Massage By Ben Articles - Free Massage, Bodywork, and Health Articles.
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 72      
Categories

Addictions
Alternative Medicine
Chiropractic
Diseases and Conditions
Health
Massage & Bodywork
Medical
Medicine
Meditation
Nutrition
Staying Fit
Supplements
Weight Loss
Wellness
Yoga
 
Stats
Total Articles: 35921
Total Authors: 1210
Total Downloads: 3542176


Newest Member
Michael Richards

 


   

$4.4 Million Verdict After Nurse Trainee Fails To Note Unborn Baby Is In Fetal Distress



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.massagebyben.com/articles/rss.php?rss=272
By : Joseph Hernandez    29 or more times read
Submitted 2009-09-09 20:20:31
No one is born a great doctor or a great nurse. They have to attend school, study, and spend many, many hours learning practical knowledge through actual experience. We expect that they will make mistakes along the way. We also expect, however, that they will be carefully supervised and their work will be reviewed by a capable, experienced doctor or nurse. This way they can learn while their mistakes are rectified so that patients are not harmed.

The doctors and nurses who are still in training need to understand the limits of their knowledge and ability. Those supervising them need to also understand the skills doctors and nurses in training have mastered and the limits of what are able to do on their own. Otherwise, even a single mistake that is not caught by the supervising doctor or nurse can lead to tragic results.

Recently a case was reported in which a pregnant woman went to the hospital with complaints of nausea and vomiting. She was almost at full term. While at the hospital the woman was monitored by a nurse trainee. The nurse trainee, rather than a registered nurse or a doctor, read the strips from the fetal heart rate monitor. The strip showed that the woman's unborn baby was in severe fetal distress but the nurse trainee misread the strip as normal. The woman was sent home without knowing that her baby was suffering from a lack of oxygen.

Three days later the baby was delivered as scheduled. She had suffered severe brain injury and developed cerebral palsy. The little girl spent the following four years of her life enduring seizures, undergoing therapy and having to be fed through a feeding tube as she could not eat on her own, before dying due to complications from her cerebral palsy. She was survived by her parents and 11 and 16 year old brothers. The law firm that represented the parents was able to report that they took the case to trial and achieved a verdict on behalf of the parents in the amount of $4,400,000.

This case illustrates what can happen when a doctor or nurse who is still in training is allowed to make decisions on their own before they have fully mastered the necessary skills. True, even experienced doctors and nurses sometimes misread a fetal heart rate strip. But while an experienced labor and delivery nurse has interpreted hundreds or thousands of the strips a nurse trainee has only read a few and is much more likely to make an error. When the error is not caught, as in this case, the result can be devastating and lead to a malpractice claim.
Author Resource:- Joseph Hernandez is an Attorney focused on complex injury cases, including birth injury medical malpractice cases. To learn more about fetal distress cases visit his website at www.birth-injury-malpractice-law.com.
Article From Massage By Ben - Articles

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
select
Author Sign Up
select
Learn More
Affiliate Sign in
Discount Travel
 
Nav Menu
Articles Home
Massage Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 


 
Sponsors
 

 

Make a Living....Living!

 


 

Powered By: Electricity