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Posts Tagged ‘hospital’

Pope breaks right wrist in fall

Pope Benedict XVI. File photo

Pope Benedict XVI has been admitted to hospital after a fall while on holiday in northern Italy, but the Vatican says he was not seriously hurt.

The Pope, 82, went for a check-up at a hospital in the alpine town of Aosta.

"It is nothing serious," Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi was quoted as saying.

Reports say the Pope walked into the hospital with an aide. Pope Benedict, elected pontiff in 2005, was formerly Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.

The Pope is reported to have injured one of his wrists. A Vatican statement is expected after the medical checks.

The Pope has been staying at a modest house with a view of Mont Blanc, in the village of Les Combes in the Valle d’Aosta region. It was a favourite vacation spot for his predecessor, Pope John Paul II.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pope falls and suffers broken wrist

The Pope is recovering in hospital after falling and breaking his wrist. The Vatican said Benedict had slipped in the bath at his holiday chalet near the northern Italian town of Aosta, and suffered a minor fracture of the right wrist.

Octuplets’ hospital privacy fine

Nadya Suleman being interviewed in February

The hospital where octuplets were born in January has been fined for a second time for failing to protect the family’s medical privacy.

Nadya Suleman attracted worldwide attention after giving birth to eight babies at Kaiser Permanente’s Bellflower hospital in Los Angeles.

The hospital was fined $250,000 in May over staff looking at Suleman’s records inappropriately.

The new $187,500 fine is for similar breaches of the babies’ privacy.

"We have no reason to believe that anyone gave this information to anyone else or the media"

Jim Anderson
Kaiser Permanente Bellflower Hospital

The latest fine is part of an on-going investigation into the case by the the California Department of Public Health (CDPH).

Kaiser Permanente, which carried out its own investigation into the case, said 27 people had either looked at either Suleman’s or her babies’ records without authorisation.

Of these, two were fired, nine were disciplined and 16 resigned.

Jim Anderson, a spokesman for the hospital, said: "We have no reason to believe that anyone gave this information to anyone else or the media."

Dr Mark Horton, CDPH director, said: "We are very concerned with violations of patient confidentiality and their potential harm to the residents of California.

"Medical privacy is a fundamental right and a critical component of quality medical care."

Controversy

Suleman – dubbed "Octo-Mom" by the media – gave birth to six boys and two girls by Caesarean section.

She attracted criticism after it was revealed that she was unemployed, and had conceived the octuplets, along with six other children, through IVF.

She said she wanted to make up for the loneliness she felt growing up as an only child.

Suleman has signed a deal to star in a reality TV series, and will be filmed for a proposed television show by production company Eyeworks.

Her lawyer said it would be "less intrusive" than other reality shows.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ashton Kutcher Ruptured Eardrum

Twitter King Ashton Kutcher is recovering from a ruptured eardrum after he was injured during shooting for his new movie Five Killers in Nassau, Bahamas earlier this month.
Ashton was filming scenes for the action comedy with co-star Katherine Heigl when he complained of a severe headache and took a break.
Worried crewmembers rushed Ashton to a [...]

America’s hospital industry: Taking a scalpel to costs

Hospital operators brace themselves for health-care reform

EARLIER this month America’s hospital bosses gathered in Washington, DC, with vice-president Joseph Biden. To the amazement of many, they vowed to accept a cut of $155 billion in their expected revenues over the next decade as part of a grand bargain on health-care reform. How can they justify giving away such a vast sum? There are several explanations, not all of them altruistic. Taken together, they show that the industry’s leaders are bracing themselves for a period of upheaval.

For hospitals, the positive thing about health-care reform is that it is going to be good for business. It will be welcome news to an industry that is hardly in rude health. Despite two decades of consolidation, hospitals’ finances remain anaemic; over a quarter of them regularly post negative operating margins. The recession is making things worse. Moody’s, a credit-rating agency, notes that many patients are putting off non-essential treatments. …

S Korean ex-leader on respirator

Kim Dae-jung attended the funeral of former President Roh Moo-hyun in a wheelchair - 29 May 2009

Former South Korean President Kim Dae-jung is in an intensive care unit in a Seoul hospital being treated for pneumonia, medical officials have said.

Mr Kim, 85, was put on a respirator after complications arose, but is not in a critical condition, hospital official Park Chang-il said.

He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000 for brokering the first summit of leaders from divided Korea.

He served as South Korean president from 1998-2003.

"He became short of breath on Wednesday night and was put on a respirator around 0300 this morning," an official at Yonsei Severance Hospital was quoted as saying by Yonhap news agency.

"His condition has improved since. He is conscious, and his pulse, breathing and body temperature are normal."

Mr Kim was taken to the hospital on Monday with a fever and cold symptoms.

He dedicated his career to promoting democracy and human rights during the decades of authoritarian rule in South Korea.

His Sunshine Policy improved ties with the North during his presidency, but successors have taken a tougher line with Pyongyang and North-South relations have since soured.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Taylor denies emotional breakdown after MJ’s death led to her hospitalisation

Elizabeth Taylor has denied that getting emotionally drained following the death of her close pal, late King of Pop Michael Jackson, was the reason why she was recently hospitalised.
When the 77-year-old legend was reportedly rushed to a medical centre near her home in Beverly Hills on July 13, it was alleged that she was [...]

Cook County Hospital System Adds Top Execs, Former Blago Spokesman To Handle PR

A former Sara Lee Corp. executive has been named as the Cook County Health and Hospitals System’s new human resources director.

Hartson undergoes emergency op

• Striker underwent brain operation this morning
• Hospital confirms cancer has spread to Hartson’s lungs

The former Celtic, West Ham and Wales forward John Hartson has undergone emergency neurosurgery to relieve pressure on his brain at Morriston Hospital in Swansea. The 34-year-old, who retired from football in 2008, has been diagnosed with testicular cancer which has now spread to his brain.

Hartson’s condition was confirmed at the weekend following tests at the Singleton Hospital in Swansea where he went after complaining of severe headaches.

Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University NHS Trust which governs Morriston Hospital said in a statement that cancer had also been diagnosed in Hartson’s lungs:

“He is currently being cared for by the critical care team at Morriston and is receiving round-the-clock care aiming to stabilise his condition,” said the press release. “Unfortunately, cancer has now also been diagnosed in his lungs. He will resume radiotherapy and chemotherapy as soon as possible.”

A statement from Hartson’s family was also released earlier today: “His partner Sarah, mum [Diana], dad [Cyri]), three children, brother, two sisters and very close friends are all continuing to support John in any way they can. He is receiving outstanding care from all the medical and surgical staff and we would like to thank everyone at both Singleton and Morriston, as well as the excellent ambulance staff.

“We have been overwhelmed by the support and goodwill from many thousands of football fans, players, clubs and sporting figures and we have drawn strength from this support.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


The girl who borrowed a heart

• Ten years with two hearts, then her own recovers
• 16-year-old leads full life after cancer and transplant

Her life used to consist of endless rounds of medicines, long stays in hospital and uncertainty about how much longer she would live for. Now 16-year-old Hannah Clark – the first person in Britain to receive someone else’s heart but later have it removed, only for her own to unexpectedly recover – relishes typical teenage pursuits such as running, shopping and walking her dog.

Born with a rare heart condition that could easily have killed her, Hannah, from Mountain Ash near Cardiff, was two when she joined an exclusive club by having a five-month-old girl’s heart grafted on to her own.

For 10 and a half years she had two hearts – “piggybacking”, doctors call it – although it was the donated heart that kept Hannah alive while her original organ took a long rest.

Complications meant the second heart had to be taken out when she was 12, and doctors were unsure what would happen. No one had survived such a procedure.

Now, three and a half years later, one of the most dramatic success stories in recent medical history has just done her GCSEs, started her first part-time job at a kennels and is preparing for a family holiday by the seaside – all powered by a heart which, for her first 12 years, doctors thought could not keep her alive.

Confirmation of Hannah’s highly unusual success in recovering from cardiomyopathy, which affects the heart’s muscle, comes today in the form of a long article in the Lancet medical journal.

In complicated medicalese, it tells an amazing story of survival. The authors, who include renowned heart surgeon Sir Magdi Yacoub, testify to the teenager’s feat.

Yesterday the girl who used to have two hearts negotiated another obstacle: a press conference to tell her story.

At times the constant whirring of cameras, barrage of questions and sheer number of people left her lost for words, or in tears.

How specially does she treasure life now, someone asked? “I can’t say,” replied Hannah. It took her mother, Liz, to answer: “She just loves life. She doesn’t think about tomorrow; she thinks about today, and lives life to the full. She gets up every morning smiling, and it’s very, very rare to see Hannah upset.

“She doesn’t go to bed until three o’clock in the morning sometimes … that’s how much energy she’s got. She couldn’t have done that before.”

Yacoub, of the Harefield hospital in west London, said her recovery had given the many doctors involved in her care insights into many things, such as transplant surgery and the use of immunosuppressant drugs, which must be taken to minimise the chances of a patient’s body rejecting a new organ.

Before Hannah, no one’s own heart had ever recovered enough to keep them alive, although doctors did think it was a theoretical possibility that a weak heart could somehow become strong.

Among the lessons learned from Hannah, Yacoub said, was that “the possibility of recovery of the heart is just like magic. A heart that was not contracting at all, after a time we put the new heart to pump next to it, and do its work. Now it is functioning normally. That is going to be very fundamental in helping people in the future.”

Born in 1993, Hannah underwent what surgeons call heterotopic cardiac transplantation, or “piggybacking”, two years later. However, the immunosuppressant drugs led to her developing an incurable, rare cancer that kept returning despite repeated bouts of chemotherapy.

But the doctors’ strategy, to reduce the doses of immunosuppressants, led to Hannah’s second heart failing. In February 2006, they decided they had no choice but to take it out, or risk Hannah’s death. Three and a half years of constant improvement, and Hannah’s gloriously normal life, have proved enough for them to pronounce the reversal of her transplant an unqualified, if unexpected, success.

Her father, Paul, recalled how when she was being treated at London’s Great Ormond Street hospital the family was told that Hannah was about to die.

“They called us in and said that a tumour had affected her spinal cord and was putting pressure on her brain, and was going to kill her. A nurse told us that she only had 12 hours to live. I said, ‘Well, you believe what you believe and I’ll believe what I believe’. For some reason, the next day she was OK.”

Their experience has made the Clark family advocates of presumed consent, a policy – supported by Gordon Brown and chief medical officer Sir Liam Donaldson – that would see everyone in the UK presumed to be in favour of donating their organs after death. Supporters believe that, with 1,000 people dying every year due to shortages, the move would greatly increase the supply of organs. Yacoub said that, having previously been opposed to presumed consent, he now backed it.

Survival story

1 May 1993 Hannah Clark born in Wales.

July 1995 Aged two, Hannah undergoes “piggybacking”, in which a donor heart is joined with her own. She improves for four and a half years.

August 2001 Hannah is found to have a rare form of cancer caused by immunosuppressant drugs that stop her body rejecting the new organ.

2001-2006 Her cancer keeps recurring. Doctors deem it incurable.

February 2006 Doctors decide to remove the donor heart.

14 July 2009 Hannah’s story reported in the Lancet.

  
  
  

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Six-year-old and GP die of swine flu

• UK fatalities linked to H1N1 virus now up to 17
• Exact cause of deaths to be determined by coroners

A GP and a six-year-old girl have died after contracting swine flu, taking the number of UK deaths linked to the virus to 17, officials announced today.

Dr Michael Day, a family doctor from Bedfordshire, died on Saturday at Luton and Dunstable hospital.

Chloe Buckley, from north-west London, died on Thursday at St Mary’s hospital in Paddington after contracting the virus in the UK.

Along with Sameerah Ahmad from Birmingham, also six, Chloe is one of the youngest victims of swine flu. Children aged between five and 14 are most affected by the virus, according to the Health Protection Agency (HPA).

A postmortem will be needed before health officials can determine whether Chloe had any underlying health conditions, Dr Simon Tanner, NHS London’s director of public health, said.

NHS East of England said a swab test confirmed Day had also contracted the H1N1 virus, but the exact cause of death will remain unknown until the coroner’s report.

The first British patient without underlying health problems died on Friday after contracting swine flu. The patient, from Essex, died at Basildon and Thurrock University hospital.

The UK has the third-highest number of confirmed cases – almost 10,000 – of swine flu after Mexico, which has 10,262 cases, and the US, which has at least 33,902 confirmed cases. Tanner said Chloe’s death would “probably not be the last that we have in this pandemic”. She was the sixth person in the capital to die after contracting the H1N1 virus.

“We would like to extend our deepest sympathies to the family at this difficult time as they come to terms with their loss,” said Tanner.

Dr Day’s practice, the Priory Gardens health centre, is to contact everyone who has been in close contact with the doctor recently, including patients, NHS East of England said.

They will be assessed for symptoms of swine flu and offered antiviral medication if necessary.

Dr Paul Hassan, senior partner at Priory Gardens, said staff at the practice were “completely devastated”.

“Dr Day was a work colleague and also a personal friend to everyone at the practice,” he said.

“I know the news will also come as a great shock to our patients, many of whom have known him for many years. Our thoughts at this time are with his wife and family.”

Hundreds of thousands more people than those officially recorded are believed to have swine flu. Doctors have warned that rates of infection are reaching epidemic levels in London and the West Midlands. Its rapid spread has prompted the HPA to stop giving updates of the exact numbers infected.

In its last weekly update, on Thursday, the agency said 335 people had been taken to hospital with the virus, 43 of whom were in critical care. Tanner said it was difficult to say exactly how many people had caught the virus now patients were no longer swabbed. Swabbing was abandoned after it was determined that swine flu was widespread.

Tanner emphasised that most people who contracted the virus would experience mild symptoms and feel better within a few days. The advice remained to wash hands regularly and throw away used tissues, he said.

At St Catherine’s school in West Drayton, north-west London, headteacher Sara Benn said pupils were struggling to come to terms with the news of Chloe’s death. “It is impossible to put into words the sorrow that the whole school feels in such tragic circumstances,” said Benn.

“Chloe was a bright and tenacious student with a keen interest in sports. She will be missed by her fellow pupils and her teachers at the school. Our thoughts are with her parents and family at this time. We are working with the council and health authority to support parents and pupils dealing with this devastating news.”

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Terror hits S Punjab


KHANEWAL/MULTAN – A huge blast at a seminary in the outskirts of Tehsil Mian Channu on Monday killed at least 15 persons, including seven kids, and injured around 95, as the explosive material stored at a house by the militants ignited resulting in large-scale destruction.
According to details, the explosion rocked the village 129/15-L at 9:30 am, as the people were busy in their routine works. The explosion with deafening sound shattered everything around as more than 25 houses and a health centre were razed to the ground. The intensity of the blast can be gauged by the fact that the blast created a 15 feet deep and 25 feet wide crack. At the time of explosion, a large number of children were studying Quran there and seven of them died in the incident.
Locals say the explosion occurred in the house of Riaz Kamboh, a cleric having links with militant organisations. They further said that Riaz had established the seminary for minor boys and girls just adjacent to his house situated near the government-run health centre of the village.
A local UC Nazim Asif Sindhu talking to media said Riaz had visited Afghanistan for training.
District Police Officer Kamran Khan, who is leading the rescue work, has said that two suicide jackets, six rocket launchers and some jihadi literature are also recovered from the blast site. Sources say the literature found belonged to ‘Harkat-ul-Jihad’, a militant outfit.
On the other hand, Rana Sana Ullah while talking to the newsmen at village 129/15-L has disclosed that three terrorists have been arrested from the area, but he did not confirm the arrest of the house owner Riaz Kamboh. He said Chief Minister Punjab Mian Shahbaz Sharif is monitoring the rescue work and slackness on the part of any official would not be tolerated.
To assist in the rescue operation, high-ranking officials, fire brigade and social and political volunteers reached the site from Multan and Khanewal, while a heavy police contingent surrounding the locality. Local MNA Pir Aslam Bodla and MPA Babar Japani, both of PPP, and District Naib Nazim Pir Ahmad Nadeem Bodla were also trying to control the situation.
The rescue operation is in progress and the injured are being treated at THQ, DHQ and private hospitals whereas many seriously wounded persons have been shifted to Multan.
Meanwhile, emergency was declared at Nishtar Hospital and Medical College Multan following the Mian Channu blast. The hospital administration arranged 50 beds in emergency block and called all medical staff to duty, who were out or on leave.
Hospital sources disclosed that 19 injured of the blast were brought to the hospital out of which two had expired. The deceased were identified as Ghulam Nabi (40) and Hajra Bibi (4). The condition of five others is also precarious, they added.
According to latest details issued by the district administration 9 had died on the spot and two in the Nishtar Hospital Multan. Three of the dead children belonged to a family including Aaisha (21), Abdullah (16) and Asad (6).
The remaining are Hajran Bibi D/O Anwar, Rimsha D/O Ashraf 3 and Iqra D/O Zulfiqar while three dead bodies are yet be identified in the THQ Hospital Mian Channu.
ONLINES add: Master Riaz, owner of explosion-wrecked house, his brother and their six other associates have been arrested and taken to unspecified destination for interrogation.
According to a private TV channel, Riaz and his brother, who were admitted to a hospital for treatment after being injured in blast, were arrested by a heavy contingent of police and intelligence agencies officials
Earlier, DPO Khanewal and other sources had said that Riaz was member of a banned Sipha-e-Sahaba Pakistan (SSP) and participated in Afghan war for about 8 years. He had settled in Mian Channu for the last several years.
Hospital sources have also confirmed Master Riaz Hussain and his brotherÂ’s arrests.
The number of killed is feared to be around 25 to 30 with around 150 houses destroyed completely.
APP adds: President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday ordered an inquiry and sought an immediate report into the explosion at a village in Mian Channu that killed nearly 20 people and injured several others.
The President expressed his shock over the loss of innocent lives in this dastardly act of terrorism in which apparently explosives hidden in a house went off, causing widespread damage to people and property.
he condemned the incident and said innocent people were falling victim to the acts by unscrupulous elements, who for personal gains were threatening the lives and property of people.
Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani also ordered an inquiry into the explosion.
The PM also denounced the blast and asked the provincial authorities to investigate the matter and submit him an immediate report as to how the incident occurred.
He ordered that best possible medical care be provided to the injured and measures taken to provide relief to those whose houses were damaged and destroyed.
He expressed deep grief and sorrow over the loss of precious lives and directed the authorities concerned to ensure provision of best medical care to the injured.
The PM also conveyed his condolences to the bereaved families.

‘Mistake kills flu baby’ in Spain

Gregorio Maranon Hospital in Madrid

A baby born prematurely to the first woman in Spain to die of swine flu has also died after a glaring medical error, a hospital director has said.

The baby boy was born by Caesarean section on 29 June just hours before his mother, Dalila Mimouni, died.

Doctors said the baby, Rayan, did not have swine flu and he seemed to be doing well despite being premature.

But he has now died after an elementary feeding error by a member of staff, said the hospital’s managing director.

Antonio Barba told a news conference that on Sunday night the child was fed intravenously instead of through a gastric tube.

The mistake was detected about an hour later, and doctors battled through the night to try to save the child by cleaning his blood.

But Rayan died just after midday on Monday, said Mr Barba, managing director of the Gregorio Maranon hospital in Madrid.

Mr Barba said the error was "very grave negligence and there is no excuse for it.

"The hospital assumes all responsibility, both human and financial, although we know there is no making up for something like this," he said.

Mr Barba said the nurse who made the error was working on the unit for the first time and her supervisor was temporarily absent.

Legal action

Dalila Mimouni, Rayan’s 20-year-old Moroccan mother, died of respiratory illness caused by swine flu on 30 June.

She died just hours after Rayan was delivered by emergency Caesarean section two months before his due date.

The case had gripped the Spanish media.

Mimouni’s bereaved husband had already announced his intention to take legal action against two hospitals, including Gregorio Maranon, after his wife’s complaints of feeling unwell were repeatedly dismissed before she was finally diagnosed, reports El Pais newspaper.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Footballer’s wife dies after botched operation

The wife of the former Scotland football captain Colin Hendry died today following surgery to correct the botched liposuction procedure that almost killed her seven years ago.

Denise Hendry, who was 43, had been in intensive care at Salford Royal hospital for several weeks suffering from a meningitis-like infection after undergoing an operation to repair the damage.

She nearly died in April 2002 after the liposuction procedure at the private Broughton Park hospital in Preston, Lancashire, went badly wrong, leaving her with multiple complications.

Hendry, from Lytham St Annes, Lancashire, fell ill just two days after the surgery and was treated for septicaemia at the Royal Preston hospital.

Her heart also stopped for four minutes as she went into a cardiac arrest following the botched operation. She suffered nine punctures to her bowel and colon, causing blood poisoning and multiple organ failure, and needed a 16-hour operation in May as part of the long recovery process.

Gustav Aniansson, the cosmetic surgeon who carried out the liposuction procedure, voluntarily applied to be removed from the General Medical Council’s register, and lawyers for the couple later secured a £300,000 damages settlement in November 2006.

Speaking afterwards, Hendry said: “I felt so bad when I thought Colin could have lost his wife and my children would have lost their mother. I felt overwhelming guilt at how stupid I’d been.”

She had been receiving treatment from a specialist in the unit of the National Intestinal Failure Centre, which is based at the hospital.

Her husband, the ex-Manchester City, Blackburn Rovers and Rangers central defender, had been at her bedside throughout the ordeal.

The couple have four children aged between 19 and nine.

Yesterday, Colin Hendry paid tribute to his wife and spoke of his family’s sense of loss.”Words cannot describe the desolation we feel,” he said.

“I cannot begin to imagine life without her, but we are a strong and devoted family and somehow, if only for Denise’s sake, we will get through.”

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