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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
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    3

    Default Surgical Procedure Performed Without Consent

    My question involves medical malpractice in the state of: Texas

    Suppose these are the facts:

    1) Patient complains of pain following a specific
    activity.

    2) Orthopedic surgeon contemplates two separate procedures based on MRI report, but only mentions ONE procedure to patient, who agrees to the one procedure.

    3) Surgeon submits operative plan to hospital in which both procedures are cited, and, surgeon does perform the second procedure, without the patient's knowledge nor consent. This 2nd procedure was not due to any life-theatening condition, nor any pressing need, but, is a procedure described as usually performed along with the first procedure.

    4) The first procedure (disclosed and agreed to) consisted of removing frayed portions of connective tissue - the 2nd procedure (not disclosed nor agreed to) consisted of severing a healthy ligament, and excising 1 cm each of facing ends of two healthy bones.

    5) Patient experiences excrutiating pain and significant disability due to the second procedure, and remains ignorant about the cause for 6 months, until patient retrieves hosptical records and discovers that the 2nd procedure was contemplated AND performed without his consent.

    5) Doctor explains (6 months AFTER surgery) that the 2nd procedure was pre-emptive (to avoid patients complaining about still having pain after surgery), and "only takes 15 minutes".

    6) No photos were taken of the target ligament nor target healthy bone-ends prior to the second procedure.

    7) The activity cited by patient in the original complaint is in no way related to any symptoms for which the 2nd procedure would be indicated.

    Does anyone here have experience or prior study concerning a patient's rights to be informed about ALL contemplated procedures prior to elective, non-life-threatening, surgery? Does consent to have one non-altering-of-healthy-tissue procedure imply consent to other procedures that severe/remove healthy tissue for pre-emptive purposes?

    Before contemplating legal action, is there any medical association that can hear complaints of this nature and reguire surgeons to present themselves and explain this kind of behavior? Is there such a thing as "censuring" a surgeon for performing additional, contemplated, and un-necessary, procedures without the patient's consent?

    How does one go about locating an expert in arthroscopic surgery who is willing to studiously examine the facts and report honestly and thoroughly, without any prejudice favoring the practice of orthopedic surgery, his expert opinion as to the relative consequences of the 2nd procedure, as related to the painful and disabling consequences to the patient.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    Somewhere near Canada
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    19,624

    Default Re: Non-Consential Procedures

    Did the patient actually read the informed consent form?
    An intelligent hell would be better than a stupid paradise - Victor Hugo

    Do not microwave grapes

  3. #3
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    Jun 2012
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    3

    Default Re: Non-Consential Procedures

    No forms were presented to the patient until the morning of the surgery at the hospital, moments before surgery, when the patient was nervous and under duress.

    The patient doesn't remember the many forms put before him for signature by the hospital staff - he did not see the surgeon himself nor did anyone mention anything to him about the extra second procedure that was planned. The patient succumbed to the anesthesia expecting nothing more than to have the frayed connective tissue removed, as per the discussion with the surgeon several days earlier.

    The hospital staff only told him that the forms put before him granted permission to operate and collect insurance from medicaire, and something about medical records. There was nothing to alert the patient that the surgeon intended to perform the second procedure.

  4. #4
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    Apr 2009
    Location
    Somewhere near Canada
    Posts
    19,624

    Default Re: Non-Consential Procedures

    The patient had a duty to read any and all forms before signing. I believe it will come out that the patient acknowledged the other possibilities by signing the IC.

    Of course, if the other possibilities weren't mentioned on the IC that might be different. The patient really needs to find out what was signed.
    An intelligent hell would be better than a stupid paradise - Victor Hugo

    Do not microwave grapes

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2012
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    3

    Default Re: Non-Consential Procedures

    So is there no one on this forum that knows of any cases where failure to inform and performing procedures without patient consent constituted error on the part of the surgeon? We can all have our speculative opinions, but, I was hoping someone here knows of one or more actual cases. How about medical review boards (in lieu of a court case)? Doesn't anyone know one or more cases where surgeons have been called to answer for failing to inform and operating without patient consent?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    21,265

    Default Re: Non-Consential Procedures

    Doesn't anyone know one or more cases where surgeons have been called to answer for failing to inform and operating without patient consent?


    why is that relevant other than this really sounds like a homework question?
    I am not an attorney and any advice is not to be construed as legal advice. You might even want to ignore my advice. Actually, there are plenty of real attorneys that you might want to ignore as well.

  7. #7
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    Apr 2009
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    Somewhere near Canada
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    19,624

    Default Re: Non-Consential Procedures

    Quote Quoting littleberry
    View Post
    So is there no one on this forum that knows of any cases where failure to inform and performing procedures without patient consent constituted error on the part of the surgeon? We can all have our speculative opinions, but, I was hoping someone here knows of one or more actual cases. How about medical review boards (in lieu of a court case)? Doesn't anyone know one or more cases where surgeons have been called to answer for failing to inform and operating without patient consent?


    Given that the patient doesn't know what s/he signed, it's a tad premature to make statements that the patient was operated on without consent, no?
    An intelligent hell would be better than a stupid paradise - Victor Hugo

    Do not microwave grapes

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