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An inmate claims that he was denied medical treatment after complaining of a skin disorder. He filed a claim for medical malpractice, and that claim was dismissed close to two weeks ago by the Deleware Supreme Court.

According to court documents, Alan T. Brooks requested ultraviolet radiation treatment for vitiligo while incarcerated at James T. Vaughn Correctional Center. The skin condition causes blotches on the skin due to a lack of pigment.

The man filed a complaint against medical professionals at the prison, claiming that he developed the disease after undergoing open heart surgery in 2012. According to Brooks, a dermatologist prescribed ultraviolet therapy in 2015 to manage the skin condition.

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Dr. William Thompson is a man largely ignored by media outlets. He is a senior scientist for the CDC and in his career, he has published some of the most widely cited vaccine studies. Two, in fact, were the most commonly cited during the controversy over the MMR vaccine and autism. Those articles were written in 2004 and 2007, respectively.

Dr. Thompson now says that he went along with the paper that stated there was no evidence connecting the vaccine and autism. And that he nor his co-authors reported significant findings. Today, he regrets being “a part of the problem.”

The doctor has attempted to testify to scientific fraud and the destruction of evidence. It is his opinion that for the past 10 years, his employers have pressured him and others to manipulate data and lie with regards to vaccines and autism. Because Dr. Thompson’s testimony that vaccines and autism are directly linked, his testimony would not promote the objectives of the CDC and he has been effectively blocked from giving such testimony.

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A Rockford man filed a medical malpractice lawsuit eight years ago, claiming that former doctor LaDonna Waugh and Mercy Harvard Hospital were negligent in taking care of his post-operative complications.

According to court records and media reports, Robert Kantner underwent weight loss surgery in 2006. After the surgery, his blood pressure dropped into the 60s. Waugh failed to treat this drop in blood pressure promptly or correctly, and she was eventually taken off of Kantner’s case.

As a result of the negligence, Waugh was terminated from the hospital and Kantner filed a medical malpractice lawsuit. The lawsuit progressed for years before one of Kantner’s lawyers began to experience personal issues. Kantner says that he was advised by a judge that he could, and should, withdraw his case and refile at a later date when his attorney would be able to concentrate on his case.

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4034861100_685175398b_bA Houston doctor is being sued by three families who are accusing the doctor and the hospital the doctor works for of mishandling their babies’ deliveries. One baby died and the other two have lifelong injuries to deal with.

Dr. June Williams Colman and the East Houston Regional Medical Center, where each woman gave birth. Each woman claims that the doctor failed to notice signs of distress in their infants, forcing the women to push longer than safe, and not offering the option of cesarean sections.

Of the infants that were injured, one has a severe brain injury and the other has multiple injuries, including impaired vision. The child who died suffered with severe brain injuries and other injuries that were caused by the prolonged labor. The child died shortly after birth. Attorneys for the women accuse the doctor and other medical staff of making multiple errors during the deliveries all three women experienced.

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20699620022_eb701a8717_bLast week, a woman who was forced to have her leg amputated as a result of medical malpractice was awarded $25 million by a Connecticut jury.

Court documents tell a heartbreaking story. In 2009, Virginia Schneider, then 18, saw Dr. Marsel Huribal, complaining of pain in her left leg. The doctor failed to diagnose Schneider properly. Schneider was suffering with a blood clot that went undetected.

The pain Schnieder was experiencing became worse and she sought treatment at Griffin Hospital. Emergency doctors also failed to diagnose the blood clot. Schneider was sent home. The woman’s pain continued to worsen and she ultimately lost circulation in her leg due to the clot. Because that clot was not treated in a proper or timely manner, Schneider’s leg had to be amputated.

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4286179535_4dec419202_bA man who lost the lower parts of both of his legs has been awarded nearly $9 million in what an attorney has called the largest malpractice verdict in the history of Butler County, Pennsylvania.

According to court documents, Todd Wogan suffered from a colovesical fistula. He went to Butler Memorial Hospital in January 2012 to undergo a procedure to repair the condition. Wogan required a follow-up surgery later that same month. In that procedure, doctors removed 6 inches of Wogan’s colon.

Wogan never fully recovered after the second procedure. Wogan visited the hospital multiple times until he was finally admitted again in March 2012. It was hours before Wogan’s surgeon was advised of his condition and by the time an exploratory procedure was begun, Wogan’s colon was leaking fluid into his abdomen.

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Fluzone_vaccine_extractingA doctor in Chicago has been found guilty of medical malpractice after authorities discovered that he had been using homemade vaccines for children with allergies for more than 10 years.

Dr. Ming Te Lin was found guilty of administering unapproved vaccines to children as young as seven days old. The oral vaccines were made with cat saliva and vodka. Reports also show that the doctor gave unapproved versions of childhood shots to his patients.

Once authorities received reports from other health care providers, investigators visited Lin’s practice. They found his office to be unsterile and cluttered. They also found the materials the doctor used to make his own vaccines.

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Lineanigra2012A medical malpractice trial involving the family of a woman who died shortly after childbirth came to an end last week. The judge in the trial declared that it would stop after an attorney made a statement suggesting that the doctor involved in the case had played “Russian roulette” with the young mother’s life. The doctor was on the witness stand at the time of the statement and broke down as a result.

Dr. Lucinda S. Antosh was one of the doctors who treated Candice L. Perrillo, 25, in the days after she gave birth. The doctor testified that she had acted appropriately, but she also admitted to not ordering necessary tests or reviewing the patient’s full medical history.

The judge emptied the courtroom and admonished the attorney for the statement. The judge then ordered a mistrial, forcing both sides to come together for a new trial at a later date with new jurors. The judge stated that there was no purposeful decision made to inflict harm upon the patient on the part of the doctor.

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As residents of the coastal states work to clean up the damage that Hurricane Matthew left in its wake, people in New York and other states will begin to offer their assistance. If you plan on counting yourself among those who will donate to the relief efforts, it is important that you do so wisely.

According to the FBI, there were more than 4,000 websites that popped up after Hurricane Katrina, advertising that accepted donations would be sent to victims. These websites were scams. Experts also recommend not contributing to any organization with an verifiable overhead of more than 20 percent.

So how can you help safely?

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https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/33/Seal_of_the_United_States_Department_of_Veterans_Affairs_(1989-2012).svg/2000px-Seal_of_the_United_States_Department_of_Veterans_Affairs_(1989-2012).svg.pngJason Simcakoski was prescribed approximately 14 different drugs when he visited the Wisconsin Veterans Affairs facility. He later died despite his family’s concerns that he was too sedate when they visited him. The family is now suing the facility, alleging medical malpractice.

According to documents, Simcakoski was diagnosed, among other drugs, Suboxone. the drug is typically used for narcotic addiction, but was given to this patient to relieve chronic pain. The drug, the suit alleges, was given in too high of a dose and with a mixture of other pills.

On August 30, 2014, Simcakoski’s family visited him at the facility. They expressed concern that he was hardly able to talk and seemed more sedate than usual. In the early afternoon, the patient was discovered to be unresponsive and life saving measures were not started until approximately 10 minutes after he was discovered to be in distress.

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