Showing posts with label Hospitals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hospitals. Show all posts

June 4, 2016

Updated: Boxing Champion Muhammad Ali Dead at 74


Posted June 3, 2016 5:34 PM ET; Last updated June 4, 2016 4:11 AM ET


Fighter: Kentucky-born Ali picked up the gloves at the age of 12. Within six years he'd achieved an amateur record of 100 wins to five losses and took gold at the 1960 Olympic games. That same year he turned pro.

[Updated June 4, 2016 4:11 AM ET]
[From article]
Muhammad Ali, the colorful but polarizing three-time world heavyweight champion who risked his career and his freedom by his refusal to be inducted into the Army during the Vietnam War, died Friday night in a Phoenix hospital after a long, debilitating battle with Parkinson’s disease believed to be brought on by repeated blows to the head. He was 74.
An Olympic champion and veteran of 61 heavyweight fights spanning three decades, in the ring Ali may be best known for his three epic bouts with longtime foil Joe Frazier, a brutal trilogy that left both fighters greatly diminished.
Ali who devoted much of his post-boxing career to humanitarian causes around the world and who for decades was widely recognized as the most famous person on the planet, had battled Parkinson’s since 1984 and in recent years had lost the ability to speak. It was a cruelly ironic twist for the outspoken boxer who made almost as many headlines with his loquaciousness and poetry — “Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee. Your hands can’t hit what your eyes can’t see” — as he did with his dancing feet and iron fists.

http://nypost.com/2016/06/04/muhammad-ali-dead-at-74/

Muhammad Ali dead at 74
By Don Burke
June 4, 2016 | 12:31am
New York Post

* * *

[Posted June 3, 2016 5:34 PM ET]
[From article]
Boxing legend Muhammad Ali has been hospitalized with a respiratory issue, according to his spokesman.
Bob Gunnell said Thursday that Ali, who has long battle Parkinson's Disease, is in 'fair condition' and being being treated by doctors in Phoenix, where he lives, as a precaution.
He declined to say in which hospital Ali is based or when he was admitted. However, he did say that Ali's stay in hospital is expected to be 'brief.'
'He is being treated by his team of doctors and is in fair condition,' Gunnell said. 'A brief hospital stay is expected. At this time, the Muhammad Ali family respectfully requests privacy.'
The three-time world heavyweight boxing champion's health has been fragile in recent years, but he has always succeeded in fighting back.
[. . .]


The Greatest: Ali (seen here victorious over Sonny Liston in 1965) was a three-time world heavyweight boxing champ in his prime.


He retired from boxing in 1981 and devoted his life to social and humanitarian causes. In 2005 he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush.
And although his public appearances have diminished since then, Ali has remained active on his official Twitter channel, and has also spoken up on major issues of the day.
In December last year, Ali responded to Donald Trump's remarks about banning Muslims from the U.S. with an open letter that asked for peace and understanding, rather than fear.
'Speaking as someone who has never been accused of political correctness, I believe that our political leaders should use their position to bring understanding about the religion of Islam,' said Ali, who converted to Islam in 1964,
Talking about recent terror attacks, he added that politicians should 'clarify that these misguided murderers have perverted people's views on what Islam really is.'
That remark continued a long history of outspoken political activism by the 'rope-a-dope' champ, who nearly torpedoed his own career in 1966 when he refused to sign up the Vietnam War, saying 'No Vietcong ever called me a n****.'


Triumphant: Ali spars with challenger Floyd Patterson for the world heavyweight championship belt in 1965. Clay won in the 12th round with a technical knockout.

In 1990, he met with Saddam Hussein in Kuwait to negotiate the release of American hostages, and in 2011 appealed to Iran to release a pair of captive hikers.
Ali was born Cassius Clay Jr on January 17, 1942, in Louisville, Kentucky. His introduction to boxing began when he was just 12: Furious over the theft of his bike, he told a police officer he would 'whup' the thief.
That officer happened to be boxing coach Joe E. Martin, who told the young boy he should learn to box before he put up his fists - and that's exactly what he did.
Over the next six years Clay won six Kentucky and two national Golden Gloves titles, an Amateur Athletic Union National Title and the Light Heavyweight gold medal in the 1960 Rome Summer Olympics.
That same year he left behind an incredible amateur scorecard of 100 wins with five losses and took up the mantle as a professional.
His speed and strength quickly took him up the ladder, though his mouth was what caught the public's attention.
With characteristic cockiness, he called New Yorker Doug Jones - then third in the world behind Clay and then-champ Sonny Liston - 'an ugly little man' and Jones's home turf of Madison Square Garden as 'too small for me'.
Though statements like that would become his trademark, they didn't go down well at the time, and when Clay beat Jones in 1963 by unanimous vote, the ring was pelted with trash by the audience.
In 1964 Clay was gunning for Liston's title, saying he would 'float like a butterfly, sting like a bee,' while Liston was an 'ugly bear' who would be donated to the zoo after the match.
Though temporarily blinded by ointment used to seal Liston's cuts - the first he'd ever had inflicted in the ring - Clay won in the seventh round by a TKO. At 22, he was the youngest-ever heavyweight champion.
It was after this match that Clay announced he had converted to Islam, given up what he called his 'slave name' and would in the future be known by a new moniker: Muhammad Ali.
Liston came back for the belt the next year, but was taken down in two minutes by Ali, who knocked him down with a blow so fast it was hard to see - a blow the press later called the 'phantom punch.'
From 1967-1970, following an outcry at his refusal to sign up for the Vietnam War (Ali told press 'No Vietcong ever called me a n****'), Ali found himself frozen out of the game, denied a boxing license, and stripped of his passport and - arguably worse - title.
During that time he spoke at colleges against the Vietnam War and in favor of racial justice and black pride - beginning an interest in advocacy that he would pursue in later years.
Finally, he was able to return to boxing with his draft evasion case still on appeal, and in 1971 he took on Joe Frazier in what was dubbed 'The Fight of the Century.'
This was the first fight in which Ali introduced his 'rope-a-dope' strategy, leaning against the ropes to exhaust his opponent but ultimately lost in his first professional defeat. Three years later he took down Frazier by unanimous judges' decision.
This was Ali in his prime: taking on George Foreman in Zaire in 1974 - a bout that would be termed 'The Rumble in the Jungle' - he took down the fearsome boxer and reclaimed the world champ belt with a knockout.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3622439/Boxing-great-Muhammad-Ali-hospital-respiratory-issue.html

Boxing legend Muhammad Ali, 74, hospitalized with respiratory issue - but spokesman says he's 'in fair condition'
Ali's hospitalization in Phoenix was announced Thursday
His spokesman said it was a 'precaution' and that he's 'in fair condition'
His stay in hospital is expected to be 'brief,' the spokesman said
He was last seen in public in April, attending a celeb fight night
By ASSOCIATED PRESS and JAMES WILKINSON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 13:12 EST, 2 June 2016 | UPDATED: 17:01 EST, 2 June 2016



* * *



[From article]
Boxing great Muhammad Ali is hospitalized in the Phoenix area with what two people familiar with his condition say may be more serious problems than his previous hospital stays.
The people told The Associated Press on Thursday that Ali is fighting respiratory issues that are complicated by the Parkinson's that he was diagnosed with in the 1980s. The two spoke separately in describing Ali's condition that they say is concerning to family members.

http://www.wdrb.com/story/32125118/muhammad-ali-hospitalized-for-treatment-of-respiratory-issue

Muhammad Ali hospitalized for treatment of respiratory issue
Posted: Jun 02, 2016 1:40 PM EDT
Updated: Jun 02, 2016 3:03 PM EDT

WDRB 41 Louisville News

May 20, 2016

Conjoined Twins Successfully Separated in Texas Hospital



This Feb. 10, 2016 photo provided by Driscoll Children's Hospital shows conjoined twin sisters Scarlett, left, and Ximena Hernandez-Torres at Dirscoll Children's Hospital in Corpus Christi, Texas. Doctors in Texas will attempt to separate the two 10-month-old sisters born conjoined below the waist. The girls share a colon and bladders that will be reconstructed. Their identical triplet sister, Catalina, was born without serious health issues. 
(Joshua Thelin/Driscoll Children's Hospital via AP) 
(Driscoll Children's Hospital)
[From article]
Twin girls who were formerly conjoined below the waist have been released from a South Texas hospital.
A spokesman for Driscoll Children's Hospital in Corpus Christi confirmed that Ximena (huh-MEE'-nuh) and Scarlett Hernandez-Torres were discharged Wednesday.
The Corpus Christi Caller-Times reports the twins moved to a Ronald McDonald House to continue their recovery with their mother and their triplet sister.
The twins are about 1 year old. They underwent an hourslong surgery last month to separate them. They had been joined at the pelvis and shared a bladder and other organs.
Doctors have a positive outlook for the children's recovery and say the girls will require additional surgeries as they grow.
Their triplet sister, Catalina, was born without serious health issues.

http://www.foxnews.com/health/2016/05/18/formerly-conjoined-twins-released-from-texas-hospital.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+foxnews%2Fmost-popular+%28Internal+-+Most+Popular+Content%29


Formerly conjoined twins released from Texas hospital
Published May 18, 2016
Fox News

March 23, 2016

Sarah Palin Producing Court TV Show, Visits Injured Husband in Hospital



Sarah with Todd's dad, Todd (behind the snowmobile mask) and daughter Willow.

[From article]
Sarah Palin was seen for the first time visiting her husband Todd in hospital after he was seriously injured in a snowmobile crash - just as it was revealed the former Alaska governor will give Judge Judy a run for her money and host a new reality courtroom show.
In pictures obtained exclusively by Daily Mail Online, Palin appeared tired and tense as she left Mat-Su Regional Medical Center in Alaska last Friday after flying home from Florida where she had been campaigning for Donald Trump.
Indeed, Palin will have her hands full as she supports her husband, who faces a long recovery after undergoing surgery to repair 14 fractured ribs and a collapsed lung, and work on her new syndicated TV show.
[. . .]
The former governor of Alaska, 52, made her way unaccompanied to her SUV after spending many hours with Todd who remains on a ventilator in intensive care.
[. . .]
The daytime show would launch in 2017 if everything goes to plan.
[. . .]
The former governor of Alaska, 52, made her way unaccompanied to her SUV after spending many hours with Todd who remains on a ventilator in intensive care.
[. . .]
She left around ten minutes later and stopped to clean her truck at a car wash before returning to the family’s lakeside compound several miles away in Wasilla.
The mother-of-five has been updating concerned well-wishers on Todd’s condition via social media.
She revealed that her husband, 51, has a long road to recovery and is still on a breathing machine after having a six-hour surgery to repair 14 fractured ribs and a collapsed lung.
She wrote on Facebook: ‘Thank you for lifting Todd up in prayer. He's still in ICU under care of a superbly skilled staff.
'A long surgery repaired numerous breaks in Todd's upper body, docs essentially lifted and secured every rib with steel bands, anchored the broken clavicle with plates and rods, set aside repair of a broken shoulder for later (also later are more minor things like ACL/MCL knee injuries), still mechanically inflating one collapsed lung while other bruised lung, liver, etc., are watched; chest drain is working overtime to keep things clear.'
Sarah shared a picture of daughters Willow and Piper laughing while seated on a hospital bed in the March 17 post with the Irish proverb: ‘A good laugh and a long sleep are the two best cures for anything.’
She went on to say: 'Requiring a bit more than our usual fix-all up here - Duct tape - some gnarly incisions to enter his innards will be reminders of how life can change in the blink of an eye. (And skating through TSA detectors with bionic parts will now be anything but the blink of an eye!)

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3505023/Here-comes-judge-Frazzled-Sarah-Palin-leaves-hospital-visiting-husband-Todd-signs-deal-host-reality-courtroom-show.html

EXCLUSIVE PICTURES: Here comes the judge! Frazzled Sarah Palin leaves hospital after visiting husband Todd as she signs deal to host her own reality courtroom show
Sarah Palin was seen for the first time visiting Todd at the Mat-Su Regional Medical Center in Alaska after his horrific snowmobile accident
Today it was revealed the former Alaska governor will give Judge Judy a run for her money and host a new reality courtroom show
She flew home from Florida where she was campaigning for Donald Trump after her husband was seriously injured in a snowmobile crash
Palin's daughter Piper and son Trig were also pictured with leaving the hospital where she was carrying Todd's snowmobile boots
The former governor of Alaska made her way unaccompanied to her SUV after spending many hours with Todd
Todd has a long road to recovery after having a six-hour surgery to repair 14 fractured ribs and a collapsed lung
By LOUISE BOYLE IN ANCHORAGE, ALASKA FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 14:59 EST, 22 March 2016 | UPDATED: 16:33 EST, 22 March 2016

October 28, 2015

Israeli Doctors Save Lives of Palestinians, Who Threaten to Kill Them All




[From article]
the 16-minute video released on October 23, 2015 by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). In it a masked terrorist, armed with a rifle and speaking fluent Hebrew, threatened to slaughter Israelis and Jews everywhere. He promised his viewers that soon there won’t be a single Jew left in Jerusalem or in the whole country. Tens of thousands of these Islamic terrorists would soon be on the way to slaughter Jews and throw them into the garbage.



Israel’s humane behavior does not resemble garbage, as Palestinian leaders obviously know. On October 20, a few days before the video, the brother-in-law of President Abbas underwent a successful life-saving heart surgery at a private hospital, Assuta Medical Center, in Tel Aviv. Israel has similarly helped other patients. One is the wife of Abbas who in 2014 was also treated at Assuta in a private room with security guards to maintain her privacy. Another was the sister of a senior Hamas leader, Moussa Abu Marzouk, who was treated for advanced cancer. Marzouk was listed as a specially designated terrorist by the U.S. Treasury Department. This was in addition to the Israeli treatment of relatives of other Hamas figures. Among them were the daughter, mother-in-law, and granddaughter of Ismail Haniyeh, another senior Hamas leader.
[. . .]



The Muslim countries in the Middle East are characterized by religious groups subject to religious intolerance and hostility and the accompanying political, economic, and ethnic suffering.
Israel, by its Basic Law on Human Dignity and Liberty, establishes freedom of religion, and the legal protection for religious freedom is enforced. The Israeli Supreme Court has upheld that freedom, including freedom of conscience, faith, religion, and worship, regardless of the religion of an individual. Though Israel is described as a “Jewish and democratic state,” freedom of religion and conscience and legal political equality exist regardless of religious affiliation.
[. . .]
After [Saddam Hussein] fell in 2003, the Shia Muslim majority, under PM Nouri al-Maliki, acted against the Sunnis, preventing peaceful protests, mistreating Sunni citizens and prisoners, and limiting the number of Sunnis in government and security positions. A major result of this was the entrance of ISIS, which now controls considerable parts of northern and central Iraq.
[. . .]



All religious communities who do not accept that ideology [ISIS] have been subjected to extraordinary abuses, including expulsion from their historic homelands, forced conversions, rape, enslavement of women and children, torture, beheadings, and massacres.
After it captured Mosul in June 2014, ISIS issued an ultimatum that all Christians, whose community dates back 1,700 years, must convert to Islam, leave Mosul, pay a tax, or be killed.
[. . .]
The once vibrant Jewish community in Egypt has now disappeared, but nevertheless, anti-Semitic publications and cartoons still appear.

http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/10/murderous_religious_intolerance_in_the_middle_east.html

October 25, 2015
Murderous Religious Intolerance in the Middle East
By Michael Curtis

October 19, 2015

Minnesota Deputy Sheriff Shot Dead By Hospital Patient



Aitkin County Minnesota Sheriff's Deputy Steven Sandberg
[From article]

A sheriff's deputy was shot and killed inside a Minnesota hospital by a man who was a suspect in a "domestic-related incident" Sunday morning, authorities said.
Danny Hammond, was being monitored by Aitkin County Sheriff's Deputy Steven Sandberg at the request of St. Cloud Hospital, where he was being treated, when a "struggle" broke out at about 5:15 a.m. (6:15 a.m. ET), said Drew Evans, superintendent of the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.
Hammond grabbed Sandberg's gun during the struggle and shot him, Evans said.
Hospital security responded to the suspect's hospital room and electrically stunned him — he then became unresponsive and died after being taken into custody, Evans said.
The cause of Hammond's death is being investigated by the Ramsey County Medical Examiner.
[. . .]
St. Cloud Hospital staff had asked for a deputy to monitor Hammond because the the "seriousness" of the domestic incident he was allegedly involved in, hospital Vice President Kurt Otto said. 

http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/sheriffs-deputy-fatally-shot-patient-being-treated-minnesota-hospital-n446751

Sheriff's Deputy Fatally Shot by Suspect Being Treated at Minnesota Hospital
by Elisha Fieldstadt
Oct 18 2015, 4:55 pm ET

August 5, 2015

Deadly Drug Resistant Super Bug Found At UCLA Hospital, Deaths Due To Negligent Cleaning of Device



The Olympus TJF-Q180V duodenoscope.
[From article]
The bacteria arrived at UCLA unnoticed in September, hitching a ride on a patient.
Unbeknownst to doctors, that patient — a woman being evaluated for a liver transplant — was carrying an unusually potent version of CRE, or carbapenem-resistant enterobacteriaceae.
Some Americans carry these bacteria with no ill effects, but years of antibiotic overuse have created virulent strains immune to most treatments. By some estimates, CRE kills up to half of infected patients.
The Olympus TJF-Q180V duodenoscope.
The source patient at UCLA underwent a procedure Oct. 3 known as ERCP, or endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography.
[. . .]
The medical scope had picked up the bacteria from the woman’s intestinal tract, and the standard cleaning didn’t remove it.
[. . .]
The medical records turned up 34 patients, including Young, with a CRE infection. But about half of them had CRE before coming to UCLA.
[. . .]
More conventional testing methods, such as looking at levels of antibiotic resistance, had given doctors the false impression that patient infections were unrelated. Tiny pieces of DNA were carrying an antibiotic-resistant gene from one cell to another, creating different-looking bugs.
[. . .]
The bug came from dirty scopes.
[. . .]
Doctors had confirmed that the transplant patient, admitted four months earlier in September, had passed the bug onto a scope made by Olympus Corp.
Sitting on the edge of his bed, Rubin called the endoscopy lab and halted ERCP procedures. Next, he alerted L.A. County public health authorities.
The hospital pulled the cleaning logs to determine what scopes were used on the infected patients. Rubin needed a list of all patients who may have been exposed, so they could be notified for testing.
[. . .]
The public learned of the UCLA outbreak when The Times broke the news on Feb. 18. In all, eight patients had been infected by the contaminated scopes, and three of them died. Nearly 180 other patients were exposed and advised to get tested.
The incident prompted the FDA to issue a safety alert to all U.S. hospitals the next morning, Feb. 19, warning them to take extra caution when cleaning the scopes.
[. . .]
The company warned European hospitals and doctors in January 2013 that lethal bacteria could become trapped at the tip of its scopes. It had issued no warning in the U.S., however.
[. . .]
This might be his life for some time to come — never fully free of the dangerous bacteria.
Every subsequent surgery or procedure runs the risk of stirring up the superbug, and there’s no guarantee past treatments will rescue him the next time.
[. . .]
A North Carolina woman who lost her husband to a contaminated Olympus scope sobbed in front of the panel of medical experts and lashed out at the company and the FDA, accusing them of letting patients die.
[. . .]
After two days of testimony, the medical experts determined that the duodenoscopes were unsafe. But they said the devices shouldn’t be pulled off the market because they are used in a potentially life-saving procedure with no better alternative.
FDA officials are weighing their next steps. A redesign of the duodenoscope isn’t expected anytime soon. Meanwhile, UCLA and other hospitals have ordered more Olympus scopes — because new cleaning methods take the devices out of service longer.
[. . .]
The outbreak makes him wonder what other medical devices touted by companies and cleared by regulators pose a similar danger.

http://graphics.latimes.com/superbug/

Los Angeles Times
August 2, 2015
Chad Terhune.

July 28, 2015

Ill Mother of Eight Dies in Mount Vernon, NY Court Holding Cell, After Visit To Prison Hospital




[From article]
someone within the DA’s office advised him that sometime between Turner’s arrest and Monday morning, she complained of being ill and was taken to Mount Vernon Hospital — across the street from the holding cell — for treatment before being returned to custody.
A law enforcement official confirmed that the victim had spent time at the hospital before being returned to custody.
The source was unable to provide a detailed chronology of what happened, but noted that the victim once again became ill early Monday, delaying her expected appearance in court that day — and that she was later found dead in her cell.
“Right now, it doesn’t appear to be criminal, but rather someone who got sick and then died,” said the official.
Gonzalez suggested that officials could have done much more to address Turner’s health issues and were aware that she was in distress before she died.
He added that on Monday, Turner’s husband, Harold, appeared in court for his wife’s expected arraignment and was told by a woman court worker, “Your wife is not feeling well. She needs to see a doctor.”
The court worker, who was employed by Pre-Trial Services, advised the husband that the agency would recommend to the judge that Turner be released on her own recognizance so she could consult with a doctor, Gonzalez said

http://nypost.com/2015/07/28/jailed-mom-found-dead-in-cell-under-mysterious-circumstances/

Jailed mom of 8 found dead in cell
By Philip Messing
New York Post
July 28, 2015 | 3:51pm

June 4, 2015

Utah Woman, 69, Beat Car Hijacker, Hospitalized Him



A suspect has been hospitalized in Utah after Frances Machm 69, punched him in the head several times when he forced himself into her car. 
(KUTV)
[From article]
A suspect has been hospitalized in Utah after a 69-year-old woman punched him in the head several times when he forced himself into her car.
Frances Mach arrived at her daughter’s Saratoga Springs home Saturday night about 9:30 p.m. when she said a man jumped into her car and told her to drive, a local CBS affiliate reported.
“He says ‘take me out of here … go!’” Ms. Mach said. “He started to reach for the steering wheel and he smacked me with the other hand and said ‘go!’”
That’s when she decided to fight back.
“I just balled up my fist and I nailed his head about three or four times and told him to get out of my car,” she told CBS. “He couldn’t believe it, I’ll tell you what, because I fought back. He looked about half-scared.”
Ms. Mach said the man got out of the vehicle and ran inside the home. She called the police, who arrived to see flames coming from an upstairs window.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/jun/2/utah-woman-69-pummels-would-be-carjacker/

Utah woman, 69, pummels would-be carjacker: ‘He couldn’t believe it’
By Jessica Chasmar
The Washington Times
Tuesday, June 2, 2015

May 30, 2015

Rape Victim Dies After 42 Years in Vegetative State



Aruna Shanbaug: Mumbai rape victim in a coma for 42 years has died


[From article]
A Mumbai nurse who was in a coma for 42 years after being sexually assaulted while working in a hospital has died, hospital authorities said Monday.
Aruna Shanbaug suffered severe brain damage and was in a vegetative state after she was raped and strangled by a hospital worker in 1973.
[. . .]
India's Supreme Court rejected the petition filed by Pinki Virani who had sought euthanasia for Shanbaug, saying the court should 'end her unbearable agony.'
The case was opposed by nurses at the hospital who took turns taking care of her for more than four decades after Shanbaug's family said they were unable to support her.
[. . .]
Aruna, a native of Haldipur in Karnataka, had joined KEM Hospital as a junior nurse in the seventies.
On the night of November 27, 1973, sweeper Sohanlal Bhartha Walmiki attacked her when she had to gone to change in the vacant canine experiment room of the hospital.
To overpower Aruna, Walmiki used a dog chain to choke and sexually assault her. The choking permanently damaged her brain cells, leaving her in vegetative state and partially blind.
Culprit Walmiki was booked for robbery and attempt to murder, as the doctors then did not think it appropriate to include sexual assault charges to save Aruna from facing social stigma.
Walmiki was convicted, and after serving his sentence, he is said to have moved to Delhi.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3085989/Indian-nurse-dies-42-years-coma-rape.html

Indian nurse who was in a coma for 42 YEARS after brutal hospital rape that left her in permanent vegetative state has died
Aruna Shanbaug was raped and strangled by a hospital worker in 1973
Shanbaug had been suffering from pneumonia and was on life support
Her case sparked a national debate over India's euthanasia laws
By TED THORNHILL FOR MAILONLINE and ASSOCIATED PRESS
PUBLISHED: 02:40 EST, 18 May 2015 | UPDATED: 11:34 EST, 18 May 2015

May 1, 2015

Rural Hospitals Closing




[From article]
After 45 years of providing health care in rural western Missouri, Sac-Osage Hospital is being sold piece by piece.
Ceiling tiles are going for 25 cents, the room doors for an average of less than $4 each, the patient beds for $250 apiece. Soon, the remnants of the hospital that long symbolized the lifeblood of Osceola, population 923, will be torn to the ground.
Sac-Osage is one of a growing number of rural U.S. hospitals closing their doors, citing a complex combination of changing demographics, medical practices, management decisions and federal policies that have put more financial pressure on facilities that sometimes average only a few in-patients a day.
"Money just kept drying up," said Chris Smiley, a former operating room nurse who was the last chief executive of Sac-Osage and is now overseeing its liquidation.
A total of 50 hospitals in the rural U.S. have closed since 2010, and the pace has been accelerating, with more closures in the past two years than in the previous 10 years combined, according to the National Rural Health Association. That could be just the beginning of what some health care analysts fear will be a crisis.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/rural-hospitals-struggle-stay-open-adapt-30724015

Rural Hospitals Struggle to Stay Open, Adapt to Changes
OSCEOLA, Mo. — May 1, 2015, 1:57 PM ET
By DAVID A. LIEB
Associated Press

April 19, 2015

Los Angeles Hospitals Don't Reveal Staff Caused Infections Passed To Patients Due To Negligence



Carole and Ty Moss hold a photo of their son, Nile, who died at age 15 after he went to an Orange County hospital for an MRI and got infected with a superbug. A law giving the public access to limited data on infected patients was named after him. 
(Photo: Allen J. Schaben, Los Angeles Times)


[From article]
The cardiac surgeon had unknowingly spread a staph infection from the rash on his hand to the hearts of at least five patients by the time Los Angeles County health investigators learned of the outbreak.
The doctor had operated on more than 60 others in recent months, and county officials feared those patients could be struck with the same dangerous infection.
Investigators didn't ultimately tie any deaths to the 2012 outbreak, but four patients needed additional surgery because of the infection.
The only public mention of the case came a year later in a little-noticed appendix to the health department's 350-page annual report. It referred only to "Hospital A." Even now, the name of the hospital remains secret.
[. . .]
L.A. County health officials investigate and confirm an infection outbreak inside one of the county's hospitals once or twice a month. The public rarely finds out which hospital is involved, how many patients were stricken or whether any died.
The secrecy surrounding hospital outbreaks runs counter to the push toward more public disclosure in healthcare. In recent years, consumers have benefited from data comparing some health outcomes by hospital, the fees hospitals charge for various procedures and the payments doctors receive from drug and device manufacturers.
Keeping outbreaks confidential is a common practice of federal, state and local health investigators across the country. The rationale: It encourages hospitals to be open and quickly report suspected surges of infections.
http://touch.latimes.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-83328732/

A veil of secrecy shields hospitals where outbreaks occur
BY MELODY PETERSEN
April 18, 2015, 1:00 p.m.

March 22, 2015

Seven Killed In Gas Explosion At Mexican Maternity Hospital



Reuters

[From article]
A leak in a hose from the truck, which was fueling the hospital’s tanks, was believed to have triggered the explosion, officials said.
“They tried to stop the leak, but it was not possible,” Mancera said.
President Enrique Pena Nieto voiced sadness and solidarity with the families of the victims on Twitter.
Many areas of Mexico City have no mains gas supply, and rely on deliveries from gas trucks.

http://nypost.com/2015/01/29/gas-explosion-at-maternity-hospital-kills-at-least-7/

Gas explosion at maternity hospital kills at least 7
By Reuters
New York Post
January 29, 2015 | 11:47am

March 4, 2015

Superbug Found At Second Los Angeles Hospital; Four Deaths, 135 Infections



Four people have been infected with a superbug linked to a contaminated medical scope, Cedars Sinai has discovered, and 64 others may have been exposed.
(Frederic J. Brown / AFP/Getty Images)
[From article]
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles said it has discovered that four patients were infected with a deadly superbug from a contaminated medical scope and 64 more people may have been exposed.
------------
FOR THE RECORD
1:44 p.m: An earlier version of this article said 68 people in addition to the four infected patients may have been exposed to the superbug. An additional 64 people may have been exposed.
------------
The hospital said Wednesday it began investigating the possibility of patient infections after a similar outbreak at UCLA’s Ronald Reagan Medical Center. In that outbreak, five people became infected and two died after being treated with scopes carrying CRE bacteria.
Patients at Cedars-Sinai may have been exposed to the lethal superbug from one Olympus Corp. duodenoscope in use from August 2014 to mid-February, according to the hospital.
Cedars-Sinai said one of the four infected patients has died, but it was unrelated to a CRE infection.
[. . .]
The infections at UCLA and now Cedars-Sinai are the latest in a string of similar scope-related outbreaks across the United States.
The Food and Drug Administration said last month that it was aware of 135 possible patient infections from January 2013 to December 2014 linked to duodenoscopes.

http://touch.latimes.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-82973527/

Superbug outbreak extends to Cedars-Sinai hospital, linked to scope
BY CHAD TERHUNE
Los Angeles Times
March 4, 2015, 4:30 p.m.

Las Vegas Hospital Finds Twin Fetuses Wrapped in Dirty Laundry



[From article]
Officers were called by laundry company Angelica on Tuesday morning after workers discovered the foetuses.
According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the foetuses were 16 weeks into development and were found in a laundry truck.
Spring Valley Hospital Medical Center, the hospital that accidentally delivered them, said in a statement that the mother arrived at the hospital after suffering a miscarriage at another location.
The twins were wrapped in linens before her arrival, it said.

http://news.sky.com/story/1438251/miscarried-babies-sent-to-laundry-by-mistake

Miscarried Babies Sent To Laundry By Mistake
Workers at a laundry in Las Vegas find twin miscarried foetuses, believed to be 16 weeks into development, mixed with the linen.
10:41, UK,
Wednesday 04 March 2015
By Sky News US Team

February 24, 2015

Ten Month Old Conjoined Twins Successfully Separated At Texas Hospital



Conjoined twins Knatalye Hope and Adeline Faith were successfully separated during surgery Feb. 17 at Texas children's Hospital.
(Photo: Allen S.Kramer / Texas Children's Hospital)

[From article]
Doctors shared more good news Tuesday about the separation of conjoined twin girls at Texas Children's Hospital.
After only 10 months of living conjoined, a team of doctors at Texas Children's Hospital successfully separated Knatalye and Adeline Mata during a 26-hour surgery on Feb. 17.
Doctors shared more good news Tuesday about the separation of conjoined twin girls at Texas Children's Hospital.
After only 10 months of living conjoined, a team of doctors at Texas Children's Hospital successfully separated Knatalye and Adeline Mata during a 26-hour surgery on Feb. 17.
http://www.khou.com/story/news/local/2015/02/24/doctors-share-more-good-news-on-separation-of-conjoined-twins/23962813/

Doctors share more good news on separation of conjoined twins
KHOU.com
Staff
5:27 p.m. CST February 24, 2015

February 19, 2015

More Deaths Due To Medical Negligence, Failure To Clean Devices




What happened to common sense? Non existent. Why does it take a rule by the US government to tell hospitals how to keep their devices clean? It is simple common sense. A commodity that is not so common. Virginia hospital that cleaned up its procedures and became one of the safest hospitals in the nation did not wait for the bureaucrats to tell them what to do.

[From article]
Nearly 180 patients at UCLA's Ronald Reagan Medical Center may have been exposed to potentially deadly bacteria from contaminated medical scopes, and two deaths have already been linked to the outbreak.
[. . .]
At issue is a specialized endoscope inserted down the throats of about 500,000 patients annually to treat cancers, gallstones and other ailments of the digestive system.
These duodenoscopes are considered minimally invasive, and doctors credit them for saving lives through early detection and treatment. But medical experts say some scopes can be difficult to disinfect through conventional cleaning because of their design, so bacteria are transmitted from patient to patient.
[. . .]
“There is either a design issue to be addressed or a change to the guidelines for the cleaning process,” said Dr. Andrew Ross, section chief of gastroenterology at Virginia Mason. “It's the role of the federal government to make some of those decisions.”
[. . .]
“Hospitals and manufacturers often take months to assess what to do, with the infected patients being the last to know,” Muscarella said. “Bringing patients into the loop and answering their questions is important for hospitals to prevent outbreaks.”
[. . .]
Meanwhile, some doctors worry the outbreaks might deter patients from seeking care they need.

http://www.latimes.com/changebrowser#url=/#section/-1/article/p2p-82855461/

Superbug linked to 2 deaths at UCLA hospital; 179 potentially exposed
BY CHAD TERHUNE
February 18, 2015, 9:14 p.m.

January 6, 2015

Wounded NYPD Officer In Hospital Unhappy To See Mayor



Andrew Dossi and Bill de Blasio Photo: Getty Images (right)

[From article]
When Officer Dossi regained consciousness after surgery, his dad tried to keep it light and busted his son’s chops over $20.
“I went over and asked, `Where’s the $20 you owe me?’ My son started laughing and said, `I took it out of your wallet, I didn’t think you’d notice,’ ” said the dad, breaking down in tears. “He just tried to make me laugh.”
[. . .]


Surveillance footage from the bodega the suspect robbed before running into the Chinese restaurant, where he shot Dossi and another officer. 
Photos (above and below): G.N. Miller



Officer Dossi, an Iraq veteran, is an Army Airborne reservist and was scheduled to go to Africa in a few weeks.
That tour, and perhaps his entire reservist career, are now on hold.
“The doctor just told me the bullet in his back just missed his spine. He was shot in the left arm and the arm just doesn’t look good,” the hero cop’s dad said.
“The doctors expect a full recovery. But that arm. I just hope that doesn’t affect his career. He’s Army Airborne. He can’t jump out of airplanes with a messed-up arm.”

http://nypost.com/2015/01/06/cop-wounded-in-shootout-didnt-appreciate-de-blasios-hospital-visit/

Cop wounded in shootout not happy about de Blasio’s visit
By Kevin Sheehan
New York Post
January 6, 2015 | 11:44am

December 8, 2014

Rape Allegations Investigated in Connecticut Hospital



Martin Chalecki, in his apartment at the Marina Village housing project in Bridgeport, Conn. on Thursday, December 4, 2014, claims he was molested by Gonzalo Flores while a patient at St. Vincent's Medical Center. Chalecki said he reported the molestation to the hospital at the time, but that his charges were dismissed by hospital authorities.
Photo: Brian A. Pounds

[From article]
Chalecki's complaint was the first accusation against Flores police and hospital staff said they had received. There was no arrest at the time, and the February allegation lingered, unsubstantiated, for months.
Then on June 7, an unidentified Fairfield man reported to police that he was sexually assaulted in his hospital room. In that incident, the victim was paralyzed, according to a police report.
Following that alleged attack, as police investigated Flores -- but before his arrest -- the hospital fired him on June 11.
Nearly a month later, on July 8, Flores was arrested and jailed on charges he sexually assaulted the Fairfield patient.
[. . .]
During the July 8 interview with Flores, the day of his arrest, police said he confessed to sexually assaulting more patients.
Then on Sept. 30, another alleged victim reported he was abused by Flores at the hospital on March 14, 2013 -- more than a full year before Chalecki's accusation.
On Nov. 15, while in jail, Flores was arrested a second time and charged with the sexual assault of the unidentified St. Vincent's patient in 2013-- the earliest known attack.
[. . .]
"My roommate called the nurse, but instead of helping me, the nurse accused me of making it all up," he said. "She just kept saying `come on frequent flyer Martin, just stop lying. The doctor is not going to give you any more medication, come on frequent flyer Martin.' "
[. . .]
Chalecki said he called hospital security from his room, and a security officer showed up a short time later, but didn't take his account seriously.
"He wrote something down, but I could tell he didn't believe me," he said.
[. . .]
He said, `Are you sure the drugs didn't make you hallucinate? He kept saying `are you sure, are you sure?' Then he said if I made a false account, I could be arrested," Chalecki said. "He had me doubting myself and finally I told him, `All right I won't do anything, and he left.' "

http://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Hospital-rape-case-widens-5940881.php

Hospital rape case widens
Daniel Tepfer
Updated 2:16 pm, Monday, December 8, 2014

November 26, 2014

Few American Hospitals Equipped To Isolate Ebola Infections



Dr. Richard Besser, the chief health and medical editor for ABC News

[From article]
"The idea that this could be done by any American hospital that has an isolation room and can be done safely, I was skeptical about that," said Besser, in a clear departure from recent statements by the CDC that any American hospital can safely care for Ebola patients. Besser mentioned the highly specialized biocontainment equipment and advanced training available at at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, where Fort Worth doctor Kent Brantly was successfully treated for Ebola exposure, and the Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, where an NBC photographer is currently getting treatment.
[. . .]
Besser did agree that all American hospitals needed to be prepared to receive patients with Ebola, but that once diagnosed, they should be moved to facilities that were fully equipped and prepared to handle the contagious disease.

http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Texas/2014/10/12/ABC-Chief-Medical-Expert-CDC-Wrong-All-US-Hospitals-Cant-Treat-Ebola-Safely

ABC CHIEF MEDICAL EXPERT: CDC WRONG, ALL US HOSPITALS CAN'T TREAT EBOLA SAFELY
by SARAH RUMPF
12 Oct 2014

November 23, 2014

Patient Refuses to Leave Hospital, Which Sues For Eviction



Michael Zurawin insists that he is not well enough to leave Lenox Hill Hospital — over a month after first arriving.  
Photo: J.C.Rice

[From article]
Michael Zurawin, an erstwhile millionaire who lives with his mom, has stayed a month past his discharge date. He has become a one-man Occupy Lenox Hill movement.
Now, the East 77th Street hospital has asked a judge to order him out, insisting the retired 70-year-old businessman is ready and able to go home. He claims he can’t walk and won’t leave until Lenox Hill officially refers him into a rehab facility.
“The hospital’s scarce resources should not be utilized unnecessarily by patients . . . who do not ­require acute medical care,” Lenox Hill charged in Manhattan Supreme Court papers.
Zurawin, in a bedside interview, bridled at ­Lenox Hill’s allegation.
“They can sue me all they want,” he said. “They’re wrong.”
[. . .]
The retiree was once known as the state’s biggest tax deadbeat, with
$16 million owed in income taxes. He told The Post Thursday that he paid the taxes and got a refund. A day later, he said he knew nothing of a tax debt.
State Finance Department officials said he still owes $3 million in taxes.


http://nypost.com/2014/11/23/hospital-asks-judge-to-boot-patient-who-refuses-to-leave/

Hospital asks judge to boot patient who refuses to leave
By Kathianne Boniello
November 23, 2014 | 3:59am