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April 2013

Did The Doctor Diagnose Your Stroke F.A.S.T. Enough?

By |2019-03-18T22:02:38+00:00April 23rd, 2013|Stroke|

When the diagnosis of stroke is unnecessarily delayed, the patient's treatment options become critically limited.  Thromboembolic strokes, i.e., those caused by blood clots (thrombus) that travel (embolize) through blood vessels to cut off blood flow to the brain, can be treated by clot busting medications (thrombolytics such as tPA), but only if treatment is commenced within a certain [...]

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Surgical Errors: Wrong Side Surgery

By |2022-02-17T23:14:48+00:00April 22nd, 2013|Surgical Error|

Surgical errors are often preventable.  Clearly, wrong side surgeries are preventable.  In 2002, the National Quality Forum published a list of 28 Serious Reportable Events (SREs) "to increase public accountability and consumer access to critical information about healthcare performance."  The list includes a number of common preventable surgical errors, including wrong site surgery (e.g., an operation performed [...]

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March 2013

FAQs: How Do I Obtain My Medical Records?

By |2019-03-18T22:02:38+00:00March 26th, 2013|FAQS|

FAQs: How does a patient obtain his/her medical records from an Ohio physician or hospital when he/she is concerned about potential medical negligence? Answer: Ohio law provides that you are entitled to a copy of your medical records in response to a written request. When a patient or loved one suffers a bad outcome during a hospitalization or while under [...]

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Birth Injuries: Postpartum Hemorrhage

By |2019-03-18T22:02:38+00:00March 19th, 2013|Birth Injury|

When we write about birth injuries, our focus is typically on the newborn.  Injuries such as cerebral palsy or brachial plexus injury, such as Erb's palsy, are common sources of medical negligence litigation in Ohio.  But we also know that preventable injuries can happen to a mom as well.  Today, I would like to discuss one complication [...]

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For Patients: How Big Pharm Corrupts Medical Practices

By |2019-03-18T22:02:38+00:00March 18th, 2013|Patient Safety|

For patients, trusting your physician to put your interests first is taken for granted.  But what happens when the physician is influenced by gifts from pharmaceutical companies to push a patient toward a particular medication irrespective of the patient's best interests?  We see the influence of pharmaceutical companies and medical device manufacturers on physicians' practices growing all the time.  [...]

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New Stroke Guidelines Recommend Early Use of Clot Busters

By |2016-06-09T17:37:31+00:00March 15th, 2013|Stroke|

New guidelines published by the American Heart Association (AHA) urge administration of clot busting medications, called tissue plasminogen activator (or, TPA), within 60 minutes of arrival at a hospital.  TPA dissolves clots.  It can be given intravenously or applied directly to the clot through a catheter in a procedure performed by an interventional radiologist.  TPA can only be [...]

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Avoiding PML-Type Brain Injury in MS Patients

By |2019-04-24T18:00:03+00:00March 13th, 2013|Brain Injury|

A type of brain injury, called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), can occur as a result of complications from use of Tysabri (natalizumab) by patients suffering from multiple sclerosis (MS). PML was first identified in immunocompromised patients, such as AIDS and cancer patients.  However, it can arise when Tysabri reactivates a dormant viral illness called JC Virus (also known [...]

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Hospital Negligence: Mistakes by Residents

By |2019-03-18T22:02:39+00:00March 12th, 2013|Hospital Negligence|

Hospital negligence occurs when a hospital employee, such as a nurse or resident physician, fails to comply with accepted standards of medical care.  Residents make important decisions in many patients' care, even though they are not fully trained physicians.  Many mistakes by residents occur as a result of fatigue, inexperience or misplaced arrogance.  Since residents are usually employed by the hospital [...]

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Elopement from the Nursing Home

By |2022-02-17T23:19:40+00:00March 11th, 2013|Nursing Home|

A nursing home owes a duty to protect elderly patients from a variety of hazards, including falls, C. Diff. infections, assault by employees or other patients, dehydration, malnutrition and bed sores, to name a few.  Another hazard, called elopement, involves special considerations.  Elopement occurs when an impaired patient wanders away from supervision in the nursing home setting.  [...]

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February 2013

Hospital Negligence: Overworked Hospitalists

By |2015-12-17T18:16:42+00:00February 26th, 2013|Hospital Negligence|

Caregiver fatigue can result in hospital negligence.  A recent study shows that hospitalists are being overworked to the detriment of patient safety.  There has been an increasing trend toward the use of hospitalists to provide primary care services to hospitalized patients.  Hospitalists are typically internists or family practice physicians who provide general medical care but restrict their [...]

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