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Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby skyflyz » Wed Jun 04, 2014 8:47 pm

Parador, I completely agree. Of course I don't work in a doctor's office and hardly go to my doctor's office, but I can tell you I absolutely would not tolerate it at all if I was in charge.

I never went back to that hairdresser's after seeing them in back making fun of one of the customers.

It's really about respect.. if you don't respect your patients how can you treat them well? I say that you can't.

OTOH, humor is fine. When my mother was dying and slept all the time, the nurse said to her (in front of me) "why are you sleeping so much.. too much party?" I didn't mind that, as things were so grim and some humor was fine. There was still respect there.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Rigning » Wed Jun 04, 2014 9:25 pm

I'm interested in knowing how he smuggled a cell phone in to the operating room. And if the story is true, why I can only find the story listed under "odd" or "gossip" news. I don't know what kind of procedures they do in the U.S., but where I live, you're moved from a waiting room with nothing but a thin blanket to cover your front, to a small room in which you undress completely before you go in to the operating room. So unless he hid that cell phone up his rectum, which I think is a bit inconvenient given the circumstances, I can't see how he did it.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Parador » Fri Jun 06, 2014 8:55 pm

Rigning wrote:I'm interested in knowing how he smuggled a cell phone in to the operating room. And if the story is true, why I can only find the story listed under "odd" or "gossip" news. I don't know what kind of procedures they do in the U.S., but where I live, you're moved from a waiting room with nothing but a thin blanket to cover your front, to a small room in which you undress completely before you go in to the operating room. So unless he hid that cell phone up his rectum, which I think is a bit inconvenient given the circumstances, I can't see how he did it.

We will probably never know. It will probably get settled out of court. It does seem like the guy probably left his recorder on purposely. I just had surgery and they put me under even though it wasn't necessary. They made me take all my clothes off but I could have probably smuggled a recorder in.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Cirvante » Sun Jun 08, 2014 11:43 am

Parador wrote:UR back. I worked in a psych hospital for years and I saw staff mock patients. I didn't - very often. When I realized I was doing it I stopped. That kind of thing was noted by the inspectors who decertified the place. Once you start to dehumanize the patient it makes it easier to mistreat them and patient care suffers. Mocking patients at work should not be tolerated.


I mostly agree, except in the case of surgeons. In their case dehumanizing their patients might actually allow them to provide better treatment. It all depends on the circumstances though.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Parador » Thu Jul 24, 2014 12:08 am

Here's another one. What a freaking weirdo.

Hospital Agrees to Pay $190 Million Over Recording of Pelvic Exams

The doctor wore an unusual pen around his neck. It was really a concealed camera, and for years he secretly recorded women at some of their most private moments, during pelvic exams.

On Monday, Johns Hopkins Hospital agreed to pay $190 million to more than 7,000 women for the gross violation of doctor-patient trust in what experts said was one of the largest medical malpractice cases of its kind.

Dr. Nikita A. Levy, a gynecologist and obstetrician for Johns Hopkins Community Medicine in Baltimore, was fired in February 2013 after a female colleague reported her suspicions of his penlike device. Ten days later, he committed suicide.

Investigations by the police and the F.B.I. ended without criminal charges being filed, concluding that Dr. Levy had not shared the more than 1,000 videos and images he had stored on computers at his home.

But a class-action lawsuit against the hospital accused Dr. Levy of “harmful and offensive sexual” contact with patients. Jonathan Schochor, a lawyer for the patients, said women were devastated to learn of the filming.

“They feel an extreme breach of faith, breach of trust and betrayal,” he said. Many former patients “have dropped out of the medical system,” he said, adding that they now refuse to see doctors or take their children to pediatricians out of mistrust.

The civil suit charged the hospital with invasion of privacy, emotional distress and negligence in its oversight of Dr. Levy, who practiced in a community clinic in East Baltimore run by the giant hospital system.

In a statement on Monday, the hospital said it hoped that the settlement, along with law enforcement findings that the images were not shared, “helps those affected achieve a measure of closure.”

The statement from the hospital, one of the nation’s leading academic centers of medicine and a large community health care provider, added: “We assure you that one individual does not define Johns Hopkins. Johns Hopkins is defined by the tens of thousands of employees who come to work determined to provide world-class care for our patients and their families.”

Initially, the hospital identified nearly 12,700 patients Dr. Levy might have seen in his 25 years as an employee. Investigators estimated that he began recording patients with tiny cameras hidden in a pen or a key fob around 2005.

“Words cannot describe how deeply sorry we are for all this has affected,” two top officials of Johns Hopkins wrote to former patients last year. “We are terribly sorry this has happened and for the distress you must be feeling.”

After Dr. Levy’s colleague reported him, hospital security officers confronted him in his office, and he turned over several cameras. A hospital statement at the time said that he was told to seek counseling and was escorted off the premises. Johns Hopkins contacted the Baltimore police and fired the doctor on Feb. 8, 2013.

Although law enforcement agencies concluded that Dr. Levy had not uploaded any of the images online or shared them with others, Mr. Schochor is not so sure. He cited retired F.B.I. experts whom he hired as consultants for the lawsuit. “I think there’s overwhelming probability” that Dr. Levy shared images, Mr. Schochor said.

His law firm, Schochor, Federico & Staton, which specializes in medical malpractice, interviewed about 2,000 former patients. He said many of the women described disturbances in work and their personal lives after learning of the recordings.

“There’s been a huge, devastating result to this whole thing,” Mr. Schochor said. “Many have had changes in their ability to focus, problems with sleeplessness. Some have had changes in their relationships with spouses and significant others.”

James A. Wells, the chairman of a medicine and law committee for the American Bar Association, said $190 million was “a very large number for the settlement of medical malpractice claims involving a single physician.”

Other cases involving doctors who secretly recorded patients have also drawn big payouts, though somewhat less than the Hopkins settlement. The case of an endocrinologist in Connecticut who took nude pictures and abused a series of children, for example, was settled for about $50 million in 2012.

If the Hopkins settlement receives final approval by the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, each plaintiff will be reviewed individually to determine their share of the damages, including being interviewed and having their medical records examined.

As for the lawyer’s share, Mr. Schochor said that was up to the court to decide.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Priscilla13 » Fri Jul 25, 2014 1:00 am

From Paradore's post:

Ten days later, he committed suicide.


My first reaction was, "Good!" But then I think he took the easy way out and didn't fully pay for what he did to them.

You are right..total freaking weirdo.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Parador » Wed Jun 24, 2015 9:11 pm

They finally completed the lawsuit and the guy got $500,000. The doc who falsified the chart should be banned from practicing medicine. But the board did NOTHING to her apparently. Figures.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/ane ... story.html
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby FishPaste » Thu Jun 25, 2015 1:32 pm

I am a big beleiver in the unconscious mind and I am thinking that having people say all of those horrible things about you while you are anaesthetised could make a big impression, like sort of subliminal messages. I don´t like it at all. They could joke about each other or someone else if they need to have a joke.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Nothinglasts » Wed Jul 29, 2015 1:47 am

Many years ago I was assaulted on the operating table by a sadistic agency nurse who grabbed my dick, two seconds after waking up from general anaesthetic for a nose job. I'd been under for 6 hours. The other operating staff who were all gathered round the table rushed out the room and left me with the sadistic nurse. I then screamed and passed out as he verbally abused me in the "recovery room". I seriously regret not suing over it but at the time I had a lot of $#%^ to deal with.
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Re: Doctors mocked an unconscious colonoscopy patient

Postby Parador » Wed Jul 29, 2015 12:58 pm

Nothinglasts wrote:Many years ago I was assaulted on the operating table by a sadistic agency nurse who grabbed my dick, two seconds after waking up from general anaesthetic for a nose job. I'd been under for 6 hours. The other operating staff who were all gathered round the table rushed out the room and left me with the sadistic nurse. I then screamed and passed out as he verbally abused me in the "recovery room". I seriously regret not suing over it but at the time I had a lot of $#%^ to deal with.
You wouldn't have been able to sue anyway. No one would have verified what happened and you didn't have it on tape. And they presumable didn't falsify your medical records. I got butchered by a dentist back in 2005 - he even falsified some things in the chart to cover his ass. I called every malpractice lawyer in my area but no one would take the case. One lawyer said he would take it if I paid the $40,000 cost of filing. Malpractice doesn't pay enough to cover the costs of suing in most cases - unless you become totally disabled.

Licensing boards don't do anything either. They did nothing to the dentist who butchered me. That's why it's god to have websites like doctorscorecard and ratemd. If you get a bad doctor you can put the review in there to warn others away from him or her.
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