| American Wrongful Death Law Report
WRONGFUL DEATH IN GASTRIC BYPASS
SURGERY
Surgical Errors and Defective
Ethicon Stapler Contributing To Increased Death Rate
Although gastric bypass surgery has helped many
patients through the admirable work of dedicated physicians, a
significant number of patients unnecessarily die due to substandard
care provided by a small minority of doctors and health care facilities.
A recent study disclosed that patients' risk of dying increased
by 500% when treated by poorly trained or inexperienced surgeons.
The most frequent cause of death in these cases is poor surgical
technique and poor post-surgical monitoring and aftercare. Patients
also have died unnecessarily as a result of a defective surgical
stapler. The Ethicon stapler, manufactured by Ethicon Endo-Surgery,
Inc, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, is used in the majority
of gastric bypass surgeries. When the Ethicon stapler fails, acid
and other stomach contents can leak and promptly lead to the patient's
death. In May of 2007, the Ethicon stapler was found defective
in a Pennsylvania wrongful death trial.
JAMA Study Details Undisclosed
Risks Of Death
According to a study published in the Journal of
the American Medical Association in October, 2005, the rates of
death from gastric bypass surgery are far higher than previously
disclosed. The study of over 16,000 patients found that, among
35 to 44-year-olds, more than 5 percent of men and nearly 3 percent
of women were dead within a year, and slightly higher rates were
seen in patients 45 to 54. Among patients 65 to 74, nearly 13
percent of men and about 6 percent of women died. In patients
75 and older, half of the men and 40 percent of the women died.
With about 170,000 gastric bypass surgeries occurring each year
in the United States, as many as 4,500 to 9,000 patients may die
as a result of this surgery annually. This is more than double
previous estimates.
Preventable deaths are sometimes
caused by inexperienced surgeons
moving into the highly profitable area of gastric bypass surgery.
Precise mortality rates are presently impossible
to establish because reporting practices often obscure the fact
that the underlying cause of a death was gastric bypass surgery.
It is clear, however, that mortality rates vary dramatically from
surgeon to surgeon and hospital to hospital. According to a University
of Washington survey, high death rates may be the result of inexperienced
surgeons moving into this burgeoning and highly lucrative field.
Physician fatigue, brought about by performing too many gastric
bypass operations in a single day, may also result in errors leading
to patient deaths.
Negligent Post-Operative Care
Presents Great Risk
Most medical malpractice in gastric bypass surgery
is the result of negligent post-operative care. Although gastric
bypass surgery is technically complex, patients usually do not
die from the procedure itself. Physician's failure to properly
monitor for and detect post surgical stomach perforations, leaks
and infections is the most common cause of preventable death following
gastric bypass surgery.
Perforations in the stomach
that are not detected will often lead to a patient's death.
Doctors must be particularly cautious in post surgical
monitoring of patients following bariatric surgery because obese
patients are at higher risk of suture tears and pulmonary embolism.
Perforations of the stomach that are not detected and treated
in time will often cause the patient's death from septic shock.
If a patient develops a fever or a distended abdomen after surgery,
this may be a sign of infection and leakage. Doctors must follow
up on these symptoms according to appropriate medical standards.
Most often, perforations and leaks are detected by x-ray or CT
scan. However, exploratory surgery may be indicated if a patient
has symptoms of a leak, regardless of whether or not the leak
is evident from the CT scan or x-ray. In many cases there is an
interplay between substandard surgical technique and inadequate
post-operative care, both of which can compound and lead to patient
deaths.
Wrongful Death Claims Regulate
The Excesses Of For Profit Medicine
Where patients are killed as a result of substandard
medical care related to gastric bypass surgery, or defective medical
devices, it is entirely appropriate for their families to turn
to the civil justice system to obtain justice and fair compensation.
Bariatric surgery is a heavily advertised and highly profitable
area of medical care. It is a multi-billion dollar industry for
doctors, hospitals, and manufacturers of surgical staplers. Some
surgeons perform over 300 gastric bypass operations per year and
can earn about $6,000.00 for each procedure.
Ethicon and Johnson & Johnson have found that
selling surgical staplers and other medical devices is extremely
lucrative. Although Ethicon has received numerous reports of staple
line failures, it has apparently failed to take essential steps
to remedy this problem.
Negligent bariatric surgery
often violates a patient's right to life. When this happens, the
family's only option is to seek redress in a court of law.
With these privileges comes the responsibility to
protect a patient's right to proper medical care. When this right
is violated, the patient's right to life is all to often taken
away. In these circumstances, it the family's only option is often
to seek redress in a court of law.
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