/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111124_Arthrex_TB-378x82.jpg

Subscriptions

Advertising

Resources

About Us

Contact Us

Create An Account Forgot Your Password?
Trouble logging in or creating an account? click here
Home This Month E-Weekly Newsletter Building a Facility Article Archive Second Opinions
Search:
Benchmarking
General Surgery
Accrediting/Quality
Anesthesia
Code/Bill/Reimburse
Building/Renovating
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120426_PDI_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120430_ISI_LB-154x100.jpg
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120126_APIC_LB-154x100.jpg
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120322_Soma_LB-154x100.gif
Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly

Malpractice Verdicts Often Favor Physicians

Physicians come out on the winning end of 80% of malpractice claims that end in jury verdicts, according to researchers at Massachusetts General Hos...

Study: CT Colongraphy Effective in Finding Polyps

A CT-scan-based, laxative-free "virtual colonoscopy" may be as effective as standard colonoscopy in finding potentially cancerous polyps, according ...

Wrong-Site Prevention Video Shows the Right Way

Wrong-site, wrong-patient and wrong-procedure surgery must be prevented at all costs. The 3 steps of the Joint Commission's Universal Protocol make ...

Home > News > June, 2010

Fla. Doc Fined $5,000 for Wrong-Organ Surgical Error

Surgeon removed a healthy kidney rather than the gallbladder.

Published: June 11, 2010
Categories: General Surgery, News

A Harvard-trained general surgeon who mistook a kidney for a gallbladder during a laparoscopic cholecystectomy has been fined $5,000 by the Florida Board of Medicine.

Bernard Zaragoza, MD, of Coral Springs, Fla., will also have to serve 50 hours of community service and must reimburse the state of Florida $25,000 for its investigation into the medical error, which occurred in October 2007 at Northwest Medical Center in Margate, Fla., according to a news report.

The patient, an 83-year-old man, had unusual anatomy and abdominal scar tissue from previous surgeries that made it difficult to see and access the gallbladder. As a result, Dr. Zaragoza had to access the gallbladder from a peculiar angle. He did not know that he'd removed the kidney until it was out of the patient's body. The patient died of heart failure 3 weeks later.

"I was completely mortified," Dr. Zaragoza told Health News Florida. "It's a complication I never heard of, dreamed of or imagined could happen." Efforts to reach Dr. Zaragoza for comment were unsuccessful.

In the hearing, the surgeon's attorney argued that in a difficult procedure such as this, mistaking the kidney for a gallbladder should be considered a complication of surgery, which would not be punishable. The board, however, disagreed and ruled that it was a medical error and a violation of the state's Medical Practice Act.

Yet the board apparently sympathized with Dr. Zaragosa. A board member said that he still felt comfortable with the surgeon's abilities and would even let Dr. Zaragoza operate on his own family members.

Kent Steinriede

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.


Also in the News...

Elderly Woman Severely Injured in Fall Off OR Table

ASC Administrator Stabbed to Death by Estranged Husband

Patient Dies After Admission for Gallbladder Surgery That Wasn't Performed

Orthopod Owes $150,000 for Post-Op Knee Infection

Ophthalmologist Sues His Own ASC for Blocking Plans to Open Competing Center

So-What Study Finds That ASC Owners Perform More Surgery

CMS Updates Emergency Equipment Requirement

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

Already have an account? Please sign in:
Email Address:
Password:
PRODUCT & SERVICE RESOURCES
Did You See This?
A showcase of products and services geared to make your facility better.

Architects' Showcase
Is a beautiful, efficient new facility in your future?
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120429_KenQuest_AR-300x250.gif
Other Articles That May Interest You
Court Says Hospital Can Terminate Pot-Smoking Endoscopy Nurse
Male nurse sued hospital after firing for positive drug test.
Do You Use Multimodal Analgesia Before Surgery?
Fewer than 25% of facilities are vigilant about reducing post-op pain.
Overprescribing Post-Op Pain Medications Can Lead to Abuse
Researchers say surgeons need to cut down on narcotic doses so patients aren't tempted with leftover pills.