Additional medical malpractice was also committed by the surgeon and the anesthesiologist who failed to communicate proprely about which instrument would be used by the surgeon and which gas would be used by the anesthesiologist to check if there was incompatibility or danger. According to the DOH report the surgeon used an instrument that sparked a fire in presence of the oxygen used by the anesthesiologist. The patient was injured but the the extent of the injury was redacted in the report received by the NY Post.
After the accident happened at the beginning of December 2014 the hospital didn’t act to improve safety measures to prevent patients from being injured in a similar manner. It was only after the the Department of Health inspection, at the end of the same month, that the hospital instituted new safety measures related to operating room fires. The measures included changing the oxygen delivery method for surgeries posing a high risk of fire.
There are between 500 and 600 cases of operating room fires every year in the U.S. Most of them are preventable. More information on how to prevent this type of medical malpractice can be fond on the Council on Surgical & Preoperative Safety website or in a previous blog we wrote on this subject.
Picture: Courtesy of Wikipedia