I am going to play devil's advocate here...
First of all, as usual, we're only hearing one side of this story. A pregnant woman who gets all her limbs lopped off is an instant object of pity and outrage and will sell a lot of cornflakes for the media. A hospital is an ugly, faceless corporation in which scary things go on and thus makes a fantastic villian.
Now, to address some issues.
Mr. Bean wrote:The thing is streptococcus is fucking rare, like people who die from Ebola in downtown New Jersey rare. The chances of someone acutaly being infected with streptococcus at that hosptial and not already A. Dead. B. Dead. C. in complete and total isolation, spacesuits and everything for doctors. Well... If it acutal happened she's in line to win three diffrent lotto's on the same day, be struck by lightning twice on a sunny day and then crushed behind the tourbus of KISS.
No sir, streptococcus is NOT rare. Not rare at all. I guarantee your throat and skin and other mucus membranes are crawling with it right now. You can culture it off any human being. It's just that usually your skin and immune system keeps it in check.
Strep gone wild IS the infamous "flesh-eating bacteria". It moves very fast through the fascia (the connective layers just under the skin), at a rate of an inch an hour on average, and can kill within 48 hours.
Even when it's not FEB, a strep skin infection is horribly painful and can damage various organs. I myself have had the misfortune to have such an infection, and when I did, in addition to a shitload of antibiotics and some scary instructions on Bad Thing to Look For, my kidney function was also very closely monitored, and there were concerned noises being made about possible effects on the heart. And that wasn't even a strep infection bad enough to hospitalize me.
ORLANDO, Fla. -- A Sanford mother says she will never be able to hold her newborn because an Orlando hospital performed a life-altering surgery and, she claims, the hospital refuses to explain why they left her as a multiple amputee.
Please note the phrase
"she claims" - the hospital is NOT going to talk to the media
at all. For all we know, they DID explain to her exactly why they did what they did, but she didn't accept the answer.
The hospital maintains the woman wants to know information that would violate other patients' rights.
To me, this is the wackiest part of the whole story - I can't figure out how her finding out what happend would violate the rights of
other people.
She was transported to Orlando Regional Medical Center in Orlando where her arms and legs were amputated. She was told she had streptococcus, a flesh eating bacteria, and toxic shock syndrome, but no further explanation was given.
As I mentioned, strep can manifest as FEB. It certainly can induce toxic shock. It is possible to suffer from both at the same time. Amputation IS, unfortunately, an all too common outcome of either of the above.
IF that was the case, it is possible the medical personal tried to explain what was going on and what was about to happen, but the woman was too out of it to comprehend. Or she might have just said "Save me, save me, I want to live." over and over without understanding of what that would require. We weren't there and we certainly aren't getting the whole story here.
The hospital, in a letter, wrote that if she wanted to find out exactly what happened, she would have to sue them.
If it concerns other patients, this may indeed be the case.
Mejia said after she gave birth to Mathew last spring, she was kept in the hospital with complications. Twelve days after giving birth at Orlando Regional South Seminole hospital, she was transported to Orlando Regional Medical Center where she became a quadruple amputee
OK, that's interesting - what were her complications? Did she have an infection? That's a rather important point they just breeze past. These days, you have to be pretty damn sick to be in the hospital 12 days.
"Woke up from surgery and I had no arms and no legs. No one told me anything. My arms and legs were just gone."
Yes, that can happen. Without any malice on anyone's part. You can be driving down the road, BAM! and wake up a week later in the hospital missing body parts. You can have a nasty infection, go to the hospital, fall unconcious, and BAM! wake up missing bodyparts. Medical emergencies don't always leave you concious or allow for long, detailed explanations and prep time for catastrophes. It's a horrible, horrible thing but it can and does happen to people every year.
The couple wants to know how she caught streptococcus, during labor or after.
We ALL have strep on us, ALL the time. No negligence is required to come down with it. Doesn't mean there
wasn't negligence, only that it is not
required.
"And why, I want to know why this happened," she said.
Because the universe is a pervers and hostile place?
The hospital's lawyers wrote back, "Ms. Mejia's request may require legal resolution." In other words, according to their interpretation of the law, Mejia has to sue them to get information about herself.
About
herself...? Or about
other patients....? Because some of the statements in this article seem to imply that the couple in question believe or suspect she caught this infection from someone else. Under the law, she has no right to the information of other patients in that hospital, but if she, her husband, and their lawyer are fishing for that sort of information yes, they WILL have to go to court and provide justification for accessing other peoples' medical records.
ORMC said Mejia is requesting information on if there were other patients or someone on her floor with the streptococcus. They said, if they release that to her, that would be a violation of other patients' rights.
Bingo.
The hospital is correct - disclosing whether or not anyone else had an active strep infection (we are
all strep "carriers") at the same time WOULD be a violation of US law, specifically HIPAA, which carries
very severe penalities for doing so.
Master of Ossus wrote:That is the most bizarre story, ever. How can they go through with quadruple amputations without getting someone in the family to sign off on a consent form, at the least.
If she was having complications post-delivery and signed a consent form for treatment, it may have been broad enough to cover amputations to save a life. If she was unconcious, in imminent danger of death, had given prior consent to treatment, and no family member could be contacted the hospital would, most likely, make the presumption she would want to live rather than die and would go forward with emergency transport and treatment. You have to
explicitly refuse treatment in most circumstances, even something as extreme as quadruple amputation.
How do you do that? On the consent form you write in "except for treatments X, Y, and Z" but most folks don't do that. Most of the time, they don't even read the form. (And docs can get really wiggy if you insist on reading the forms sometimes.)
And why are they insisting on a lawsuit in order to even find out what happened?
Well, according to one side of this dispute, they've been told what happened - she developed a life-threatening infection after labor and delivery and her limbs were amputated to stop that infection and save her life. She and her husband are saying that explanation isn't good enough, they want to know WHY she got strep like that. The hospital (I'm presuming) said something along the lines of "bad luck" and the couple in question don't accept that as a legitimate answer.
Well, I'm sorry, that sort of bad luck DOES happen in this world. It's understandable the family involved is pissed off and unhappy about it, and I suspect they are looking for someone or something to blame. No doubt they'd like to have a big settlement from a lawsuit, if only because the woman is going to require a LOT of rehab and care.
(I really HOPE then send her to rehab - a quadruple amputee requires a lot of help, but they are seldom completely helpless if they have any sort of residual limb left - but nothing in the article states the specifics of her circumstances. If she still has her knees and elbows, for instance, her prospects are much better than for a high-level amputation)
So, really, we don't know. It could be the hospital did nothing wrong and aren't hiding anything and are operating in a completley moral, ethical, and legal manner and this family is simply
outraged at the fact fate pissed on them mightily and they're looking for a scapegoat. Or it could be the hospitale did fuck up. We don't know. We
can't know from the information presented.