More hospital horrors

when they have to come up with funds themselves.

being the operative (no pun intended) phrase.

meaning, in the vast majority of cases... they have shitty or no insurance...

or it's something medically unnecessary.

yeah. i hear they do great fanny lifts in juarez. gonz, you gonna get on that shit?
 
This one from Britain:

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,379821,00.html

Woman Dies After Ambulance Gets Lost Going to Hospital
Thursday, July 10, 2008

A 21-year-old English woman died after the ambulance taking her to the hospital got lost due to a faulty navigation system, the Daily Mail reported.

The paramedic attending to Kay Gadsby had to climb into the front seat to help the driver find the hospital, while the terrified 21-year-old repeatedly asked her mother, "I'm not going to die, am I," according to the report.

Gadsby's father, who was initially following the ambulance in his car, arrived at the hospital ahead of the wayward ambulance.

An ambulance was called to Gadsby's home in Mablethorpe, Lincolnshire after she collapsed. She has long suffered from organ failure and had a heart and kidney transplant 10 years ago. She had a second kidney transplant five years ago and was on a waiting list for a third kidney transplant.

The ambulance got lost on its way to the Diana Princess of Wales Hospital in Grimsby, about 30 miles from Gadsby’s house, because its navigation failed and the driver had only been to the hospital once before, Gadsby's parents told the Daily Mail.

"We have spoken to doctors and nobody can really say either way if Kay would have survived if they had not got lost," said Gadsby's father, Russell. "But the delay in getting her to hospital has made the situation worse."
 
So wait.....if you are a multiple transplant patient would you live 30 minutes away from the nearest hospital? I am thinking I would not.
 
Another one bites the dust.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,406281,00.html

Report: Hospital Patient Died After Being Left in Chair for 22 Hours

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

RALEIGH, N.C. — Investigators say a North Carolina mental patient died after nurses at a state mental hospital left him in a chair for 22 hours and failed to feed him or help him to the bathroom, a newspaper reported Tuesday.

Security video showed Steven H. Sabock, 50, as he died in April after he choked on medication at Cherry Hospital in Goldsboro and a nurse stood nearby without helping, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported.

The newspaper said the death was one reason federal officials said they might cut off funds for the facility. Hospital officials have about two weeks to develop an improvement plan and try to persuade federal officials to continue providing funds.

Video showed hospital staff watching television and playing cards while Sabock was in the same room. One technician hugged and kissed another staff member and appeared to be dancing.

Investigators said in a report released Monday that Sabock, who had lived in Roanoke Rapids, sat in a busy day room during four work shifts.

When technicians couldn't get him to walk to his bed, the video showed that they stood him and slid a chair under him before sliding him down the hall to his room. A few minutes later, the video showed a cart of emergency equipment being pushed down the hall.

The report said Sabock ate nothing on the day he died and had little food for three days before his death on April 29. Investigators said it appeared no one evaluated the patient's nutrition.

"The review revealed no nutritional consult was requested and revealed no evidence the physician was notified about the inadequate nutritional intake," the report said.

Sabock's father told the newspaper he wasn't allowed to see his son after he was admitted to Cherry Hospital.

"They said he was lying down and didn't feel like talking," said Nicholas Sabock, who lives in Virginia. "They wouldn't let me see him. I think he died that day."

Susan Sabock, the patient's wife, said the state sent her a letter saying there was negligence in her husband's care.

Cherry Hospital director Jack St. Clair couldn't be reached, the newspaper said.

But a state institutional administrator said last week the hospital knew about the problem before investigators arrived and was already working to correct it. Jim Osberg said he didn't know details of the hospital's response.

Federal investigators said the hospital's own investigation showed some information in Sabock's record was falsified.

Besides Sabock's case, investigators said the hospital didn't respond properly to a teenager with developmental disabilities who was punched by a doctor after he bit the physician.
 
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