Colonoscopy is an AmericanCancer Society recommended procedure for men and women over the age of 50 who have an average risk of developing
colorectal cancer. The results of one such procedure are documented
below: Apparently all is not particularly rosy in South Carolina when it
comes to a patient's ability, under state law, to obtain damages for mistakes,
or accidents resulting from the Doctor's failure to follow that most basic of
all requirements of the Hippocratic Oath, "above all, do no harm."
Harm seems to be acceptable in South Carolina so long as it may be
defined as a "known complication" of a given medical procedure.
Of course traffic accidents are a "known complication"
of driving, are they not? Still, if someone T-bones you at an intersection
while you are proceeding to negotiate a green light, you will have the
opportunity to seek legal recompense. Of
course you are not a protected species as is, say, a colonoscopist whose
actions in performing his task may be enabled and made sacrosanct by our state
legislature under its legislation covering doctors and their insurers in
malpractice situations.
The following "Colonoscopy notes" describe a procedure
done 10 September, 2012, at Aiken Surgical Center, in Aiken SC by Dr. Afsar
Waraich the physician; Stephen V. Geddes the patient and writer.
Colonoscopy notes
I arrived at Aiken Surgical Center at 1:45 PM, a bit more than one
hour (per instructions) early to fill out needed paperwork.
At 3 PM I was taken to preop.
A short time later I was taken to the procedure room. Dr.
Waraich and his anaesthesiologist were there. They administered a general
anaesthetic and I went "under."
Things happened.
About 4:00 to 4:45, I estimate, I was returned to preop, now the
recovery area. When asked how I felt, having no pain, I said fine.
I may have mentioned bloating--I don't really remember. If I was asked
about it, I would have answered to the best of my ability, I'm sure.
About 5 PM, the closing time for the Center, I was wheeled to my
car. The nurse asked me how I felt. I told her I felt a bit
bloated. She said "That's the gas. It will pass."
My wife then drove the two of us home.
After two hours with no passage of gas, feeling, essentially, as I
did when I left the Surgery Center, I called Dr. Waraich. He told me to
give myself an enema. This I did, sitting on a commode. The only
problem was the water ran out of me as fast as I squeezed it in. I have
given enemas before, and this never was a problem.
I called Dr. Waraich, about 8PM, and explained the problem.
He told me to give myself another enema, but this time to lie on my side as I
was giving it. He also said if I felt nauseous or feverish, to go to the
ER.
As my wife prepared a bed, laying down plastic and towel material,
I tried to push the gas out, sitting on the commode. I "pushed"
extremely hard. I was finally successful (I really did not want to give
myself an enema on my bed.)
I called Dr. Waraich back and told him of my success. I told
him I was now "farting like a racehorse" (somewhat something of a
mixed metaphor, but I think he knew what I meant.)
I sat back down on the couch and continued to vent gas while
watching television.
About 10 PM I got up to urinate. I found out as long as I
sat on the couch fairly quiet, I felt fine. Getting up changed
that. My innards definitely felt bad. I told Jennie we needed to go
to the ER.
About 10:20 we were at the ER at Aiken Regional Medical Center.
Vitals were taken, and I told them I needed to lie down (less pain.)
Trish, a friend, was on duty as nurse assistant(?) ER Doc Garrett
listened to my symptoms--very full gut (still full of gas?), crampy, right
shoulder hurting. He said that might be from gas in the body
cavity. He ordered a CT scan, a morphine shot, a quart of gatoraid with
iodide. Got the scan, through the donut hole.
Maybe the morphine took over. In any case, I met my surgeon,
Dr. Chase. He is not sure where the problem is and needs to take a
look. He will go in laparoscopically, and find and fix the problem that
way if possible. He may need to make a larger incision.
Midway through the surgery, his findings were passed to wife
Jennie. The larger incision was needed. A 2 to 3 inch tear was
found in the caecum (cecum.) Repair was effected by removal of the cecum
with the attached appendix, and the ileocecal valve, and a bit of large
intestine. The small and large intestines were then joined together.
I was taken to room 402 where my stay was uneventful.
Dr. Waraich came by a couple of times--we didn't discuss the problem. Dr.
Muniz, my GP, came by at my request, as did Dr. Chase.
I was discharged on 15 Sep.
Thoughts on the above:
1) At Aiken Surgical Center, I was the last patient of the
day. My leaving coincided with the center's closing time. If
degassing was attempted at all, perhaps it was not done with much care since
the need to close the facility was one concern and the discharge of the
"room gas" was apparently expected to be something that would occur
as a matter of course. Why CO2 was not used for the procedure, a state of
the art method used as a matter of course in many facilities to minimize
post-procedure difficulties for the patient, is not known. It was never
discussed with me as an option, and the use of CO2 was something I learned
about much later.
2) I never told anyone at the Surgical Center I had any pain
because there was none. I did feel the bloating, though, in my gut.
I experienced no pain until after I had forced some gas out of my body by
pushing--the same thing I would have done had I had a recalcitrant, too dry
fecal discharge due to some unavoidable delay in being able to access or use a
restroom coupled perhaps with a too-high-in-fiber diet the day before.
Never before had I had any difficulty discharging any gas that may have
accumulated in my intestine--probably because I had never before had my gut
pumped full of air and a sigmoid volvulus generated by the combination of the
gas and, perhaps, a rather thoughtless, perhaps hasty withdrawal of the
colonoscopy instrument. Why a sigmoid volvulus? Well, some sort of
obstruction was keeping the air in, and there was no significant fecal material
there--it had all been cleaned out by the pre-colonoscopy diet and purging requirement.
What else, but a twist of the sigmoid, the last stage of the large intestine
prior to the rectum and anus, would have prevented the enema from going in
while preventing the gas from going out?
3) If I had been told not to try to force the gas out, to
let it come out on its own accord, that is what I would have done (of course,
it wouldn't have worked.) If I had been directed to go to the ER for
intubation to get the gas out, that is what I would have done. Lacking
instruction, I did what I knew how to do--I pushed. While everyone I have
told this to has thought it was improbable, I think I blew a hole in my cecum
trying to get Dr. Waraich's gas out. Dr. Chase's notes say the cecum
appeared to be beat up and the wound he found was described as a 3 inch
longitudinal serosal tear with no definite penetration and a mucosa that
appeared beat up. He also states there was pneumatosis of the cecum.
Could the colonoscopist have done this and been unaware of the damage he
caused? Doubtful. As a matter of fact,
there was a picture of the cecum in Dr. Waraich's report on the procedure.
Was the problem my fault? Truth of the matter is this: Dr.
Waraich put the gas in there, and, in retrospect there appears to be no doubt
he should have removed it as part of the procedure. The Doctor's
"informed decision (or guess)" that it would be OK to discharge
me without deflating the gut (what apparently happened,) perhaps to avoid
overtime payments to the Surgical Center (I left at "quitting time"),
was an informed mistake. Had he left a glove in there, or a piece of the
colonoscopy instrument, there would be no question as to his culpability.
The fact that the material he left there was in the gaseous as opposed to a
solid state should not relieve him of his responsibility for what happened as a
result of his "informed decision." The fact that I worked hard to
push the gas out is immaterial, since I received no instructions to the
contrary--I was only told, "it will pass."
What damage was really done? None, some would say, unless
you count having to take a dump several times a day instead of the usual
once. Unless you find yourself walking a trail and have to take a dump
but cannot due to the nearness of civilization. Unless you are in the
middle of a Walmart when the need happens and you find all the stalls in
use. The looseness of my bowel material due to the lack of a cecum, the
place where much of the water is removed (it has the least thickness of
all of the bowel, about 1mm) is something I have had every day for the last two
years and it is something I will have till the day I die. I have
"messed my pants" more than a few times. I consider this a
major inconvenience, and feel some sort of compensation is due. Put yourself
in my place. What would you expect. The Doc was paid for his work,
defective though it may have proved to be. His insurance should pay for
my inconvenience and disability, just as certainly as his automobile insurance
would pay if he had accidentally caused a vehicular incident that left me in
this condition. The fact that I am not dead or dismembered should not
relieve Dr. Waraich and his insurance company of any responsibility to pay
whatever the legal system might consider reasonable--be it a dollar or the
maximum allowable amount per our state legislature's highly lobbied law
limiting payments for malpractice.
Given the relatively small amount of compensation available per
the law, and the costs for filing such a lawsuit, it seems to me that the
legislature should be notified that their law is unfair to the person having
what should be a small settlement and having little means to pay, up front, the
relatively large amounts required to obtain legal and medical counsel in order
to be able to simply file and prosecute a claim. Justice should not be
something that must be bought. It is, though, or at least it was for me,
under the terms of the state law on malpractice suits. The legislature lost
sight of this when they wrote their law. I experienced more than just difficulty
in finding a lawyer to take my case because it was not a slam-dunk, and they do
not find the legal potential for profit to justify their participation. What
I experienced was a total inability to find a lawyer willing to take the
case.
Because of these considerations, I feel, instead of no
consideration at all, I should have been compensated with the maximum amount
available by law--$375,000 (and expenses) to: 1) Notify the legislature they
should re-examine this law for reasonability understanding the difficulty the
average person will experience should he need to try to obtain justice given
the current constraints of the law and; 2) notify insurance companies,
especially Marsh, Inc. of JUA, that they are in a position to determine
liability and should so do and not simply deny potential claimants a settlement--their
stated position--knowing the economics of filing would cause many of them to
dry up and go away regardless of the justness of their claim; and, 3)
while I know the economic costs of buying supplies to use in dealing with my
disability is relatively small, the fact that almost anyone would totally
dislike the added need to deal with their bodily elimination function, the
wiping and the washing, etc., as often as I am forced so to do is not something
I would wish on you or on myself, or even on our legislators. My
condition makes everything I do more difficult: shopping, traveling,
enjoying our parks, going to meetings, e.g., everything I might do is liable to
be interrupted in order that I deal with the problem Dr. Waraich has "given"
me.
Well, as I said, I was unable to obtain legal representation.
Specifically, I contacted at least five legal firms specializing in
malpractice cases and none would take my case. I contacted several
"expert witnesses" and found they would only speak with a plaintiff's
legal representatives. I had two years to file a complaint, under the
terms of our state law, and was unable to so do. So, I guess I must bear
the burden of my condition with no compensation. Is this fair? Our current
state legislature thinks so. I think they all should be fired for their
lackluster performance in crafting this law (of course they probably did little
to craft anything. They seem to have passed a law that was provided by
legal lobbyists for the doctors' insurance firms.) I guess what we had
when this was passed was a medical-legislative alliance, something akin to the
industrial-military complex President Eisenhower warned us about.
Goodness--where do you go to find a good President (or, on the state
level, a good Governor) when you need one.
Oh, well--guess I've gotta stop. I need to go take a
"waraich" (sorry, Mr. Craps, my condition requires a slight redefinition
of the vernacular, for me if for nobody else.) And, Doctor, should the
term catch on, you have only yourself and your insurance company to blame.
Think it'll catch on? Well, strange things do occasionally happen,
but in this case probably not--the four letter term seems to be the norm for
material such as this.
One note (that is probably obvious to the reader, but that should be made completely clear at this point.) This has not been written by a Doctor, or by an Attorney, and no inference should be made other than what one might make by understanding it was written by a patient, and one who has experienced uncompensated loss from a local doctor. To express my feelings in another way, one easily understood in our "horsey community," I feel I have been "rode hard and put up wet." And, if you don't want to find yourself in the same situation, maybe you should be very careful about what colonoscopist you choose if you elect to have this procedure (a recommended one, for sure) done to yourself.
One note (that is probably obvious to the reader, but that should be made completely clear at this point.) This has not been written by a Doctor, or by an Attorney, and no inference should be made other than what one might make by understanding it was written by a patient, and one who has experienced uncompensated loss from a local doctor. To express my feelings in another way, one easily understood in our "horsey community," I feel I have been "rode hard and put up wet." And, if you don't want to find yourself in the same situation, maybe you should be very careful about what colonoscopist you choose if you elect to have this procedure (a recommended one, for sure) done to yourself.
3 comments:
This is my first reading of your blog and I am horrified. I can't believe that there were no attorneys that would take your case. I understand your intermittent discomfort and limiting activity levels, since many women from childbirth have this condition...and it seems, it is all our own faults.
Many men after a prostatectomy are also experiencing this along with impotence...but, that too, is hard to get any compensation to cover. The military doesn't consider this a disability after cancer surgery that gives it a clean result of the cancer.
I am so sorry that you are having to deal with this, but I have no help in finding a source of legal help. I feel you are correct about how the medical/surgical lobbying are responsible for wiggling out of this.
I am getting ready to have mine next week...my 4th...and I always request the 1st case of the day (just because of the fasting time), so that could be why it hasn't been an issue for me.
My best wishes for a lessening of issues as time goes on.
Bobbie
Thanks, BJ--Things getting a good bit better, but it has been 10 years. Think I'm going to try billing my doc for my time to cleanup after myself. May be able to get an attorney to help with this. Hope so, anyway!
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