by Dr. Joseph Mercola
August 10, 2019
from
Mercola Website
Story at-a-glance
-
In 2012, Armstrong, aged 82, underwent heart surgery at Mercy Health
Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio. He died two weeks later. His two sons
insisted his death was caused by medical error
-
An anonymous source leaked documents to the press showing the
hospital paid the Armstrong family a $6 million malpractice
settlement. The sender hoped bringing the information to light might
help save lives
-
When nurses removed the wires for Armstrong's temporary pacemaker,
he began to bleed. Armstrong was brought into the catheterization
lab for evaluation rather than straight to the operating room - a
nonstandard decision that cost him his life
-
Armstrong's case is a perfect example of the indiscriminate nature
of lethal medical errors; 19% of elderly patients are injured by
medical care in the U.S., and those injured have nearly double the
death rate compared to those who receive proper treatment
-
July 20, 2019, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11
moon landing. In a riveting three-part documentary series, PBS
explores the space race that led to American astronauts becoming the
first men to set foot on the moon
Like many of you, I clearly remember watching the black and white
images of Neil Armstrong first walking on the moon, at home with my
family. It was very moving for me and I was inspired, like many, to
become an astronaut.
Thankfully, I changed that course and
redirected to medicine.
July 20, 2019, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the
Apollo 11
moon landing. In a riveting three-part documentary series, PBS
explores the space race that led to American astronauts becoming the
first men to set foot on the moon.
The Apollo 11 crew consisted of,
-
Neil Armstrong
-
Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin
-
Michael Collins
1
After a four-day journey through space,
Armstrong and Aldrin landed the lunar module - Eagle - on the moon
surface, while Collins remained in orbit.
Armstrong was the first to step onto lunar soil, uttering the now
famous quote:
"That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for
mankind." 2
The series includes long
forgotten archival footage from the 1960s, much of which the younger
generation has never seen.
As reported by Space.com: 3
"Part 1, 'A Place Beyond the Sky,' focuses on the space race the
United States and the Soviet Union engaged in during the early years
of the space program.
Part 2, 'Earth Rise,' covers the human
Gemini and Apollo missions that prepared for the moon landing.
Finally, Part 3,
'Magnificent Desolation,' examines the moon landing itself and
the cultural and scientific legacy of Apollo 11."
Watch the full video
'Chasing the Moon.'
Also, the full series, totaling
six hours, can be found on PBS.org. 4
For those of you who are old enough
to remember watching the moon landing on TV back in 1969, this
documentary will reignite the awe felt that day.
If you have any interest in space history I could not more strongly
recommend watching the full six hours. It is one of the best
documentaries I have ever seen.
If you balk at the time, just
consider a Netflix series, which typically runs about 10 hours.
American hero falls victim to lethal medical errors
In 2012, Armstrong, aged 82, underwent heart surgery at
Mercy Health
Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio. He died two weeks later.
According to
The New York Times, 5 his two sons insisted his death was caused by,
"incompetent
post-surgical care."
An investigator retained by the hospital reportedly agreed, finding,
"serious problems with his treatment."
Documents reveal Mercy Health
paid the Armstrong family a $6 million malpractice settlement to
avoid what The New York Times describes as "devastating
publicity."
Indeed, as noted by attorney Bertha Helmick, who represented
Armstrong's grandchildren in the proceedings against the hospital,
"No institution wants to be remotely associated with the death of
one of America's greatest heroes." 6
According to Helmick, the malpractice settlement could be subject to
repayment should the details of the terms be revealed.
The New York
Times cites records from probate court showing $5.2 million of the
settlement was split 50/50 by Armstrong's sons, Mark and Rick.
Armstrong's brother and sister each received $250,000, and each of
his six grandchildren received $24,000. Armstrong's widow, Carol,
did not participate in the settlement.
Armstrong's fate revealed by anonymous source
Both the complaint and the settlement were in fact to remain secret,
but the documents were leaked by an anonymous party to The New
York Times in the days following the moon landing anniversary.
The New York Times
writes: 7
"Armstrong had undergone bypass surgery in early
August 2012, and
his wife told The Associated Press afterward that he was 'amazingly
resilient' and was walking in the corridor.
But when nurses
removed the wires for a temporary pacemaker, he began to bleed
into the membrane surrounding the heart, leading to a cascade of
problems that resulted in his death on Aug. 25...
The medical dispute and secret settlement, never before reported,
comes to light days after the 50th anniversary of Mr. Armstrong's
moon walk drew a flood of nostalgic coverage celebrating his feat.
The New York Times received by mail from an unknown sender 93 pages
of documents related to the astronaut's treatment and the legal
case, including dueling reports by medical experts for the two
sides.
Some of the documents, though marked 'filed under
seal,' are publicly available at the probate court's website,
8 confirming that the documents received by The Times
are authentic.
An unsigned note
included in the envelope said the sender hoped the information
would save other lives."
What went wrong in Armstrong's care?
According to The New York Times, the documents they received reveal
that after the nurses removed the wires for Armstrong's temporary
pacemaker, which resulted in bleeding and a rapid drop in blood
pressure, he was brought to the hospital's catheterization
laboratory.
An echocardiogram was performed, showing,
"significant and
rapid bleeding."
Blood was drained from
his heart at this point, after which he was finally brought into an
operating room.
At that point, it was too
late. According to one of the expert reviews, the failure to bring
Armstrong directly to the operating room, diverting him instead to
the catheterization lab, was a crucial mistake (by
doctors).
The New York Times
writes: 9
"'The decision to go to the cath lab was THE major error,' Dr.
Joseph Bavaria, a vice-chair of cardiothoracic surgery at University
of Pennsylvania wrote in a review conducted at the request of the
Armstrong family.
Dr. Richard Salzano, a cardiothoracic surgeon at Yale Medical Center
who reviewed the case for the hospital, saw the decision to bring
Mr. Armstrong to the catheterization lab as 'defensible' but,
'certainly riskier than taking the patient to the
O.R.'...
Dr. Ashish Jha, a professor of medicine at Harvard University and a
hospitalist who regularly cares for patients post-cardiac surgery...
reviewed the experts' reports for The Times.
'If someone has dropped their blood pressure substantially and this
is a code blue, that means they are having life-threatening
bleeding.
I don't totally understand why they went to the
cath lab,'
he said.
Dr. Jha also
questioned the hospital's original decision to perform the
bypass surgery on Mr. Armstrong on an emergency basis.
'It feels to me
like his death was wholly preventable,' he said."
According to Richard Salzano, Armstrong would likely have had a 50-50 chance
of survival had he undergone surgery without delay.
As it happened,
Armstrong,
"became unsalvageable on the way to the O.R."
In other
words, precious time was lost and a crucial window for lifesaving
treatment missed.
The New York Times also asked Dr. Craig Smith, a cardiac surgeon at
Columbia University Medical Center, for comment on the case. While
Smith was unfamiliar with Armstrong's medical records, he noted that
patients with Armstrong's complications normally would not be
brought to the
cath lab for treatment.
"Generally, if a patient develops signs of bleeding inside the chest
after pacing wires are pulled under observation, they would usually
go straight to the operating room and usually survive," Smith told
The New York Times. 10
No one is immune to medical errors
Armstrong's case is a perfect example of the indiscriminate nature
of lethal
medical errors.
If the conventional medical system can
kill America's greatest hero then it can happen to anyone at any
time.
Research 11,12 shows 19% - nearly 1 in 5 - of
elderly patients
are injured by medical care in the U.S., and those experiencing
medical injury have nearly double the death rate compared to those
who receive proper treatment.
Common injuries found in this study
included:
-
Being given the wrong medication
-
Having an allergic reaction to a medication
-
Receiving treatment that led to more complications of an existing
medical problem
Further, the risk of an adverse medical event rose 27% for each
chronic medical condition a person had. 13
Lead researcher Mary
Carter, director of Towson University's gerontology program,
told Medicinenet.com: 14
"These injuries are
caused by the medical care or management rather than any
underlying disease... The rate of these injuries is probably
higher than has been estimated."
Medical error is the third leading cause of death in the US
Indeed, preventable medical errors have repeatedly been identified
as being a leading cause of death in the U.S. for at least two
decades.
In 2000, JAMA published a commentary
15,16 by Dr. Barbara Starfield, the data provided in which revealed doctors to be the
third leading cause of death.
Her research showed 225,000 Americans die from iatrogenic causes,
meaning their death is caused by a physician's activity, manner or
therapy.
Sadly, Starfield herself fell victim to medical error.
She
died suddenly in June 2011... a death her husband attributes to the
adverse effects of the blood thinner Plavix taken in combination
with aspirin. 17
Mirroring Starfield's findings, a paper
18,19 by Dr. Martin Makary
and research fellow Michael Daniel published in The BMJ in 2016
reports the same statistic right in its headline:
"Medical Error - The Third Leading Cause of Death in the U.S."
As noted in this
paper:
"Medical error has
been defined as an unintended act (either of omission or
commission) or one that does not achieve its intended outcome,
the failure of a planned action to be completed as intended (an
error of execution), the use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim
(an error of planning), or a deviation from the process of care
that may or may not cause harm to the patient."
Makary's and Daniel's data suggest medical errors kill 251,454
Americans each year, an increase of more than 25,000 people annually
from Starfield's estimates 16 years earlier.
These numbers may still
be vastly underestimated however, as deaths occurring at home or in
nursing homes are not included.
Makary is a surgeon and professor of health policy at one of the
most prestigious hospitals in the U.S., Johns Hopkins. I recently
interviewed him about his new book on this issue, "The Price We
Pay," 20 which will be out September 10, 2019.
The interview will be
published right around that time and goes into great detail about
medical abuses.
Estimated 440,000 Americans die from medical errors each year
Another study 21 published in 2013 estimated that preventable
hospital errors - when including diagnostic errors, errors of
omission and failure to follow guidelines - kill 440,000 patients
per year, or,
"roughly one-sixth of all deaths that occur in the
United States each year."
This number likely hints at the true scale
of the problem.
Still, whether we're talking about 250,000 or 440,000, iatrogenic
deaths would still rank third on the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's list of leading causes of death, right
after heart disease and cancer, 22 or fourth, if you include
Alzheimer's mortality statistics (which CDC doesn't).
As noted by the authors
of this 2013 study: 23
"Needed changes involve not only doctors and hospitals but increased
participation by patients in their health-care decisions.
Perhaps it
is time for a national patient bill of rights for hospitalized
patients that would empower them to be thoroughly integrated into
their care so that they can take the lead in reducing their risk of
serious harm and death.
All evidence points to the need for much more patient involvement in
identifying harmful events and participating in rigorous follow-up
investigations to identify root causes. Even for those harms
identified in the medical records of Medicare patients, only 14%
become part of the hospital's incident reporting system.
Physician observers of our hospitals have made Congress
painfully aware that the hospital peer-review system has
widespread failures that permit negligent care by physicians.
Hospitals are simply
not going to heal without attentive, systematic listening to
those harmed patients or their survivors."
How to safeguard your life while hospitalized
Download Interview Transcript
While a patient's bill of rights 24 was adopted by the U.S. Advisory
Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care
Industry in 1998, it does not specifically address the prevention of
medical errors by empowering patients in their own care, as
suggested in the study above.
Staying involved with your care and paying close attention to
everything about to be done is a crucial component, though, with or
without such a bill of rights.
In the video above, Dr. Andrew Saul,
co-author of "Hospitals and Health," shares important tips for
staying safe during a hospital stay.
Remember, once you're hospitalized, you're immediately at risk for
medical errors, so one of the best safeguards is to have someone
there with you.
Frequently, you're going to be relatively
debilitated, especially post-op when you're under the influence of
anesthesia, and you won't have the opportunity to see the types of
processes that are going on.
This is particularly important for pediatric patients and the
elderly.
It's important to ask what procedure is being done and why.
Know that you have every right to be fully informed about what's
about to be done to you or your loved one in the hospital.
For every medication given, ask,
"What is this medication? What is it
for? What's the dose? What are the side effects?"
Take notes. Ask
questions. Building a relationship with the nurses can go a long
way.
Also, when they realize they're going to be questioned, they're more
likely to go through that extra step of due diligence to make sure
they're getting it right.
That's just human nature...
Checklists can help minimize errors in care
Makary, co-author of the 2016 BMJ paper cited earlier, and his
research partner Dr. Peter Pronovost have also developed a
pre-surgery checklist and an ICU care checklist.
The World Health Organization (WHO) used some of their principles to
develop its own official checklist.
The WHO surgical safety
checklist and implementation manual 25 - which is part of the
"Safe
Surgery Saves Lives" campaign 26 that Makary and Pronovost
participated in - can be downloaded
here.
If a loved one is in the hospital, print it out and bring it with
you, as this can help you protect them from preventable errors in
care.
As for what to do should you find yourself a victim of a
preventable medical mistake, Makary - whom
I interviewed about this
in 2013 - suggests:
"Ask to talk to the doctor about that mistake.
If you're not
satisfied, write a letter or call the patient relations department.
Every hospital is mandated to have this service. They are set up to
answer your concerns.
If you're not satisfied with that, write a letter to the hospital's
lawyer, the general counsel. And you will see attention to the
issue, because you've gone through the right channels.
We don't want
to encourage millions of lawsuits out there.
But you know,
when people voice what happened, what went wrong, and the nature
of the preventable mistake, hospitals can learn from their
mistakes.
Sometimes they're taking a lot of attention now to
prevent mistakes from happening again.
You should let that
mistake be known."
This appears to be the exact sentiment that drove the anonymous
source to leak Armstrong's malpractice case to the media.
As long as
medical mistakes continue to be swept under the rug, no significant
changes will be made. We already have two decades' worth of data
showing medical mistakes aren't decreasing...
The fact that medical mistakes are the third leading cause of death
in the U.S. is a shameful stain on conventional medicine as a whole,
but ignoring it won't make it go away.
One can only hope Armstrong's
case proves to be the match that finally alights a real campaign for
change.
References
1
NASA.gov
The first person on the moon
2
NDTV
June 5, 2013
3
Space.com
June 6, 2019
4
PBS.org
Chasing the Moon, Three Parts
5,6,7,9,10
The
New York Times July 23, 2019 (Archived)
8
Hamilton
County Probate Court (Archived by NYT)
11
Injury
Prevention May 28, 2014
12,13,14
MedicineNet
May 27, 2014
15
JAMA
July 26, 2000; 284(4): 483-485 (PDF)
16
AHRP.org
US Healthcare Third Leading Cause of Death
17
Archives
of Internal Medicine 2012;172(15):1174-1177
18
BMJ
2016; 353: i2139
19
Bill
of Health October 14, 2016
20
Amazon.com
The Price We Pay by Marty Makary
21,23
Journal
of Patient Safety September 2013: 9(3); 122-128
22
CDC.gov
Leading Causes of Death in the US
24
Patient's
Bill of Rights (PDF)
25
WHO
surgical safety checklist and implementation manual
26
WHO.int
Safe Surgery Saves Lives (PDF)
|