When Bruce Peterson left the U.S. Postal Service after 24 years delivering mail, he started a travel agency. It was his dream career, his wife Shirlee said.
DeMaio paid $10,000 and agreed to two years’ oversight to settle the complaint over Peterson and other patients in 2011. He said his treatment didn’t contribute to Peterson’s death. “We’ve learned a lot since Bruce died,” Shirlee Peterson said. “Too many stents can kill you.” Peterson’s case is part of the expanding impact of U.S. medicine’s binge on cardiac stents -- implants used to prop open the arteries of 7 million Americans in the last decade at a cost of more than $110 billion. When stents are used to restore blood flow in heart attack patients, few dispute they are beneficial. These and other acute cases account for about half of the 700,000 stent procedures in the U.S. annually. Among the other half -- elective-surgery patients in stable... |
Copyright
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Deaths Linked to Cardiac Stents Rise as Overuse Seen
Supreme Court Rejects Tobacco Companies’ Appeal of Florida Case
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the tobacco industry’s appeal of a Florida ruling that may help thousands of smokers sue cigarette makers over smoking-related illnesses. The nation’s highest court today turned away arguments by Altria Group Inc.’s Philip Morris USA, Reynolds American Inc.’s R.J. Reynolds Tobacco and Vector Group Ltd.’s Liggett unit. They challenged a $2.5 million award to the family of Charlotte Douglas, who died in 2008 of lung cancer at age 62. The Supreme Court has repeatedly declined to intervene in tobacco litigation in Florida, where more than 4,500 smoker suits are pending. So far, Florida juries have returned verdicts totaling more than $500 million against the industry, the companies said in their appeal. Cigarette makers are seeking to limit the effect of a 2006 Florida Supreme Court decision, which said a jury’s factual findings against the industry in a class-action case could serve as the starting point for individual suits. The Florida high court reaffirmed that ruling in the Douglas case. At the U.S. Supreme Court, the tobacco companies said they were being deprived of their constitutional right to due process of law. “It is impossible to conclude with any certainty in any of these cases that any jury in any proceeding has ever decided all the elements of the plaintiff’s claims in his or her favor,” the companies contended in their appeal. Douglas’s widower, James,... |
Related articles
- The Impact and Echoes of the Wal-Mart Discrimination Case (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Employee Rights Hurt by Supreme Court Decisions (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Why Overturning DOMA Is a Win for Employee Rights (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- On Access and Accountability - Two Supreme Court Rulings on Generic Drugs (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- N.Y. AG announces order against major tobacco companies (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Fla. appeals court says $33M in damages to smoker's widow not excessive (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Truck driver alleges firing based on work comp claim
Sandra Terry filed a lawsuit Sept. 17 in Madison County Circuit Court against TMCI, Peoplease Corporation and Thomas J. Manville. In her complaint, Terry alleges she was working as a truck driver for TMCI on Aug. 9, 2008, when she suffered an injury. Because she was injured while working, Terry filed for workers’ compensation benefits including medical treatment and time off work, according to the complaint. On Sept. 20, 2008, TMCI fired Terry, the suit states. Manville authorized her termination, knowing that it happened because of her workers’ compensation claim, the complaint says. In her complaint, Terry seeks general damages of more than $100,000, plus lost wages and benefits, pre-judgment interest, punitive and exemplary damages, costs and other relief the court deems just. D. Jeffrey Ezra of Ezra and Associates in Collinsville will be representing her. Madison County Circuit Court case number: 13-L-1563. |
Related articles
- Supreme Court Rejects Tobacco Companies' Appeal of Florida Case (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The Impact and Echoes of the Wal-Mart Discrimination Case (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Employee Rights Hurt by Supreme Court Decisions (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Why Overturning DOMA Is a Win for Employee Rights (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- On Access and Accountability - Two Supreme Court Rulings on Generic Drugs (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- N.Y. AG announces order against major tobacco companies (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Robot Surgery Damaging Patients Rises With Misleading Marketing
Porter Adventist Hospital in Denver announced last year that Warren Kortz, a general surgeon on the medical staff, was the first in the Rocky Mountain region to use a technique known as robotic surgery to remove gall bladders through one incision in the belly button.
The operation, performed while the doctor sits at a video- game-like console, was “taking advantage of another breakthrough in robotic surgery” and is “easier on the patient,” the hospital said in a press release. “It’s Star Wars stuff,” Kortz was quoted as saying in another article put out by the hospital touting another operation, robot-assisted parathyroid surgery, in 2010. “My prediction is it will eventually replace everything else.” What the hospital and Kortz didn’t reveal was the risk. Even as Kortz promoted robotic surgery, 10 patients he treated suffered injuries or complications between 2008 and 2011, according to an April complaint by the Colorado Medical Board. Five had arteries punctured or torn. Objects were temporarily left inside two, and others had nerve damage. One died and another needed cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The complaint charges Kortz with 14 counts of unprofessional conduct, including sometimes not advising patients on alternatives to the robot. Robotic surgeries are on the rise, fueled by aggressive marketing by doctors, hospitals and Intuitive Surgical Inc., which manufactures the $1.5 million robot. Advertising on... |
Related articles
- New Concerns on Robotic Surgeries (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- What If I May Need Surgery Later? (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The Shocking Truth About Medication Errors (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Nurses Prone to Injuries With Heavier Patients (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- An "F" for Quality (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Many Cancer Patients Overtreated In Final Days (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Mets' Harvey Is Covered Like Any Other Employee With a Workplace Injury (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
ABA president, others express concern over shutdown’s effects on judiciary
American Bar Association President James Silkenat is calling on members of Congress to send a budget to the President.
Silkenat, a partner in the New York office of Sullivan & Worcester, took office in August. In a statement last week, Silkenat called the government shutdown, which began Oct. 1, a “historic failure that imperils justice.” “The political brinksmanship that brought our government to a standstill reflects the same intransigence and unwillingness to compromise that imposed sequestration on our national government and hardships on many who contract with, work for or receive certain nonentitlement benefits from the federal government,” he said. “Federal courts already face staff reductions and programmatic cuts that threaten public safety. The failure to reach accord on a continuing resolution to fund the government has also scuttled both chambers attempts to add extra funding to pay for indigent defense representation.” He added, “Congress has practically abdicated its constitutional responsibility to provide a budget for the government. It is time to end the scorched earth tactics and send a budget to the President.” Silkenat, who argues that citizens’ access to justice will increasingly be in jeopardy, testified on Capitol Hill Tuesday about the effects of the shutdown on the judiciary. He, along with other lawyers and former judges, told members of the... |
Related articles
- Government Shutdown: Day 9 - Government shutdown hitting veterans, military families hard (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Government Shutdown: Day 8 - Injured Workers Are Being Held for Ransom (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Judge denies jury trial in Chevron RICO case (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Federal Workers Nationwide Protest Government Shutdown (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Government Shutdown (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The Government Shutdown is a Kick-In-Gut to Workers' Compensation (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- The shutdown just saved the world (washingtonpost.com)
Costliest 1 Percent Of Patients Account For 21 Percent Of U.S. Health Spending
A 58-year-old Maryland woman breaks her ankle, develops a blood clot and, unable to find a doctor to monitor her blood-thinning drug, winds up in an emergency room 30 times in six months. A 55-year-old Mississippi man with severe hypertension and kidney disease is repeatedly hospitalized for worsening heart and kidney failure; doctors don't know that his utilities have been disconnected, leaving him without air conditioning or a refrigerator in the sweltering summer heat. A 42-year-old morbidly obese woman with severe cardiovascular problems and bipolar disorder spends more than 300 days in a Michigan hospital and nursing home because she can't afford a special bed or arrange services that would enable her to live at home.
Sometimes known as super-utilizers, high-frequency patients or frequent fliers, these patients typically suffer from heart failure, diabetes and kidney disease, along with a significant psychiatric problem. Some are... |
Related articles
- What to Do About Futile Critical Care (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Health Spending Over The Coming Decade Expected To Exceed Economic Growth (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Health Care Spending Will Peak Around 2025 and Then Flatten Out (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- 11 Barriers to Hand Hygiene Compliance (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Deaths Linked to Cardiac Stents Rise as Overuse Seen (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Law Will Shift Demographics For Medicaid Toward Healthier Group, Study Finds (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Many Cancer Patients Overtreated In Final Days (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Risk to Food Safety Seen in Furloughs
Today's post was shared by The New York Times and comes from www.nytimes.com
WASHINGTON — The government shutdown is endangering what America eats, food safety experts said this week, as all inspections of domestic food except meat and poultry have halted and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recalled furloughed workers to handle a salmonella outbreak that sickened hundreds of people in 18 states. Offices are dark across the federal agencies charged with making sure that the fruit, vegetables, dairy products and a vast array of other domestically produced food are safe to consume. Inspectors, administrative staff, lab technicians, communications specialists and other support staff members have been sent home while lawmakers wrangle over government spending. “This is a self-inflicted wound that is putting people’s health at risk,” said Representative Rosa L. DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut, a longtime food safety advocate. Because the shutdown comes on top of earlier budget cuts to the agencies, she said, “you’re creating the potential for a real public health crisis.” At the same time, several crucial agriculture reports used by traders and farmers have been canceled because of the shutdown, seriously hampering decision making about planting and disrupting commodities markets. The highest-profile report canceled because of the shutdown is World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimates, which supplies statistics on the worldwide production of crops from cotton to corn. It also provides data on... |
[Click here to see the rest of this post]
