Home > News  > January, 2013

Rhode Island Surgeon Suspended for Drug Diversion

Michael C. Coburn, MD, admitted to injecting self with stolen surgical meds.

Published:January 7, 2013

Categories:

The Rhode Island Department of Health suspended a general surgeon's license on Jan. 3 after he admitted to injecting stolen propofol and fentanyl.

Michael C. Coburn, MD, has been on a leave of absence from Kent Hospital in Warwick since Nov. 15. According to published reports, another physician caught sight of Dr. Coburn, 50, removing syringes from the OR. A search of the hospital room where he slept uncovered needles, syringes, vial caps and bloody gauze.

"Kent Hospital took immediate and appropriate action upon learning of this incident, the details of which were outlined by the Department of Health in its findings," said hospital spokesman Jim Beardsworth, in an e-mail. "Further, all patients under the care of this physician were immediately transitioned to the care of other surgeons."

Dr. Coburn's profile on the Kent Hospital website has been removed. He had overseen the hospital's cancer committee, and in August 2011 was named one of U.S. News & World Reports' top doctors.

Calls to the Rhode Island Department of Health and Dr. Coburn's office at the Kent Surgical Associates practice were not immediately returned.

David Bernard


Also in the News...

Does Your Insurer Have to Pay to Defend You?

Stark Violations Might Cost Tuomey Healthcare System $357M

Tech Walks Out on Surgical Case, Sues Hospital for Firing Him

N.J. Considering Cosmetic Surgery Site Limits

Colonoscopy Co-Pays are Covered, With a Catch

How Are Compounder Recalls Affecting You?

How Did a Routine Endoscopy Result in Brain Damage?


 
Have an account? Please sign in:
Email Address:
Password:

DID YOU SEE THIS?
Services

Got Any Good Ones?

/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120329_Arthrex_AR-300x250.jpg

Other Articles That May Interest You

What Not To Do While Your Surgeons Operate

Study identifies 4 OR distractions that contribute to surgical errors.

Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injections Turn Deadly

Contaminated steroid from compounding center linked to deadly meningitis outbreak.

Do Hospitals Profit From Surgical Errors?

Effect of surgical complications on finances is "troublesome, but not surprising."