วันอังคารที่ 22 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2555

medical Disasters - 8 straightforward Tips Guaranteed to Save Your Life in the Operating Room

Laparotomy Surgery:

Imagine the galvanic thrill your doctor gets when as a patient you tell him, "Doctor, you're a life-saver!" And he was! He ordered the treatment that brought you out of congestive failure.

Now, fantasize the bolt of lightning that sears your brain when you comprehend that the treatment your doctor ordered almost cost you your life. In teaching institutions and large corporative Hmos this happens more than they care to admit.

Here Are 2 healing Disasters You Can Avoid If corollary My Tips & If You Ask the Right Questions:

Laparotomy Surgery:medical Disasters - 8 straightforward Tips Guaranteed to Save Your Life in the Operating Room

Medical Disaster 1: A straightforward knee doing ending in amputation

D.W was a 63-year-old woman was in scorching pain with an arthritic right knee. So, she saw the new surgeon in town who seemed like a very nice, educable and competent surgeon.

The surgeon suggested a total knee replacement. "You'll be good as new!" he reassured her. Yet, the severe pain and swelling after the surgery still prohibited her from regaining general range of motion.

After three months her knee was so stiff the surgeon performed a "manipulation under anesthesia" to break up scar tissue. It didn't work.

At six months post operative someone else surgeon told her, "Your surgeon is a very nice man, but he is brand new in convention and the prosthesis was not put in correctly." He recommended a revision. during the correction the patellar tendon ripped off the tibia, and the new surgeon reattached it with a bone screw. Later, the wound popped open and the screw head stuck out of the wound. The knee became infected. Now she is facing an amputation.

By request these 4 questions, you can avoid this precisely preventable healing disaster:

  • How many operations of this nature have you performed?
  • What can go wrong and what will you do to forestall it from happening?
  • What other forms of treatment are there?
  • Who would you go to, face of your own office, if you needed this treatment?" Get a second opinion.

Medical Disaster #2: A gall bladder surgery that almost cost a patient's life

J.M. Was a 55 year old suffering every day with chronically infected gall bladder. His internist referred him to the teaching convention and healing town due to serious scar tissue colse to the gall bladder making a laparotomy and excision of the gall bladder necessary.

In the beginning, J.M. Was precisely pleased with the team of residents and healing students who would be taking care of him. He liked his attending surgeon who was very leading in his field, and he was reassured when the surgeon greeted him in the doing room the next morning.

During surgery the attending opened up the abdomen, and then let the chief resident take over the removal of the scarred gall bladder while he left to make phone calls. The attending poked his head back into the room to make sure all things was okay, and then left.

As the surgery went well, the chief resident then gave the closure to the first year resident so he can go see consults. The first year resident used this occasion to let the healing students convention tying quadrilateral knots during the closure.

That night the floor nurse called the resident to help conduct severe pain. He ordered Iv Toradol, which is usually very effective. But he forgot the healing student's history and corporal of the patient, which he'd signed-off on. This article indicated that J.M. Was allergic to aspirin - similar to Toradol.

The next morning J.M. Had hiccoughs and the lower part of the wound closure started to pop open. An X-ray of the abdomen showed free air where a perforated ulcer had occurred in the stomach due to the Toradol. But that's not even the worst part.

Jj.M started to vomit blood and go into shock. He was then rushed back into surgery where a thriving hemi-gastrectomy was performed. This time the attending stayed and closed the entire wound himself.

Here are my top 4 tips to help you avoid this healing disaster:

  • Always ask, "Doctor, are you personally going to perform my surgery, and will you be there until the end of the operation?"
  • Be aware that when you are in a teaching institution, person is going to be learning on you.
  • Actively engaged yourself in your care. Be questioning, not confrontational. Ask what medicines you are being given and know your allergies.
  • Ask, "Doctor, have you practiced in other cities before advent here?" A doctor that moves a lot is a "red flag."

These eight system or questions can help you avoid the above healing disasters and many others described in my new book, Death on the learning Curve". Knowing them will empower you receive the best care inherent when treatment is necessary.

Laparotomy Surgery:medical Disasters - 8 straightforward Tips Guaranteed to Save Your Life in the Operating Room

ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:

แสดงความคิดเห็น