Mike let's review:
The only question is how much harm it did
Okay so the answer to your "only question" is none so far as medical science can detect.
Stormbringer, et al, never suggest that the doctor should get off scott free, but state:
And this was, according to the medical evidence a harmless mistake. Exactly why is it that we should drop the hammer on that?
Note the question isn't should the doctor not be disciplined, but why should the hammer be dropped (as in ruin his career).
Stormbringer again ascerts that without evidence we cannot assume harm.
Frankly, unless there's some evidence that it was harmful in any other way the point stands. It was apparently a harmless mistake.
And all the medical evidence points to this,
if a mistake occurred it was a harmless one.
So you reject all of the medical evidence that hormone overdoses or even long-term low-level exposure can be harmful?
Now in reply do you talk about anything remotely close to the case at hand? No you talk about the medical evidence of overdose, which in this case SUPPORTS STORMBRINGER, and long-term low-level exposure which has piss all to do with these circumstances.
And an honest mistake that causes no harm requires drumming some one out why?
I already explained why. Please address my response rather than mindlessly repeating your question.
Now I'm still not finding where Stormbringer or anyone else is argueing that something like a letter of censure, mandatory remedial education, or something similar is not warranted if the experts deem it to be so needed. EVERYONE talks about "drumming some one out" or otherwise canning the doctor.
So here was my initial take:
So what should happen in this case? First the criminal courts should determine if criminal negligance occurred ... in which case you bring the idiot up on charges; not hit his insurance company up for all it's worth.
Second you have a medical board look into the misconduct and award appropriate sentence. That may be a letter of reprimand, mandatory remedial courses, stripping of medical licensing, or referal back to the criminal system with recomendation for charges.
Lastly you go to civil court and establish legal responsibility and award recompense for damages suffered.
Now what part of that do you disagree with?
Stormbringer claimed that it's OK to make a serious error if you get lucky and nobody is hurt by it, so no disciplinary action should occur.
This is BS, pure and and simple BS. Stormbringer asks should we "drop the hammer" or "drum some one out", NOWHERE did stormbringer advocate "no disciplinary action". Now perhaps my reading skills are deficient, but please feel free to show me a post where Stormbringer says no disciplinary action should be taken.
You won't even admit that you were wrong to assume I thought he should have won the case
Did I ever say such a thing? Maybe its my deficient memory and my deficient reading skills, but I just can't find me saying "Mike Wong beleives the case should have been won".
along with the obvious fact that you never bothered reading my position before responding to what you thought it was.
Your position appears to be that the doctor should be fired over this alleged mistake. Your position appears to be that actual harm was done to the child despite having piss all for evidence to back that up.
How does this change the fact that if a drug with serious potential side-effects from overdose was accidentally administered twice, some kind of discipline should be applied?
I have preciously reposted I already said such discipline should be administered by a medical board and that such discipline should NOT be termination of the doctor's practice. Show me anywhere I say no discipline should be taken.
Leaving aside the obvious fact that complications during childbirth can potentially harm the infant regardless of whether his overdose is smaller than the mother's overdose, the point is that you are denying the importance of a serious mistake in determining whether disciplinary action is warranted. You are treating this exclusively from a standpoint of legalism, not professional standards.
The first thing needed to determine whether disciplinary action is warranted is
evidence that an error occurred. For
13 years no one even claimed an error was made, retroactively some hired guns concluded that a mistake
must have been made to cause the kid's brain damage.
After is actually established that an error occurred, the magnitude of the error and the individuals responsibility for it must be weighed against the magnitude of the punishment meeted out. In this case, even if the error occurred EXACTLY as the plaintiff alleges, it DOES NOT WARRANT TERMINATION OF LICENSING. And before you tell me again how horrible pitocin is in OD, you should note that the dosages typically required to cause the side effects you posted is
twice what the mother was given (in other words four times the standard dosage).
Possibly, in this case he got away with it. The evidence does not, however, back Stormbringer's assertion that oxycotin overdoses are necessarily harmless. In fact, it says the exact opposite, listing specific and numerous possible side-effects.
Yes at double the dosage we are talking about here with clear clinical indicators when such a thing occurs
Further I can't seem to find where Stormbringer said that. The closest is Blkbrythegreat, but even he speaks about hormones in general.
Because Stormbringer made the unbelievable comment that in general, hormone overdoses should be assumed harmless by default. I was merely giving numerous well-known examples of how this is obviously untrue. Sorry you never learned to read.
No that would be BlkbrryTheGreat:
Hormones are nothing more then a specific pattern of protein, they work via a "lock" system found only on the designated receptor cells and only produce effects within those cells. With most hormones, an overdose won't have the damaging effects you're implying. The ones that do, such as the adrenal hormones (ephonphrin and neuraephonephrin), do so for very obvious reasons.
and echoed by Chrostas. But hey I'll try learning to read.
you seem to believe that if somebody risks the health of a patient via incompetence but gets lucky, then no discipline should be forthcoming.
Let me reiterate my position word for word:
Second you have a medical board look into the misconduct and award appropriate sentence. That may be a letter of reprimand, mandatory remedial courses, stripping of medical licensing, or referal back to the criminal system with recomendation for charges.
You're asking for very specific details about this case now, which you say you have followed but which none of us have, in yet another effort to be a pedant. You note that none of the serious complications associated with an oxytocin overdose were present, hence you conclude that it was impossible for the patient to receive said overdose.
None of the clinical indicators
period were observed. It is hypothetically possible to be administered an OD of pitocin and not show any of the clinical indicators, however that is just about as unlikely as winning the lottery. It is not just that no harm was witnessed, but that all the standard diagnostic procedures, like the apgar test, tested well inside the normal range.
Do the severity of side-effects vary from patient to patient, or is this wonder-drug so controlled in its effects that it always has the same side-effects with respect to dose in every patient?
The side effects you listed are typically seen with double the dosage alleged to be given here (there is a difference between a mild overdose and a severe overdose). Given that and the placental barrier, the minimum required sensitivity would be 2 to 3 std's above normal. Note there is jack didly squat that a doctor could have done then to determine said sensitivity before hand. This is almost bee sting and peanut land.
If somebody doesn't get lung cancer, does the absence of recognized side-effects of smoking mean he couldn't possibly be a smoker? If somebody lacks serious liver damage, does that mean he couldn't possibly have taken an overdose of tylenol?
If he doesn't show blood vessel constriction I'd bet good money on him not having nicotene in his system. If blood oxgyen levels are normal, he almost definately isn't a smoker.
If the serum acetaminophen assay comes up negative you better beleive he didn't OD on tylenol.
It isn't just that nothing harmful was witnessed, it was that none of the clinical indicators were witnessed and nobody thought anything of it for 13 years. It was only after somebody saw a pot of gold that any of this became an issue.
That is not the point of contention between myself and Stormbringer, idiot.
I know that would be wether or not the mistake was sufficiently grave to bar the man from practicing medicine. The fact that the entire case may well be fraudulent has no bearing on barring him from practicing medicine
Stormbringer's absurd argument that it's perfectly acceptable to make the error and receive no disciplinary action whatsoever as long as you can't prove specific damages.
No Stormbring explicitly states:
An objective proffesional reveiw and investigation which would determine the what, how, and why is a much better start. After that the appropriate punishment should be decided on the basis of that investigation.
Very funny, Scotty. Now beam down my clothes.