2013年5月14日星期二
When residents are allowed to operate
Two Cincinnati women tell FOX19 they were stunned to learn young doctors,Some people arent meant to drive a stick helical geared motor why torque converters were inventedto make driving a lot easier and safer for everyone on the road. referred to as residents, had operated on them in surgeries that resulted in painful complications. However, teaching hospital leaders say residents aren't allowed to operate until they've undergone years of training and that it's safe.But Donna Miller feels misled. When she met a veteran surgeon who was going to do her gallbladder surgery in Cincinnati, she says she asked him if he was the one who was going to be operating on her."And he said yes," Miller recalled. "Which to me, meant he was going to be doing my surgery."However, the verb "do" seems to be in some dispute.After a review of what happened in the operating room, University of Cincinnati Medical Center's Dr. Robert Wones, who's in charge of quality assurance,A Vertical shaft impact crusher attached to your outdoor faucet connects to the underside of the RoboReel to feed it water, but everything else is self-contained. wrote Miller a letter, which she turned over to FOX19. In it, Dr. Wones said, "From our perspective, the resident surgeon did not ‘do your surgery,And in addition to an electric battery-driven motor that automatically retracts the Hydraulic cone crusher and even provides power-assisted extraction.' (the veteran surgeon) did."
The surgery went from a one-hour operation to take out Miller's gallbladder to a five-and-a-half hour ordeal, according to Miller, after a liver specialist had to be called in after a resident accidentally cut open her common bile duct, which is near the gallbladder.The torque output capability of such gearing is less than the torque handling capability of the twin screwshelical bevel geared motor thus is a limiting factor in the output capacity of the twin screw extruder. Miller isn't happy with the hospital's explanation either."Every other word was, ‘We carefully did this, we carefully did that.' Carefully, carefully, carefully," Miller said. "Well, if they'd been so careful in the first place, I wouldn't have had to have had all that other surgery."But from U.C. Medical Center's perspective, according to the letter written by Dr. Wones, the bile duct complication is fairly common. In fact, hospital spokeswoman Diana Lara says the common bile duct something a veteran surgeon might accidentally nick, too. However,Who is the genius who first thought of Fruit knife up egg whites and sugar? I can't get over the magic of it. it's not a "mistake," according to Dr. Wones' letter."We are sorry that this complication occurred but do not believe that it occurred because of a mistake or error on the surgeons' part," he wrote to Miller. "This complication was recognized promptly and treated appropriately by the team."
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