Deposition of ER Doctor in Failure to Diagnose Malpractice Case (2 of 2)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • Deposition of Defendant Emergency Medicine doctor in medical malpractice case involving ER failure to diagnose. Our client was a middle-aged man who went the ER after injuring his knee and leg.
    This is how we explained the mechanism of his knee injury to the jury:
    studio.youtube...
    Doctors at the ER (including the deponent in this video) took some x-rays and sent him home with a knee sprain diagnosis. 2 days later they end up having to amputate his leg because the ER doctors during his initial visit failed to discover damage to his popliteal artery.
    Claim Against this Doctor
    This doctor allegedly agreed with the assessment done by PA, but even though she does not need to do her own exam of the patient, she did anyway.
    She remembers this patient and remembers that she has all the same findings as the PA, even though there is not a single note in the file documenting her exam or her findings. She did not sign the actual chart in this case for a full 10 days, long after the plaintiff's leg had already had his leg amputated.
    Verdict
    We brought a medical malpractice action against the PA and this doctor in Baltimore City. After a hard-fought trial, the jury awarded our client $5.2 million.
    Great Client
    The client, a very good man, was kind enough to allow us to share depositions from his case to help educate others.
    More Related to this Malpractice Lawsuit
    You can find the deposition of the defendant's emergency room doctor claimed this doctor's care was within the standard of care here: • Deposition of Defendan...
    And the defendant physician's assistant here: • Defendant Physician's ...

Комментарии • 670

  • @BSNRN_NightingGale1927
    @BSNRN_NightingGale1927 2 года назад +43

    🥺”I didn’t read the chart, I went straight to the source”. WOW!!!
    This case breaks my heart 💔. I’m so glad this he won

    • @kimyeakel7251
      @kimyeakel7251 2 года назад +3

      she's a pretty poor defendant.

    • @Steve0TH
      @Steve0TH 2 года назад

      @@kimyeakel7251 gkgskgkgkgkgkgkgkgkgkgkgskgkdgkk Kik kees k agagekfsjgsjgdkgjsgsgsgsgjgjsgsjgjgjgjgkggskgkgsskgskgksgsgskgskggdkgkdgkgdkgkgkgkgkgkgkdgkgkgkgkgkkdgskggkgkgkgjsjsffjgkgjgjgjgjgdkgsjgkdgsjgjsgsjgjsgjsw

    • @Potamotrygorgeous
      @Potamotrygorgeous Год назад

      You can see her face speaking so much more here. She realizes that what she did was wrong.

  • @smfarrie2943
    @smfarrie2943 3 года назад +55

    5.2 million was well deserved. Some of these doctors and other medical personnel just don't give a damn.

  • @OOceaneyess
    @OOceaneyess 3 года назад +39

    The way she skirts around simple yes or no questions is disgusting. Conveniently forgets important issues. Doesn’t want to admit any fault in any of this. Hard to believe she’s an ER doctor. She clearly feels no remorse for the man who lost his foot/leg.

    • @cutypieable
      @cutypieable 3 года назад +8

      It’s hard to believe she’s any kind of doctor. I wouldn’t take my pet to her !!

    • @OOceaneyess
      @OOceaneyess 3 года назад +2

      @@cutypieable Lol! Ditto!

    • @melinda5777
      @melinda5777 2 года назад +1

      Some of these questions are not yes or no questions/answers. That's why you as a Healthcare worker, OBSERVE/WRITE your opinions. She is not a specialist. She works in Uregant Care not the Emergency room.

  • @Ailenna
    @Ailenna 3 года назад +28

    Conclusion: how his injury happened, and the amount of weight that fell on his knee, justified x-rays and ct scans. Because x-ray only see the bones. The likelihood of soft tissue problems very high. Plus the lack of accurate record keeping. This facility sounds like a butcher shop more than anything.

    • @fiddlefolk
      @fiddlefolk 2 года назад +1

      The ER doesn't fix this type of injury...they access it and refer the patient out to a specialist unless there is no pulse in the extremity which would require emergency surgery by an on call surgeon. According the ER staff, a pulse was present and the patient sent home to follow up with an ortho specialist The argument is whether the patient had a pulse in the extremity when he was at the ER. The ER staffs lack of documentation does not confirm this so I can bet with almost certainty that is what lost the hospital the case. The X-ray occurred because the ER would splint the leg if broken bones were found. They didn't take a CT scan because they do not treat internal soft tissue injuries. The orthopedic specialist would order that.

    • @jaynehabegger9962
      @jaynehabegger9962 2 года назад +1

      It wasn't too a door that came down on him. A spiked vehicle gate in the ground was raised when he was walking across it. And I don't understand how the original person documenting wrote that he said a gate came down on him. I think his care would have been totally different. And yes, the ER should have done CT scans, saw almost the ligaments torn, and referred to a surgeon within their hospital immediately. How hard is that?
      And our system of care in the USA is atrocious!!! This doctor and most have huge egos! I couldn't stand this doctor's eye rolling, heavy breathing, and failure to answer questions with truth.

    • @kathleenscheidt7339
      @kathleenscheidt7339 2 года назад

      My daughter was treated at this hospital years ago…it was a Royal CF

  • @deedrathelibra
    @deedrathelibra 3 года назад +55

    My boss: What time did you come in today?
    Me: Objection! Form and foundation.

  • @Lisa_RNHealthHub
    @Lisa_RNHealthHub 3 года назад +17

    As an RN, this is painful for me to watch. Great atty questions among constant evasivness & objections.

  • @GingerNinja1
    @GingerNinja1 2 года назад +5

    Any M.D. who cannot define the "Standard of care," shouldn't be able to practice medicine until they CAN define it. She also needs to learn to read a chart before examining a patient as well as documenting EVERYTHING she performs on that patient like pulse & temp, especially on a limb injury!! Without knowing everything in that patients chart, but from just listening to her deposition I think it's safe to say the patient was appropriately awarded bless his heart. The plaintiff's attorney did an excellent job imo. Great upload thank you!

  • @chattsignal
    @chattsignal 3 года назад +24

    I'd rather croak in my field than run into this so-called doctor in an ER. SMH

  • @lilianagarcia1061
    @lilianagarcia1061 3 года назад +21

    Glad there is electronic charting now and place for progress notes.

    • @CAMarg-zs1xq
      @CAMarg-zs1xq 3 года назад

      Did you see the nurse speak? Her electronic charting was terrible

    • @JennyT101
      @JennyT101 3 года назад

      Yeah now they seem to over chart. My dad got his medical records after he had a heart attack and they had added all kinds of symptoms he never experienced, things he never told them.

  • @SuperCelliott
    @SuperCelliott 3 года назад +62

    How arrogant of her to think she doesn’t have to document! Every healthcare place I’ve worked in requires it, as does a license

    • @katrinamackenzie8789
      @katrinamackenzie8789 Год назад +2

      Absolutely so rude this Dr 🙄

    • @jeffhatmaker817
      @jeffhatmaker817 8 месяцев назад

      I agree. This woman is disgusting! She has the mentality and demeanor of a miserable DMV public servant. If I were on the jury I would have voted for a 10 million dollar settlement based solely on the testimony of this despicable POS.

  • @nrqed
    @nrqed 3 года назад +108

    When a witness does everything to avoid answering a straightforward question again and again (even a yes or no question), the witness is afraid of the truth.

    • @jordanbdailey
      @jordanbdailey 3 года назад +9

      no. they’re actually typically instructed to not answer “yes” or “no,” specifically because it locks the witness into the specific verbiage asked by the attorney. they want to control the narrative, and generally people take generally true statements as true, which is of course not correct.

    • @fiddlefolk
      @fiddlefolk 3 года назад +17

      A lawyer doesn't ask straightforward questions. The purpose of yes or no questions is limited. The subject matter of what happened is complicated and can't be answered yes or no. It's not black and white. This case should never have been won by the plaintiff. The patient left the ER with perfusion of blood flow to the knee. At some point after leaving the ER, he lost perfusion or blood flow. It is the patient's responsibility to return immediately. Not 3 days later when it is too late and his leg has to come off. Piss poor defense attorney cost this case.

    • @fiddlefolk
      @fiddlefolk 3 года назад +7

      @Ma P you're welcome...This was not negligence. My girlfriend is in a malpractice suit right now where gross negligence did occur such as a surgeon cutting through her bladder and both ureters due to not administering carmine indigo to locate them. Surgeon also used a robot that she wasn't certified to use. Clear difference. Doctor's oath is to do no harm. It's not to fix everything like some believe.

    • @usaf1girl
      @usaf1girl 3 года назад +4

      @@fiddlefolk Wow, that’s horrible. So sorry for your girlfriend. Hope her quality of life isn’t permanently affected.

    • @fiddlefolk
      @fiddlefolk 3 года назад +2

      @@usaf1girl Thank you! She has more surgeries in the future but she's tough.

  • @dbell3230
    @dbell3230 Год назад +3

    I wanted to weigh in here. I've been a Nurse for over 30 years. I hold active CCRN, CEN & TNCC certifications and I have been deposed as an 'expert witness'. As a nurse you are the PATIENT ADVOCATE and must represent their best interests! Hind sight is alway 20 20, I would have PULLED in another physician to evaluate, I've done it many times and will do it again. Once it was determined he had compromised circulation, they quit being pissed off and usually comment, that was a good catch.

  • @WDUJSay
    @WDUJSay 2 года назад +13

    Wow, did she even go to medical school? Her evasiveness on answering simple medical questions and conditions is sickening - no pun intended. This video is eye opening and makes me want to study as much as I can about any condition, so I can insist on further care, tests, operations, etc so I don’t lose a limb or have to watch a loved one go through this kind of doctor’s “medical care”. She needs to wear the Hippocratic Oath on her forehead.
    Everyone memorize this phrase: “DOPPLER STUDY!”

    • @zebra3962
      @zebra3962 Год назад

      I 💯 agree

    • @user-sl4ul4nc3t
      @user-sl4ul4nc3t 5 месяцев назад

      Wait until you get one of those new fancy DEI doctors... or a lawyer from a state that no longer requires the bar exam..

  • @kyreshlcsw2229
    @kyreshlcsw2229 4 года назад +40

    everyone in all disciplines should watch this.

    • @lisamoroney3036
      @lisamoroney3036 3 года назад +3

      It’s definitely made me more conscious .

    • @LouHillierPsych
      @LouHillierPsych 3 года назад +3

      Definitely! I regularly review the Disciplinary Hearings that are made public in my profession as well!

    • @jamiemiesler322
      @jamiemiesler322 3 года назад +2

      I couldn’t agree more. I work in a dental office & all of my notes need to clarify absolutely everything because if our dr has his notes for a particular patient supoenad (sorry. Spelling😬) by the court they better be thorough or it could look bad or worse on him. It’s a good lesson in being sure to document everything possible. Although I do understand that there are things you don’t document when they are within normal limits.

    • @BSNRN_NightingGale1927
      @BSNRN_NightingGale1927 2 года назад

      ABSOLUTELY.

  • @perdetha
    @perdetha 3 года назад +23

    I'm a BSN RN. Most times it's one of us that pick up a potential decline in Patients, and we pull the Physician's coat to it. Seems like all these different types of Technicians are taking RN's and LPN'S POSITIONS. Experience, training, and caring are important elements. Caring is paramount. Nurses are the gatekeepers.

    • @susanbeckham9586
      @susanbeckham9586 2 года назад

      Yes! They pass off medical assistant s as nurses. I am also an RN BSN who attended a reputable school, Purdue University. Those medical assistant s don't know Jack shit. They sure don't make much money because their certificate s aren't worth the paper they're printed on. Save money, hire a dummy.

    • @tracywestbrook7552
      @tracywestbrook7552 2 года назад

      @@susanbeckham9586 How dare you put down a Medical Assistant . So what you have a Bsn that does not make you smart. I would trust A Medical Assistant or a Certified Assistant before you. You sound arrogant and feeling your self and all you are is a high tech Cna. Stop boasting on having a Bsn that means nothing. No Masters no PhD. You make yourself look ignorant.. You have no Medical experience you did not go to medical school.

  • @lyndasmith593
    @lyndasmith593 3 года назад +114

    Good Lord above save me from a doctor like this.

  • @bluestar9463
    @bluestar9463 3 года назад +46

    Gotta get an appointment with this doctor. Great chance of getting a few million.

    • @kathyouthere
      @kathyouthere 3 года назад +11

      If she doesn't kill you first!

    • @vickydavis4748
      @vickydavis4748 3 года назад

      I guess that's one way of looking at things :)

    • @yl7495
      @yl7495 3 года назад +1

      .....if you even survived.

    • @taunirydalch4101
      @taunirydalch4101 3 года назад +3

      Might lose a limb

    • @lindagarris1472
      @lindagarris1472 3 года назад +3

      If u dont mind losing an arm leg or eye

  • @fuzzybutkus3951
    @fuzzybutkus3951 3 года назад +18

    They were probably more concerned that the guy wasn’t seeking pain medication. Last time I went in to E.R. I’d just had gallbladder removed and right from jump Everytime I drank a little water I threw it up and got sicker and sicker. I was supposed to have it out by Lap surgery but doc had a problem and ended up making a incision. They released me the next day and 8 days later I was still sick and went back to E.R. I sat waiting for 45 min. to see a doc to see if I could have pain meds. He walked over looked at me for about a min. and said he’s not drug seeking. Come to find out I had a bowel obstruction.and was in surgery 15 min. Later. They are taking this pain med thing to far.

    • @candilease938
      @candilease938 2 года назад +3

      Because of all the drug addicts out here going to ten different doctors and trying to get narcotics ……so the people who really need pain relief have to go without ….it’s sad and it’s sickening!!!! My poor mother suffered so badly and when all the overdoses started to happen in the earlier 2000’s her GP refused to prescribe her her pain meds after she did for ten years (she had multiple sclerosis and degenerative disc disease along with many more health issues) she had a really hard time finding a doctor who would prescribe them to her. The woman could barely get to the car let alone have to go out every single day to doctor after doctor to try to find help. The MS shots she needed cost $12,000 a MONTH so that wasn’t gonna happen!!
      My momma passed away in 2015. But it still makes me sick to this day that people like her can’t get help because of all the pill heads and druggies ruining it

    • @user-sl4ul4nc3t
      @user-sl4ul4nc3t 5 месяцев назад

      It'd the government taking doctors licenses away and putting them in prison, they're scared to write an rx for opioidd.

  • @Nanirva
    @Nanirva 2 года назад +10

    Wow What a doctor. She didn’t review the chart for ten days but she remembers a patient she saw three years ago. She was responsible for his care. PA’s are physicians assistant for a reason they are not doctors. That is exactly why they need to be supervised by doctors

    • @SixteenTonesStudio
      @SixteenTonesStudio 11 месяцев назад

      I think she reviewed and signed it after she learned that he lost his leg - and remembers the patient because she was anticipating an impending malpractice suit

  • @baroquebeach4825
    @baroquebeach4825 3 года назад +16

    This "Doctor" would have made a better politician . She is better at avoiding answering questions and blaming others than she is at "Doctoring". I hope her license was revoked.

    • @NoNakersAllowed
      @NoNakersAllowed 2 года назад

      If you think doctors lose their license for things like this you are sadly mistaken

    • @baroquebeach4825
      @baroquebeach4825 2 года назад +1

      @@NoNakersAllowed I said I hope it was revoked. It damn well should have been

  • @clairepeters4601
    @clairepeters4601 3 года назад +33

    If this doctor told me the sky is blue, I would go check.

  • @lisamoroney3036
    @lisamoroney3036 3 года назад +31

    This has definitely made me more conscious of my decisions.

  • @fp1912
    @fp1912 2 года назад +4

    It's so infuriating how she keeps looking for approval from her lawyers after every slippery convoluted answer.

  • @Tzippy323
    @Tzippy323 3 года назад +13

    I am multiply handicapped and have had numerous visits to the emergency room. If this Doctor, and I use the word loosely, was assigned to me, I would have left AMA. She has no idea what she is talking about, and obviously is a very careless and uncaring physician.

  • @MB-us8bq
    @MB-us8bq 3 года назад +8

    And these are the people who we trust with our lives..

  • @annietenefrancia7914
    @annietenefrancia7914 2 года назад +9

    The face of a deceptive doctor is an angry, malicious smirk towards the prosecution.

  • @ronniespaz432
    @ronniespaz432 3 года назад +41

    I have never seen nor experienced a ER doctor go behind a PA and do another exam to assure the findings are done correctly. They wash their hands of the case but yes have to sign the record. They rarely even set eyes on these patients.

    • @adila2123
      @adila2123 3 года назад +10

      Exactly my thought! I’ve been seen by PA’s many times and after they leave that’s it. You don’t see a doctor after that.

    • @marymontano8227
      @marymontano8227 2 года назад +1

      Very true doctor s I worked with are requied to sign chart after the P.A. signiture.

  • @vearryhale8257
    @vearryhale8257 3 года назад +41

    I just want to say at the end of the day it sounds like negligence

  • @ronniespaz432
    @ronniespaz432 3 года назад +55

    I have been a nurse for 30 years and can definitively can tell you over the years our medical system has taken a complete shit. There used to be many many small community hospitals (with that comes competition so the person could choose from their experience what Hospital to go to) today all these hospitals have been eaten by big companies like Marshield, Mayo, healthpartners. These huge companies tell people they care and basically want them to have the Disney world experience. Yet really don’t care about anything but the bottom line. They dictate the time doctors spend with patients, what is ordered (I’ve actually had administration go to a doctor and tell them the dose of a narcotic that should be given because the husband wanted it). I hate medicine these days and am glad I’m done. When you don’t have a healthy competition people can no longer get or choose the best care possible. It’s maddening.

    • @taunirydalch4101
      @taunirydalch4101 3 года назад +1

      I'm a nurse as well, I can tell you for a fact the docs I have worked for would never have missed my notes

    • @Cgh432
      @Cgh432 3 года назад +6

      That's why I retired at 50 yrs old I'm not going to be part of patients sub par care . I actually knew of a Dr just like this she eventually was let go by a very good healthcare system but was allowed to practice for several years family urgent care medicine she just stopped giving a damned just like this lady was looking down on the patients !

    • @pantoponrosegoatoe4129
      @pantoponrosegoatoe4129 3 года назад +6

      @@Cgh432 me too! I retired 2 years ago at 50. After seeing this nightmare, I am more sure than ever I made the right decision.

    • @bsrk3170
      @bsrk3170 3 года назад +5

      You hit the nail on the head. It’s all about patient “experience”. Most folks I know would want adequate staffing vs hospital entrances that look like 5 star hotels.

    • @carolannburke5450
      @carolannburke5450 2 года назад +1

      Glad i am retired--They don't make 'em like they used to....

  • @kittycat2651
    @kittycat2651 3 года назад +11

    Damn no wonder this patient won his lawsuit. Hard to believe this woman passed her medical boards. She probably never even saw the patient or if she did half assessed the patient.

  • @vintagehollywood8409
    @vintagehollywood8409 3 года назад +21

    On a very different issue, my husband suffered immeasurable pain and suffering because of a horrible doctor just like this. The fact that she still is practicing medicine, is unconscionable.

    • @marymontano8227
      @marymontano8227 2 года назад

      Ducumentation is required by all medical staff who took cae of the patient. Admissions, Cna, license nurses. PA , Doctors ,Xray, lab etc,etc.

    • @NoNakersAllowed
      @NoNakersAllowed 2 года назад

      No it's not. The general public isn't aware of how many cases every day doctors & surgeons do this or much worse and are still allowed to practice

  • @gj6209
    @gj6209 3 года назад +55

    I’ve worked with all specialties of physicians including ED, critical care and med surg doctors and this physician is TYPICAL of what a patient suffers. This phys. is EVASIVE AND KNOWS SHE BLEW THIS PATIENT OFF AS MANY PHYS.’S DO.

    • @saradecapua3264
      @saradecapua3264 3 года назад +6

      My husband is a retired thoracic surgeon. There are more good doctors than bad but when they are bad.it's a disaster.

    • @Nat524Ricci
      @Nat524Ricci 3 года назад +2

      Agreed. And it’s a shame, because there are excellent physicians out there. But sadly, it is not a “few bad apples” problem any longer. My horrific experience and near death taught me that. The ONLY way this apathetic attitude will change is if we HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE. Do not accept sub-standard care.
      Do not accept them deviating from the standard of care. Demand the care that you deserve and need. And if they refuse, hire a lawyer. Period. We cannot let these gatekeepers between life and death get away with this abuse any longer.
      In my case, I had a brain tumor (pituitary tumor in skull base) causing all of my symptoms. I am only diagnosed now thanks to my own self advocacy and education. Prior, I was dismissed and referred to psych for YEARS, citing my anxiety as the source of my suffering.
      I suffered a massive coronary fistula with not one but TWO massive aneurysms - still took another 5 years to DX me.
      Wasn’t given my first Cushings Disease testing until May 2021 after specifically requesting it since November 2020.
      All results were 8-10x normal, then was dismissed again, told this was due to anxiety and insomnia.
      I then went to Neurosurgery at UPMC who agreed with my differential of Cushings and got their NeuroEndo to see me, as well as my pituitary MRI.
      It’s Cushings Disease due to a corticotroph pituitary adenoma! Imagine that!
      It’s also fatal with a prognosis of 4.5 years left untreated!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have a 5 year old son, and my heart fistula w aneurisms should have killed me. I’m on year 16, and despite me surviving, I have cerebral atrophy, hippocampal atrophy aka BRAIN DAMAGE. My brain looks like that of an MS patient or early onset Alzheimer’s. But not to worry - it’s just structural brain damage due to long term untreated hypercortisolism. SMH! I’m looking for an attorney, too.

    • @saradecapua3264
      @saradecapua3264 3 года назад +3

      @@Nat524Ricci You have literally been through hell. My situation was different but but I know that indifference by some doctors can lead to a death sentence. My husband and I battled royal with some who said there was nothing wrong. It wasn't until my Hmg was 3 that we got anywhere. Stage 4 ca. Went through irt a second time and survived to make them feel like a four letter word.
      I'm wishing you strength and best wishes.

    • @Nat524Ricci
      @Nat524Ricci 3 года назад +3

      @@saradecapua3264 Sara, my goodness, you have been through hell! And how terrifying is it, your husband is a surgeon and even his advocacy for you couldn’t prevent the torment you endured. This is exactly what I mean by an example of unacceptable treatment and I pray more patients open their eyes and do the work it necessitates to hold these rogue physicians accountable.
      It is an admirable profession but is being overrun with inept and incompetent physicians who are apathetic and cold, likely overworked and assigned too many patients and may be unable to provide the care their patients deserve in many situations.
      I feel a complete overhaul/restructuring of the US for-profit medical system is way overdue.

    • @saradecapua3264
      @saradecapua3264 3 года назад +5

      @@Nat524Ricci
      There are great doctors out there but what is coming out of medical schools now is disgusting. I take issue with doctors with greasy long hair dirty sneakers and rude attitudes. When my husband ws a resident, a couple residents were kicked out because they were rude to the mother of a doctor.
      Most doctors are paid less than administrators. The hospitals and administrators make the most with the exception of specialists like plastic surgeons who cater to the rich and are paid cash.
      My husband went to medical school in England which is more socialized medicine. You had better be rich or be ready to wait for a long time.
      I honestly don't know how there could be a revamping that would allow doctors to give quality care when they are rushed, abused and [having seen the treatment they receive fro patient families] This will take extremely wise people....being a doctor is not the life you see on television.

  • @redisetgo.
    @redisetgo. 3 года назад +25

    The problem is, she never read the chart but diagnosis is dependent on the "whole history" of the patient. Lord I hope I never get an ER Dr like her.

    • @user-od5pz6im9s
      @user-od5pz6im9s Год назад +1

      unfortunately in the hospital you can't choose who takes care of you ...

  • @lisan8561
    @lisan8561 2 года назад +8

    I've been to an ER 3 times in the past 3 years for 2 different medical problems. While sitting in a triage area, an RN asked me why I came to the ER, took my vital signs while documenting my answers. A PA (I'd seen a few days earlier in an Urgent Care for same problem) asked me for clarification of the changes that brought me to the ER, explained the tests she would order, ordered pain medication, would discuss with an MD. I was placed in an exam room by an RN, IV placed for IV antibiotic, had an ultrasound. I did not see or speak to the PA again. After all test results were available, medications given, an MD came in, introduced herself and discussed results, discharge plan, followup with my primary provider. With computer charting, all providers (RN's, PA's, MD's) sign their notes electronically. If still doing handwritten notes, each provider signs their name and title. I doubt this MD did much of a hands-on physical exam; she like most, more likely relied on the PA's exam, etc. She probably reviewed the chart briefly the day she "signed" the chart.

    • @jojobaja
      @jojobaja Год назад

      Except... the M.D. did a focused assessment! The M.D. discussed the plan of care with the P.A.! Normal course of events in an ER... Lots of hospitals still don't do electronic charting in the E.Ds. I just came from one Also, the physicians get their charts sent to their boxes for signatures alot.

  • @scourge3
    @scourge3 3 года назад +28

    SHE DIDN'T READ THE CHART!!!! SHE ADMITTED SHE DIDNT READ IT BEFORE SHE SAW THE PATIENT!!!! YOU CAN'T DO THAT!!!!

    • @MotherofDragons937
      @MotherofDragons937 2 года назад +1

      Yes! I’m sure that is a major part of why the patient won the case.

    • @msab657
      @msab657 2 года назад +1

      Yes, and then nobody considered that the reason he wasn’t in severe pain on examination is because he had IV Dilaudid on board.

  • @ronniespaz432
    @ronniespaz432 3 года назад +48

    MRI’s are done all the time to a limb with any suspected internal injuries. With those finding further testing IN THE ER would and should have been done.

    • @anne-mariekaterivartti1822
      @anne-mariekaterivartti1822 3 года назад +9

      It almost sounds, that this MD is working in some sort back yard clinics for toy dolls…

    • @Msstarrgirl1
      @Msstarrgirl1 3 года назад +11

      My son injured his leg and after an X-ray his ER dr. Ordered a MRI. I am sure glad he didn’t have this Dr.

    • @mobileasaurus
      @mobileasaurus 3 года назад +8

      I've been to the ER for injuries at ended up needing an MRI several times and not once did I receive an MRI at the ER. Sometimes they reccomended I go to another doctor to follow up.

    • @Msstarrgirl1
      @Msstarrgirl1 3 года назад +4

      @@mobileasaurus my son’s leg was so serious they were afraid he might have to have surgery. He was hospitalized for two days, maybe that is why they did the MRI. He fell through the floor boards of a house he was working on.

    • @anne-mariekaterivartti1822
      @anne-mariekaterivartti1822 3 года назад +3

      @@mobileasaurus in our ERs (University hospital located in Finland) X-ray and CT are first steps but if CT. Radiologists are not “afraid” to recommend MRI to be done immediately or coming days.
      What comes for my own Experiences, I have always got all needed tests and then some.

  • @bsrk3170
    @bsrk3170 3 года назад +13

    Do you know why a PA and a Dr both saw the patient? Double billing. All about the Benjamins.

  • @dr.camaled.7085
    @dr.camaled.7085 3 года назад +22

    What I can confirm, documentation is everything in the medical field, the government requires a notation of everything done to the patient.

  • @darceyyarbrough9738
    @darceyyarbrough9738 3 года назад +14

    I would like to know how she passed medical school and how she is even a licensed doctor.

    • @stillmaninmotion6081
      @stillmaninmotion6081 2 года назад +4

      Free college

    • @icanfartloud
      @icanfartloud 2 года назад +4

      Affirmative Action

    • @maysullivan7943
      @maysullivan7943 2 года назад +4

      degree was awarded

    • @NoNakersAllowed
      @NoNakersAllowed 2 года назад

      Look at these racist assumptions in the comments 🙄 😅 as if white doctors and surgeon's have done worse

    • @werringertonney7489
      @werringertonney7489 Год назад

      Boy, racism prevailed in this thread. 😂by the way, white women were the biggest beneficiaries of affirmative action you back woods, one-eyed idiots.

  • @tracyloftus3237
    @tracyloftus3237 3 года назад +12

    Since when is numbness not a subjective complaint in the ER. Objective findings are MEASURABLE abnormalities or findings that are perceived by the examiner. Unless there are something like reflex exams, nerve conduction studies, etc, measurable abnormalities or findings, numbness is a subjective complaint. I wouldn’t be surprised if the Risk Management Department returned the chart for her to sign, after they found out the patient had to have an amputation.

  • @williamadams1348
    @williamadams1348 3 года назад +33

    A supervisor that doesn't have to supervise anything. This is the picture of a quack.

  • @dude6894
    @dude6894 23 дня назад +1

    Look at how much gold this beast has on. She is never putting a hand on a patient. Not looking at them. Not reading their chart. Not even looking at them. Just talking down to a nurse, barking things out. Then storming away to complain about how much hours she is working, or some other gripe.

  • @sharonsoucy6997
    @sharonsoucy6997 3 года назад +19

    My impression is that she is right in the sense that ER treats life threading issues. I have worked in the er.

    • @emmvold
      @emmvold 3 года назад

      Threading

    • @1rage17
      @1rage17 3 года назад +2

      Lmao is that the only thing she’s right about?

  • @janicefarmer8600
    @janicefarmer8600 3 года назад +68

    What an ignorant, arrogant and irritating “so called” doctor! God save us all from this kind of ER treatment!!

    • @ritatinken5867
      @ritatinken5867 3 года назад +7

      And a b---h. Run if she’s working & you need an ED visit!

    • @jancrawford8460
      @jancrawford8460 3 года назад +8

      Rita Tinken … How in the world did she get her degree !! 🤦‍♀️

    • @carolv8450
      @carolv8450 3 года назад +1

      @@jancrawford8460 she’s a naturopathic dr.

    • @updownstate
      @updownstate 3 года назад

      @@carolv8450 O.

    • @cutypieable
      @cutypieable 3 года назад +2

      @@jancrawford8460 Affirmative action

  • @LouHillierPsych
    @LouHillierPsych 3 года назад +13

    Continuing professional development and refresher training is so important and this case seems to be a good illustration of why. Without it, "professional drift" or "sloppy practice" can creep in, for example, not keeping up-to-date with developments in the field, not keeping up-to-date with nor following organisational policies and procedures, not keeping adequate and timely notes, taking short-cuts, making hasty diagnostic assumptions about presentations without gathering adequate evidence from additional tests to corroborate (or otherwise) those assumptions. When working in health care, practitioners have to keep a complete evidential trail of written records that account for and justify every decision and intervention.

    • @solowu
      @solowu 3 года назад +1

      Excellent point!!!

    • @solowu
      @solowu 3 года назад +1

      I agree 100 percent!

  • @taunirydalch4101
    @taunirydalch4101 3 года назад +6

    OMG ' I don't know did you look"? Wow!!!

  • @jackgarand7284
    @jackgarand7284 3 года назад +12

    This doctor is a dishonest evasive disgrace to the profession.

  • @pj3956
    @pj3956 3 года назад +23

    If suspected soft tissue injury was present a MRI could have been done. Apparently pedal pulse was present and if no swelling bruising or vascular issues presented.He could have developed this issue up til a week later. Very difficult case especially for jury’s.

    • @chattsignal
      @chattsignal 3 года назад +4

      I disagree for the simple fact that this 'doctor' is avoiding everything...her body language SCREAMS laziness and the fact that she did a terrible job ....i bet the jury eats her a** up!!

  • @louisianalady7105
    @louisianalady7105 3 года назад +8

    Numbness and paresthesia are subjective pieces of information that only the patient can state, information that is based upon the patient's verbal statement. However, any limb injury requires evaluation for the 5 Ps: pulselessness, paresthesia, poikliothermia, pallor, and pain; and these must all be included in the provider's (Doctor, PA, NP) physical exam, and findings thoroughly documented. The providers suspected a fracture, as evidenced by ordering a x-ray, and the 5 Ps physical exam findings apply. In the absence of plain film fracture evidence of this patient, a MRI and CT would be the next level of patient evaluation and crucial to this patient's condition. Apparently, the patient had pain, paresthesia. The presence of pain and paresthesia requires evaluation of neuro-vascular components of symptoms; given that fracture was ruled out. The patient is in the ER with a traumatic injury to his knee-- so let's see what the injuries are while the patient is RIGHT THERE. A CT and MRI are within the imaging that takes place while a patient is in the ER. Personally, I would have dug a little deeper to see what the patient's injuries are. I would have ordered a CT and MRI. Nerve injuries and circulatory compromise must be emergently evaluated-- as in now, not as in days later. I wish the PA and the Doctor had both delved a little deeper. The only diagnosis(es) missed will be based upon the questions one fails to ask, the appropriate radiology obtained, or the questionable presentation of the patient that one fails to appreciate and evaluate.
    Yikes.

  • @ellybean5868
    @ellybean5868 3 года назад +44

    I would say this was a life and limb threatening injury considering he lost his limb.

    • @employempathy.4885
      @employempathy.4885 2 года назад

      I'd be curious if he had any underlying health history (such as high cholesterol or heart abnormalities) that could have made an unlikely limb threatening injury a limb threatening injury. Any medical experts here able to answer that hypothetical?

    • @latifahgordeeva6198
      @latifahgordeeva6198 2 года назад

      Oh that poor man

    • @latifahgordeeva6198
      @latifahgordeeva6198 2 года назад +1

      @@employempathy.4885 🤔 Possible. An accurate pt hx would have been helpful

  • @anniekrause9834
    @anniekrause9834 3 года назад +12

    When people don’t have a great relationship with the truth. You lie, lie!!!!

  • @pizzafries
    @pizzafries 3 года назад +6

    I remember I was suppose to get an x-ray and as soon as they found that I didn't have insurance,they canceled it. I was suppose to have something else done too. But they came and said ok your done,I shrugged my shoulders and say ok bye!

    • @dinacox1971
      @dinacox1971 3 года назад +2

      I like you have no health insurance. I had very low sodium (1st I knew that was a thing) and the doctor told had me literally eat more salt and come back for a test in a week. At that time they told me if it went below a certain level that I would have to immediately be hospitalized and it was extremely serious. Well, it went well below that level, and guess what, when they realized that I didn't have insurance, hospital care was no longer mentioned. Well, I am still here so I guess the best way to stay out of the hospital is to not have insurance.

    • @jenaemarieAZ
      @jenaemarieAZ 2 года назад

      I hate that!!! I have been thru the same but interesting that the ER can be filled with large families who come in with the patient (parents, grandparents, cousins, kids, ….) but they have no medical insurance but somehow get treated.

  • @lorio1331
    @lorio1331 3 года назад +20

    OMG 😳 shocking this person is a medical doctor

  • @netty10453
    @netty10453 3 года назад +5

    The guy had a door come down on his leg….would worry of a crushing injury.

  • @rachelgoldman3968
    @rachelgoldman3968 3 года назад +7

    I had to sue my Dr when she missed my broken wrist 2x. She read both xrays herself! The xray tech told me it looked broke both times. Went to another hsp & was diagnosed immediately with a broken wrist! Dr are ppl who have bad days but just not with me.

  • @dancalhoun2014
    @dancalhoun2014 4 года назад +21

    Hell of a job! Thank you for putting out this content. Very helpful

  • @theresalero7039
    @theresalero7039 3 года назад +19

    If you wonder what arrogance, deception, dissembling, obfuscation, obtuse and guilty look like, look no further.

  • @loisfolk5492
    @loisfolk5492 3 года назад +22

    Sounds like they need some process improvement discussions at the hospital

  • @pierred3l3cto47
    @pierred3l3cto47 4 года назад +42

    I can see why you won this case. Doctor is very evasive and defensive

  • @rhondasheldon6097
    @rhondasheldon6097 3 года назад +24

    This doctor shows anger to the questioner, the questions but seems ticked by the lawyers who are there to represent her. After everything said by her reps she glares at them as if she’s looking down at them with her pious, smarter than any lawyer. I picture her sitting and letting the few others do all of the work. I can’t imagine having to go BOTHER her for one itty bitty thing because her response would be frightening. I had to replay the interview because I thought I didn’t hear properly. She barked at him with a firm nasty response “did you read page eight.” I was thrilled when he raised his voice and asked “did you?” Home run!

  • @comcfi
    @comcfi 2 года назад +4

    How could someone as educated as this woman be so confused by simple straightforward questions

    • @33roses
      @33roses 2 года назад +1

      So painful

    • @NoNakersAllowed
      @NoNakersAllowed 2 года назад +1

      She's not confused. The way he's asking the questions is in a way that she admits to guilt/ negligence. If she doesn't admit to negligence she gets to keep her license.

  • @debicongram5546
    @debicongram5546 3 года назад +27

    Compare her talking to other doctors, how other doctors talk in factual medical terms and she appears unable to do that.

    • @DEEZVASS
      @DEEZVASS 3 года назад +7

      False. She’s explaining in ways he can understand. I do the same thing with anyone who’s not in medical field. It’s like a whole other language to most who are not in the field. To me she did a great job.

    • @stevethomas9194
      @stevethomas9194 3 года назад +3

      @@DEEZVASS she did a great job of showing most people how stupid she is. There is no way in hell I would want anyone I care about to be seen where she practices medicine.

    • @ale347baker
      @ale347baker 3 года назад +5

      @@DEEZVASS She's in a deposition, not talking to neighbor joe.

  • @lisamoroney3036
    @lisamoroney3036 3 года назад +12

    I’d love to have this attorney - he’s so good !

  • @annietenefrancia7914
    @annietenefrancia7914 2 года назад +5

    A doctor will know what forms were used IF she actually read the WHOLE CHART. But if she just browsed thru it, depended on the PA's assessment, & then just signed the chart absentmindedly....then she was negligent in her capacity as an ER doctor.

  • @YouWillNeverFillMyShoes
    @YouWillNeverFillMyShoes 3 года назад +7

    How many fellow nurses are loving medical malpractice depositions and cases? 🙋🏼‍♀️

    • @deb4746
      @deb4746 3 года назад

      Yes! This reminds me why I document everything even with charting by exception, I document more. CYA. Never want to be in depo chair.

  • @sophiaackley3535
    @sophiaackley3535 3 года назад +9

    People don't understand that an ER doctor is not a specialist. Tests are not done the same in the ER setting. This is why follow up with the doctor who has more time is critical. Also, our system is critically overloaded. Much of what happened here is a product of the system's design. The system needs to change.

    • @DEEZVASS
      @DEEZVASS 3 года назад +2

      Well said!! Thank you! ☺️

  • @melissalong4937
    @melissalong4937 3 года назад +3

    Not sure she could accurately diagnose a paper cut.

  • @sandramessenger2044
    @sandramessenger2044 3 года назад +25

    Shes so smug. Seems to be above anyone questioning her decisions.

    • @slawson1991
      @slawson1991 3 года назад +2

      I think she frustrated at the stupidity of the questions! This lawyer has no idea how ‘supervision’ is done by a DR of a PA. I live the term ‘gross misassumption’. He has NO CLUE how the healthcare system works.

    • @1rage17
      @1rage17 3 года назад +1

      @@slawson1991 The questions don’t sound stupid to me. Her answers sound like she’s unsure of everything

    • @kimberlykellam9795
      @kimberlykellam9795 3 года назад

      In my opinion, the doctor is not smug. I call her confident.

  • @michaelhart7282
    @michaelhart7282 3 года назад +8

    She did NOT say “Well it was December and maybe he was outside”

    • @rhondasheldon6097
      @rhondasheldon6097 3 года назад

      She would lose the entire case with her snotty attitude. When she laughs at the question and refuses to answer I want to get through my screen to smack her a good one, sad I can’t do that!
      .
      .

    • @mcharle01
      @mcharle01 Год назад

      😂😂😂😂 she did

  • @marilynmccord4612
    @marilynmccord4612 3 года назад +13

    Sad she is really sad got attitude and dont care i see nurses like that i work with some but the end of the day will have to answer to God

  • @smplot
    @smplot 2 года назад +3

    Good job holding her accountable!

  • @worldgrooves2254
    @worldgrooves2254 4 года назад +10

    Thank you so much I wish I can find a lawyer like you in New York

    • @redisetgo.
      @redisetgo. 3 года назад +2

      I feel the same way, except I need one if Florida.

  • @slawson1991
    @slawson1991 3 года назад +2

    Half of these comments show you’ve never worked in the healthcare field and have no concept of medical care, just like that plaintiff lawyer doesn’t. Half of his questions made no sense whatsoever.

  • @rosieG2112
    @rosieG2112 3 года назад +12

    If it's not documented it's not done ! One of the first thing you are taught .

  • @sergebreton6776
    @sergebreton6776 Год назад

    🇨🇦. Her lawyer and the hospital lawyer are OBSESSIVE with their OBJECTIONS. They drive me crazy

  • @tonybarden9187
    @tonybarden9187 3 года назад +9

    Man she is throwing some nasty looks at her attorneys, as if to say well are you going to object to every question

    • @salaciouslysalacious3021
      @salaciouslysalacious3021 3 года назад +4

      She’s not. She’s a doctor and has never been disposed. And with the many objections, she’s making sure or confused as to if she can reply. It’s common. She’s not an attorney and again she’s never been disposed.

    • @employempathy.4885
      @employempathy.4885 2 года назад +2

      I disagree. I believe she was always looking for validation.

  • @marandacarver8346
    @marandacarver8346 3 года назад +4

    I have to sue the surgeon who did my surgery and im just praying i win the case!! Theres a huge difference when someone in the medical field cares and when they dont. It just seems when they dont the job is mever done right . I wouldnt want anyone to go through what i have and he has patients in and out of his office.

  • @davidbrill1237
    @davidbrill1237 4 года назад +22

    Unbelievable .... the very picture of incompetence and lack of ANY sense of medical compliance and best practice standards. She doesn't appear to know what she needs to do other than "treat the patient". The poor man was discharged with a ticking bomb that should have been very evident and diagnosed prior to discharge. By the way, excellent deposition !

    • @slawson1991
      @slawson1991 3 года назад

      She done great and didn’t answer those stupid questions he was asking or trying to make her admit to things that weren’t true.

  • @kaseycarpenter8009
    @kaseycarpenter8009 4 года назад +18

    O.g..if the patient doesn't mention something then Nothing wrong. God help you if you go in to her ER unconscious...Please tell us
    this lady is out of the medical field. She going to need some WD-40 on her rolling eyes

    • @mollycote1021
      @mollycote1021 3 года назад +3

      For sure, she is a piece of work!

    • @Nat524Ricci
      @Nat524Ricci 3 года назад +4

      Her apathy is clearly seen all over her face & heard in her speech. It appears she is very uncomfortable, likely “bothered” to have to be there.
      Textbook sociopath.
      Reckless, apathetic, rude, incompetent, inept, condescending, complete lack of empathy….
      Typical physician these days. Gross.

  • @jackiesholes1835
    @jackiesholes1835 3 года назад +2

    Patient won the case 50 million

  • @dannbailey1
    @dannbailey1 3 года назад +4

    I pray I never see this woman if I’m in the hospital!!

  • @nrqed
    @nrqed 3 года назад +20

    18:20 I can't believe that woman....She is saying that the words in the chart are meaningless. What a joke she is.

    • @Liverpoolboy01
      @Liverpoolboy01 3 года назад +2

      It would be funny, if someone had not had a leg amputated!

    • @NoNakersAllowed
      @NoNakersAllowed 2 года назад

      Guess what, many of them don't read notes in the chart, especially nurses' notes, SHOCKER

  • @SuperCelliott
    @SuperCelliott 3 года назад +16

    This doc is a quack. Who doesn’t read the triage documents? Very irresponsible

  • @ljmayers2704
    @ljmayers2704 2 года назад +2

    Usually if a PA sees the patient the doc does not they just review the chart and put pain med orders if needed

  • @Henry-yf2np
    @Henry-yf2np Год назад

    Easiest lawsuit win ever. Not to discredit your hard work, but this doctor is a REAL charmer…

  • @Liverpoolboy01
    @Liverpoolboy01 3 года назад +26

    This is the American health system, it’s all about friggin profit!

    • @mimi2613
      @mimi2613 3 года назад +1

      Yep because those mri's are expensive!!!

    • @dreadobit356
      @dreadobit356 2 года назад

      5.2 million seems more expensive than appropriate testing.

  • @jtwildboar
    @jtwildboar Год назад

    As a psychologist working in a hospital I can verify that much of the time the chart is not available when you need to chart something. Too many people using the chart.

  • @GodfreyMasters
    @GodfreyMasters 3 года назад +21

    look at the ego of this woman. I can see that she probably never has had to answer to anyone and she almost snarling with contempt. Also, its sad to see how confused she is with straight forward questions I hope she wasnt that confused when treating her patients.

    • @mollyb1983
      @mollyb1983 3 года назад +6

      Also very manipulative replies. Trying to twist the interrogator’s words.

    • @usaf1girl
      @usaf1girl 3 года назад +4

      She’s fighting for her life. Wouldn’t you be evasive & nervous? Why should she be helpful to her own prosecution?

    • @bsrk3170
      @bsrk3170 3 года назад +1

      You just described most Dr’s.

  • @brianstewart6657
    @brianstewart6657 4 года назад +14

    I’m not responsible for the forms, I’m responsible for the clinical care of the patient..
    You mean the clinical care, or lack thereof, of the patient who needed to get an amputation?

  • @timgaskey2258
    @timgaskey2258 Год назад

    You only have to watch about 10 seconds of this doctor's attitude to see that she's incredibly negligent and flat out doesn't care.

  • @rebeccaswift7588
    @rebeccaswift7588 3 года назад +5

    My gawd, the RN spoke more like a physician than this "so called doctor"..she is so evasive she sounds ignorant..scary to know she treats humans in an emergency situation..

  • @ronjensen3514
    @ronjensen3514 Год назад +1

    I just went thru a massive injury to a leg and I was checked every two hrs, for 16 days this woman is not a doctor. any one who came in to check me had a body camera on and every am me and a doctor would go over the footage and record sof the night because they were afraid of me losing my leg

  • @connieblackmon3932
    @connieblackmon3932 2 года назад +1

    Listening to this doctor is very scary. I don't get the talking in circles and refusing to answer simple questions as though she does not understand the question when I understand the question and I only have a high school education. The 30 minute mark it's really interesting and in my personal opinion at that point this deposition could've been wrapped up right then. Good Job by the attorney asking questions. If something ever happens to me I want him as my lawyer

  • @hunzybunzy808
    @hunzybunzy808 3 года назад +2

    Patients do not always leAve the ER or even admitted to hospital with a specific diagnosis...for example, a patient with Chest Pain(CP), and be admitted to hospital or discharged from ER w/ diagnosis as CP, after hospital admission, further testing confirmed may reveal an Acute Myocardial infarction...
    Not saying this docs care isn't questionable...

  • @Red3-j4j
    @Red3-j4j 9 дней назад

    "I don't understand what you're getting at." Says the doctor who knows she's done something wrong after every question asked! 😅 Sounds guilty to me.

  • @dude6894
    @dude6894 2 месяца назад

    The "whole picture" apparently includes what the weather is outside. Man, this lady has caused a lot of damage in her life.

  • @mancheezethegreat8617
    @mancheezethegreat8617 3 года назад +1

    She's definitely negligent. To not read the HISTORY on his entrance? What a goofball she is. I hope I never ever have a doctor like her. She's a quack

  • @1rage17
    @1rage17 3 года назад +3

    She is not understanding any of his questions, they’re actually fairly simple questions. Seems like she can’t explain herself worth sh**

    • @JohnnyWishbone85
      @JohnnyWishbone85 2 года назад

      There are two reasons for this:
      1. She's been coached by her attorney to answer his questions in only the narrowest way possible and not volunteer anything that wasn't specifically asked-for.
      2. Many of his questions were complete nonsense. They were as ridiculous as if he were asking a mechanic why they might use a green wrench as opposed to a blue one.
      Put the two of these factors together, and you have a recipe for someone who looks like they're being evasive.

  • @eboneyboswell4328
    @eboneyboswell4328 3 года назад +3

    Based on her Deposition, MR.TOLSON SHOULD'VE BEEN AWARDED THE FULL 5.9 MILLION

  • @superbaddctv
    @superbaddctv 3 года назад +5

    Even I know what a 9 next to the word severity means and I’m blind deaf and dumb 😑😶🥴