widely published, merely said by one party to another and understood by the second party to be fact, when it is not.

“I’ve never heard of a case like this,” said Lee Berlik, a Reston lawyer who specializes in defamation law. He said comments between doctors typically would be privileged, but the Vienna man claimed his recording showed there was at least one and as many as three other people in the room during the procedure, and that they were discussing matters beyond the scope of the colonoscopy.

“Usually, all [legal] publication requires is publication to someone other than the plaintiff,” Berlik said. “If one of the doctors said to someone else in the room that this guy had syphilis and tuberculosis, and that person believed it, that could be a claim. Then it’s up to the jury to decide, were the statements literal assertions of fact? The jury apparently was just so offended at this unprofessional behavior that they’re going to give the plaintiff a win. That’s what happens in the real world.”

One of the jurors, Farid Khairzada, said that “there was not much defense, because everything was on tape.” He said that the man’s attorneys asked for US$1.75 million and that the US$500,000 award was a compromise between one juror who felt the man deserved nothing and at least one who felt he deserved more.

“We finally came to a conclusion,” Khairzada said, “that we have to give him something, just to make sure that this doesn’t happen again.”

The colonoscopy took place in Shah’s surgical suite on April 18, 2013, according to the man’s lawsuit. While being prepped for the procedure, the man apparently told Ingham that he had passed out previously while having blood drawn and that he was taking medication for a mild rash on his genitals.

Because he was going to be fully anesthetized, the man decided to turn on his cellphone’s audio recorder before the procedure so it would be on to capture the doctor’s post-operation instructions, the suit states. But the man’s phone, in his pants, was placed beneath him under the operating table and inadvertently recorded the audio of the entire procedure, court records show. The doctors’ attorneys argued that the recording was illegal, but the man’s attorneys noted that Virginia is a “one-party consent” state, meaning only one person involved in a conversation need agree to the recording.

The recording captured Ingham mocking the amount of anesthetic needed to sedate the man, the lawsuit states, and Shah then commented that another doctor they both knew “would eat him for lunch.”

The discussion soon turned to the rash on the man’s penis, followed by the comments implying the man had syphilis or tuberculosis. The doctors then discussed “misleading and avoiding” the man after he awoke, and Shah reportedly told an assistant to convince the man that he had spoken with Shah and “you just don’t remember it.” Ingham suggested Shah receive an urgent “fake page” and said, “I’ve done the fake page before,” the complaint states. “Round and round we go. Wheel of annoying patients we go. Where it’ll land, nobody knows,” Ingham reportedly said.

Ingham then mocked the man for attending Mary Washington College, once an all-women’s school, and wondered aloud whether her patient was gay, the suit states. Then the anesthesiologist said, “I’m going to mark ‘hemorrhoids’ even though we don’t see them and probably won’t,” and did write a diagnosis of hemorrhoids on the man’s chart, which the lawsuit said was a falsification of medical records.

After declaring the patient a “big wimp,” Ingham reportedly said: “People are into their medical problems. They need to have medical problems.”

Shah replied, “I call it the Northern Virginia syndrome,” according to the suit.

The doctors argued that the Vienna man did not suffer any physical injury or miss any days of work. The man’s complaint said that he was “verbally brutalized” and suffered anxiety, embarrassment and loss of sleep for several months.

“These types of conversations,” testified Kathryn McGoldrick, former president of the Academy of Anesthesiology, “are not only offensive but frankly stupid because we can never be certain that our patients are asleep and wouldn’t have recall.”

– The Washington Post

0 thoughts on “SEDATED PATIENT INSULTED DURING SURGERY

    1. True, or tek it weh..a tell you bout these doctors and whoever them work with, some of them are horrible people, and make it bad for others in the profession..God help me, these ones are drancrows…a hope dem never get fi work nowhere else ever again.

    2. I don’t agree that her license should have be suspended, but they should have fined her a few millions more to teach her a lesson. Anesthesiology is one of the highest paid specialty in medicine, with Anesthesiologist making in excess of over $400K per year. The sad part, is very few of them actually give much Anesthesia these days and simply supervise Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA), since it is cheaper for them to supervise 4 CRNAs and get full reimbursement for 4 instead of 1. A CRNA averages about $150-175K, while doing all the work, while they make 2-3 times that and do nothing. Should have found her liable for $10 Million…hit her where it hurts the most, but not take away her livelihood and years of training.

      1. I dont think its a real big deal…unprofessional yes but it happened to me before…did surgery and heard the doctors talking about me in a sexual way…I guess its something that they do to keep them grounded

  1. I am sorry, but if as a purpose in that profession falsifying documents they should not be able to practice, that is just my opinion, if them doing this crap for something as “simple” as this, what the hell else dem doing? Dem fi lose the person fi lose di license fi dat…

  2. Sad to say, most of dem do it all di time. Under sedation patient may hear, but will seldom remember after. Dat fool got caught on tape…shoulda pay out more fi real.

  3. This is nothing new, i’m in the medical field and most of the surgical staff talks crap once the patients are sedated .

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