The
Ten Scariest Medical Mishaps
By
Rusty Rockets
Doctors
and medical specialists are miracle workers, right? And when we go to hospital,
we'll leave healthier than when we arrived, right? Well, not always, unfortunately,
as accidents can happen and modern medicine isn't immune to Murphy's Law. So,
what are the most terrifyingly medical blunders that could happen to you?
Waking
During Surgery
Waking during surgery is rare, but "rare",
according to The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), means 1 to 2 people
out of every 1000 patients. All up, you're much more likely to be sliced open
without being able to move or communicate than you are to win the lottery.
There
are machines available that measure brain-wave activity and self-awareness in
patients, but the ASA recently passed a recommendation that there was "insufficient
evidence to justify a requirement that these devices be used."
Objects
Left In The Body After Surgery
This phenomenon is pure gold for the
tabloid press, and it seems there's no end to the number of patients reporting
how surgeons left scissors, gauze, and other bits and pieces inside their bodies.
As it turns out, leaving medical apparatus inside the body cavity is one of the
most common blunders that can happen to a patient. So, always have a good prod
of your body post-surgery, or if you're really worried, go and get an X-ray.
Wrong
Site Surgery
The
problem of surgeons operating on the wrong body location, amputating healthy limbs,
or operating on the wrong body altogether, is apparently "getting worse,"
according to Denis O'Leary, head of the non-profit Joint Commission on Accreditation
of Health Care Organizations. Frighteningly, hospitals are not obliged to reveal
such statistics to the public. What we hear about is "just the tip of the
iceberg," according to O'Leary, who adds that; "some hospitals are reporting
everything, and some hospitals don't report anything at all."
Dirty
Doctors
According
to medical journalist W. Gifford-Jones; "In 1846 when the first obstetrical
hospital was opened in Vienna, one in eight pregnant women died from puerperal
fever. Professor Ignacz Semmelweiss dramatically ended these deaths by demanding
that doctors wash their hands after doing an autopsy and before delivering a baby."
Yes,
Semmelweiss was certainly on to something there, but Gifford-Jones says that doctors
are still somewhat recalcitrant when it comes to hand washing. "Doctors,
even infectious disease specialists, often fail to wash their hands, spreading
germs from one patient to another," explains Gifford-Jones.
Gifford-Jones
offers a number of suggestions to make your hospital stay infection-free. These
include: telling your doctor to wash his hands (good luck with that one); have
urinary catheters removed as soon as possible after surgery (not a tip you'd forget
easily); don't smoke prior to an operation, as it can promote lung infections;
and let staff know if you're writhing in insufferable pain. Better still, stay
out of hospital.
Prescription
Medicine
Is medicine becoming too complicated for the average patient?
Or doctor for that matter, as it seems that the practice of prescribing incorrect
medications with similar sounding or looking names is on the rise, with dire and
sometimes fatal results. One case involved a patient who was prescribed sixty-times
the recommended dose of Librium instead of Lithium to treat his depression. Needless
to say, the man died as a result. Perhaps of greater concern was the hospital's
attempt to shirk responsibility by declaring that the patient had died of pneumonia.
Doctors
Of Death
Hell bent
on causing mayhem and destruction, doctors of death like Nazi medico Joseph Mengele
use their position of authority to violate their professional oath of preserving
life. One recent case involved disgraced doctor Jayant Patel, who, after losing
his license in the United States, was able to enter Australia where he quickly
set up a practice. Patel treated over 1000 patients in Australia, with 80 of them
dying due to his incompetence. A commission into the sorry saga recommended that
he be charged with murder.
Buried
Alive
Being buried
alive is one of the most terrifying of all fears. The scenario of waking up inside
a coffin six-feet-under has been used in films such as The Vanishing, Kill Bill
and, of course, Buried Alive, but just how likely is it?
During
the 17th century, plague victims often collapsed seemingly dead and historical
records indicate that there were 219 close calls and 149 actual cases of people
being buried alive. But hey, that was the 17th century; it couldn't possibly happen
today, could it?
In
1993, news agencies reported the ordeal of a man pronounced dead at the scene
of a traffic accident in Johannesburg, South Africa, who spent two days sealed
in a metal box in the bowels of the local mortuary before eventually being rescued.
Private
Contractors
Accountants have been sent in to "improve" health
services around the world, but unfortunately, things aren't going to plan. The
biggest ever citizen versus government payout was due to a private contractor
managing a birth at a Jacksonville navy hospital in 2003. Over 60 million dollars
was awarded to the parents of a boy who suffered severe brain damage due to a
private medical contractor's negligence. Do we really want our health services
sold to the lowest bidder?
Drug
Trials
Clinical trials
are a necessary aspect of modern medicine, and we owe the people who take part
in them a great deal. But they're not called trials for nothing, and things do
go wrong.
One
shocking, recent case of medical bungling involved six healthy men who took part
in a clinical drugs trial at Northwick Park Hospital in London. The trial involved
an anti-inflammatory drug, which soon after being administered, caused the men
to fall critically ill, with two of the men swelling up, and looking like the
"Elephant Man." Health officials said that it was "an unfortunate
and extremely rare event."
Cosmetic
Cock-Ups
Cosmetic surgery has become commonplace, but few people are
aware of the very real dangers involved. Lifestyle programs promote cosmetic procedures
like breast augmentations and nose jobs as quick and painless lunchtime affairs.
But there are a great many people who have been disfigured due to poorly performed
procedures.
Last
year it was found that dozens of doctors had been using an unapproved form of
botulism toxin to smooth out their patient's wrinkles, instead of the more expensive
Botox. Investigators said that the substitute that was pumped into cheeks and
brows across the nation could be as deadly as cyanide.