HOSPITAL
JOURNAL (February 21st through March 5th, 2000)
(From progressive handwritten notes by
daughter Catherine taken throughout her mothers
hospital stay and typed out for the Coroner March 7, 2000)
Weeks
prior to surgery February 21st
I spoke with Mum on a number of occasions re: the upcoming
full hip replacement surgery and what she could expect.
She told me that her G.P. Dr. Noble and the team
had looked at her history and it was decided to do a spinal
as opposed to a general anesthetic. She said that this
was part in response to her life-threatening experience
in 1994 for what was to be a double decompression at two
levels of her spine, whereby the second procedure was
aborted because of hypotension and hypoxemia. She told
us that Dr. Noble had assured her that EVERYONE
at the hospital knows about your case and not to worry,
they were not going to take any chances and would do the
spinal. Her pre-surgical anesthesia consult with
a Dr. Lavin confirmed this recommendation in writing.
At no time was she or the family told that there was any
possibility that the decision to use the spinal would
be substituted at the last minute due to the judgment
of whoever the anesthesiologist appeared to be at the
time.
Sunday,
February 20th
Mum left a message on my machine at home saying that she
was comfortably checked into her room but
that she was very confused and concerned in that the anesthesiologist
had already been in to see her and informed her that she
was to undergo a general. Her voice was anxious and I
was concerned as surgery was early the next morning and
I was unable to check things out with Dr. Noble or surgeon,
Dr. Wickham.
Monday,
February 21st, 11a.m.
Dad called and said that Dr. Wickham had called to say
the surgery had gone well and she was in recovery. Dad
went to the hospital around 2:30 and was told she was
still in recovery. He saw her. She was out of it
he said ... and he left.
Tuesday,
February 22nd, 5:45 a.m.
Dad called and said the hospital called him at 4 a.m (Internist,
Dr. Richmond) to say that things were very serious and
he and the family should get down here. No
details except that shed been transferred to ICU.
8:15ish
Brother Ron and I arrive in ICU and are told
that shed had a very bad turn around 2:00 a.m and
she was still very critical. That they had had to use
the paddle; that she was hooked to dopamine and some other
lifesaving drugs; that her blood pressure had gone way
below 100; that she was on 100% oxygen; and that blood
tests indicated that there could have been a heart attack
(a silent heart attack Dr. Richmond called
it.)
Dr.
Noble came in and I asked him how mum was and he said
she was stabilizing as best as could be expected. I asked
him at this time why mum was given a general and he looked
surprised and said, I dont know. Youll
have to ask Dr. Wickham. I reminded him that Mum
and he had discussed the preference for the spinal and
he nodded affirmatively. I also reminded him that specially
given Mums previous experience, wed understood
that this was the way to go and that this had been discussed
weeks prior to the operation. He nodded affirmatively
again and said, Yes, thats true. He
then volunteered that sometimes things change at
the time of surgery. I pointed out that this change
had come at 6 pm that night before and that the decision
had come as a shock to Mum. He said to be sure to discuss
this with Dr. Wickham.
Shortly thereafter (I think 9ish) Dr. Wickham came in
and I asked why the general? He said, Im not
sure. Its the anesthetists call he
runs the show and I dont know why the decision
was made. I continued to probe and he (Dr. Wickham)
tried to placate me by offering that she received the
cadillac of anesthetics. I pointed out that,
was that really the point given her history and the fact
that the spinal had been indicated all along for a number
of reasons which had been outlined to her? He then went
into an educational style mini-lecture on how it was a
more difficult operation under spinal because of the length
of operation and the positioning. I pointed out that none
of these aspects had NOT been known prior to Sunday night
.. and why again would the decision have been made independent
of everyones input
and wouldnt he ask given hed come in to the
operating room expecting a spinal??? He mumbled and left.
I asked Dr. Richmond the same question and he said, understandably,
that Mum had not been in his care pre-op so he did not
know.
During the morning we stayed beside Mum and at different
times, her nurse Debbi would say things like, Tests
indicate it was her heart
this can happen when there is a general. And then
something to the effect that the respiration can be suppressed
and can bring on hypoxia or something. Later when we commented
on the swelling and extreme puffiness of our mother, she
directly attributed that as well to the general. When
I asked her if she knew why Mum had had a general and
not a spinal, she went to the chart and said that it was
strange but there was no notation on the chart. I asked
if the name of the anesthetist was there and she said
no.
By evening visit, the nurse Marissa said that Mum was
200% improved then when shed come down the night
before when her breathing had been poor and her heartbeat
irregular.
Wednesday,
February 23, 9:30 p.m.
I arrived at hospital and talked with Dr. Richmond who felt
Mum was doing reasonably well and that it had been a heart
attack and he was going to put her on Amiodarone. That
it had significant side effects and that she would be
kept in ICU to monitor her closely.
1:00 p.m. I called Dr. Nobles office
and asked that he give me a call at his convenience. He
called between 2 and 3 and Ron listened on the other line.
I shared with Dr. Noble that Dr. Richmond was a very difficult
person to talk to he volunteered that he had a
certain lack of bedside manner but was a good specialist.
Dr. Noble told us that enzymes showed that she had had
a heart attack and was showing cardiac instability. That
she would be in ICU for at least 5 days being monitored,
that they would give her blood thinners to prevent clots;
and that as soon as she was stable from the cardiac point
of view, the rehab people would be called in to work with
her. I ended the conversation by asking again about the
general anesthetic; he said that hed been unable
to find out more and that when he himself had asked Dr.
Wickham today, in Dr. Nobles words, Wickham
mumbled something at him and talked about the cadillac
of anesthetics.
I asked if Dr. Noble had any information on the file of
why/who? He had his file in front of him and flipped through
and said that he would read me out loud the pre-op consult
report from a Dr. Lavin. It spoke of Mum being optimized
for surgery. That given the history and discussions, a
spinal was recommended.
But Dr. Lavin isnt necessarily the same person
who gave her the anesthetic on surgery day, Dr.
Noble said. And I havent found out yet who
that is.
I told Dr. Noble that our family wanted to know and would
be following up. He suggested he would get the name and
number and I could speak to them myself. I finally asked
(paraphrasing the nurse) whether, the general might
have not suppressed the respiration and could it have
brought on the hypoxia, especially given the fact that
Mum had told us that at the pre-surgery clinic they had
asked if shed ever been told about a little murmur
before? Dr. Noble immediately said, Oh no,
thats not possible.
Thursday,
February 24 through Friday, March 3rd
Visits
showed her slowly and progressively recovering, getting
taken off oxygen in increments, off the dopamine etc.
Our understanding is that she was transferred out of ICU
on February 29th to the 3rd floor and then on March 1st
to the general ward on the 5th floor. She was walking
small steps and sitting in her wheelchair. Various visitors
describe either visits where she would 100% engage in
the conversations, looking forward to getting out or visits
where she was just a bit addled at times, thinking her
Manitoba sister was walking down the hallway. One visitor
spoke to us of Mums concern that she was not really
all there. She said, I dont know
how to describe it Doreen. Its the oddest feeling
as if Im here but not here (this was on Tuesday
the 29th I think.)
Saturday,
March 4th
About noon, I came into Ward 5, Room 535 and couldnt
see her from the door. There was no medical staff around.
I went into the room, rounded the far corner curtain and
was met by a woman strapped into a wheelchair, near naked,
eye area bruised, nose bleeding, scabs on side of face
and in an extremely agitated state. She was making no
sense and was trying desperately to pick at the leather
strap to get it off her stomach. She kept complaining
that it hurt, it hurt. I immediately tried to pull her
together before my father came into the room (he was tracking
down her wedding ring which had been misplaced for her
stay.)
A nurses aide came into the room, saw me and immediately
starts going on about how difficult my mother had been
all night. How she was completely agitated and taking
sheets and clothes off herself and the woman in the bed
next to her. How theyd had their hands full and
it had really been extremely difficult having to deal
with this woman. I stopped her from blathering on and
said, Look, Im five minutes into seeing a
woman I dont even recognize as my mother. This is
NOT Esther Winckler. Cant you see that Im
incredibly upset and couldnt you be just a little
more compassionate. I then asked her to get me a
doctor to talk to. She said that wasnt possible
but that I could talk to the RN.
In
awhile the RN came down and I talked to him in the hall.
Told him that this was 100% different than the person
we’d known. That she was distressed, sore (he volunteered
it was probably the leather around her stomach). He also
said that he was glad that I had told him about her; they
had no idea this wasn’t her personality. I asked about
the bruise and he said she’d fallen. That I should talk
to the GP who had examined her in the morning.
I went to the front desk and had them get hold of this
GP, who turned out to be Dr. Quinn (filling in for her
GP, Dr. Noble, for the weekend.) He said that she’d had
a fall and that they’d found her next to the bed and that
he had come in to examine her; that she’d checked out
OK, but he offered that he had never met her before and
so didn’t have anything to compare her behaviour to. I
talked with great concern about her very upsetting and
almost crazy wild behaviour and her struggling to get
out of her chair because she was sore. He said that it
was a combination of “the surgery, multiple medications,
and anesthetic.”
I got off the phone and asked the nurse to tell me what
medications my mum was now on. She said” Sotalol, Rampirol,
fluticasone and ventolin puffers, Tylenol 3 (which have
always been absolutely awful for my mum for bowel blockage)...
and laxatives. At this time I expressed surprise that
the heart medication had changed. We had been told that
she was on Amiodarone by Dr. Richmond and that he’d keep
us apprised of how she was reacting to it. No one had
told us that she’d been switched to a new heart drug...
or why.
As well, there was no mention that she had been given
Atavan the night before. Something I was later to learn
from Dr. Quinn that this had been administered by the
nursing staff without his knowledge or approval and that
this can often lead to more agitation.
I
asked the nurse at the station whose care she was under
and they said Dr. Noble and Dr. Wickham. I asked when
Dr. Wickham had been in to monitor this complete change
in my mother; she could not tell me. I asked when the
last visit or consult with Dr. Richmond had been (especially
given his assurance that he would closely follow the med
reactions through her stay) and she said that it was February
28th. I asked about the last bloodwork and O2 levels and
there was no reply.
I went back to my Mum and Dad and asked the nurses aide
if there was anything I could feed her in the liquid drink
range. She had not eaten her food and Dad was worried
as she was looking thinner by the day and her skin was
incredibly dry; lips crusty. I wet her mouth and tongue,
put cream all over her legs and face... and then the aide
brought a Boost drink, asking me, “Do you really need
this? You know I understand she spilled the shake you
brought her ... and these are very expensive you know?”
I told her that we were happy to pay for the Boost; in
fact I’d bring in dozens; that I’d been the one to clean
up the spilled shake … and the spilled food of the lady
in the bed next to Mum who was sitting there for 1/2 hour
upset because there was food all over her lap. I asked
her to just be patient with my mother; this was totally
out of character... and couldn’t she find it in her heart
to be a little more understanding.
I took my Dad back to his home at Cultus Lake as he was
devastated. This was a complete turn of events for him.
She was tearing off her clothes, making no sense... and
there was no one helping her. He was in danger of falling
apart and so I returned to the hospital early afternoon
without him.
When I came around the corner this time, she had all her
clothes off and no medical personnel was in sight at all.
She was moaning, living mentally in her childhood home
in Hamiota, Manitoba, clutching at her stomach and saying,
“Larry, Larry my tummy hurts so much.” She cried to get
out of her chair through that part of the afternoon. Would
not keep her clothes on. Moaned in pain. And tried maniacally
to pick at the leather strap to free it.
At
one point late afternoon she said, “I need to go to the
bathroom. NOW NOW!” She went on herself and the chair.
When I asked one of the nurses when she could be taken
to the bathroom she admonished me not to touch her because
of the hip. I said I had no intention, but couldn’t someone
look to her needs. She said that they wouldn’t until the
doctor got to her to quiet her down; then they’d clean
her up once. “If we do it now,” she said, “She’ll just
take everything off all over again.” When I asked when
that doctor visit would be, she said she didn’t know.
By this point I was getting desperate (around 6ish). I
called my medical friend in Vancouver and asked what I
should do? I called a friend in geriatric medicine in
Vancouver and asked what to do. Both said that I needed
to demand a doctor look at her immediately.
I went to the front desk and asked the nurse politely
what my options were. Is there a doctor in the hospital
right now I could see? She said the resident was currently
unavailable. If I can get my Vancouver doctor’s friend
(a Chilliwack specialist) to come in as a favour to look
at her, would that help, I asked? She volunteered that
he would be third on the totem pole and that he couldn’t
prescribe. She said that the first choice would be the
GP in charge. “But he doesn’t even know my mother,” I
said. She said that this was still the best bet... but
that they didn’t usually phone them UNLESS the family
insisted. “Consider this an insist,” I said.
I went back to my mother; cradled her and rocked her.
Her stomach was now three times normal for her size. She
kept complaining of being very sore there. Still there
was no nursing staff or assistance.
Dr. Quinn arrived sometime thereafter and I stepped out.
When he filled me in on her condition he said he was concerned.
Her blood pressure was low 80. She had a tender abdomen.
He was going to hold the sotoril to try to bring up the
blood pressure and withhold the loxopene. He told me then
that there had been Atavan that he had not known about
and that this might have caused some of the behaviour
of the night before. He ordered blood tests stat, an x-ray
and had the nursing staff clean her up and put her to
bed.
I
went back home and at 11:00 that night got a call from
Dr. Quinn who said that they had an “abdominal catastrophe”
on their hands. That she had a high white blood count
with a shift, that blood pressure was dangerously low.
That it might be an infection or inflammation intra-abdominally.
That he had contacted the surgeon on call, and they had
discussed it over the phone and it was felt she wouldn’t
survive abdominal surgery and more anesthetic. That they
would do simple things overnight. Intravenous and a bolus
of IV fluid as well as intravenous antibiotics. “Let’s
hope it’s not a perforation.” He said. Then told me that
in the a.m. she’d get a CT scan.
I called back to the nursing station and found that all
of this was being done by phone; neither were with my
mother. I asked/insisted that the x-rays be read that
night and would someone please call me with the findings.
Dr. Quinn immediately called back and said, “I understand
you can’t get any sleep until you hear about the x-rays;
well, there just happened to be a radiologist in reading
another patient’s chart and they read your mum’s and there
is no perforation. It’s marginally good news. Go to sleep
- that’s what I’ll be doing.”
I asked one last question, prompted by my Vancouver contact.
Is there any chance of an ilius? He said no.
At 3:30 in the morning, someone new to us (a woman doctor—the
resident???) informed me that Mum had passed away. That
she had been given lots of morphine. As if that was to
make me feel better knowing that there was a ‘no morphine’
caution on her wristband given her hallucinations under
the drug!
I waited until 6:30 in the morning to tell my father that
his wife had passed away. Later that morning Dr. Quinn
called to pass along his condolences. He said that her
abdomen had indicated sepsus or something. That there
probably was a heart attack.
To date, her surgeon Dr. Wickham has never called my father;
never followed through with his patient. (This information
was as of March 7th; a week later he did call my father
and then following a note I wrote to him to express my
concerns, he said he’d like to share my concerns with
the head of nursing as that seemed to be where the trouble
lay.)
Monday,
March 6th
Dr. Noble called first thing to express shock and I mentioned
that I had already called his office to set up a 1:15
debriefing meeting with he and my brother and I. At this
time he expressed complete shock that he had come in Monday
morning to the news. That when he saw her Friday, she
was on the road to recovery with only a few lapses in
memory, which he said was common post-operatively. I told
him of our complete horror at the weekend’s treatment
and he said he understood our need to call for an autopsy
if it would make us feel better.
I did not know what was involved with an autopsy I knew
that we were not looking for blame; but for a reason for
the ongoing lack of concern, care, and the mixed messages
we were getting. I called the Chief Coroner, and he put
me in touch with the Chilliwack division and explained
the procedure and the difference between the autopsy and
a coroner’s autopsy. I reiterated that we wanted only
to make sure her voice was heard.
In a nutshell, these are the things our family does
not understand:
1) Despite a file with historical evidence of problems
with general anesthetic, despite the pre-consult report
with Dr. Lavin, despite the care team’s meetings with
my mother, and despite her wishes and fears for a general
anesthetic, why did a Dr. Suleman on the Sunday night
unilaterally make a decision without sharing it with family
or GP or the surgeon for the hip replacement surgery?
Did this affect outcome?
2) Why were medications changed without our family’s
knowledge? When was the last consult with the heart specialist
and was he continuously monitoring the combinations of
medications, blood pressure etc. When was her last bloodwork
done prior to the night of her death? And where was Dr.
Wickham in all of this? Should the abdomen have been his
responsibility? Why did no one know she was septic? Who
was in charge of her... and how could they leave her over
the weekend with absolutely no one who knew her case?
3)
With no history of heart disease, what did happen in the
operating room... and was the anesthesiologist present
at all times?
4) Why was Atavan given the night of her most agitated
state? Why were no doctors consulted during this supposedly
highly delusional night? Was she simply dismissed as a
senile old lady with too many health problems to address?
Were any tests run to see why her personality had changed
100% from the time her GP, Dr. Noble saw her on Friday
through to Saturday a.m.?
5) Why was she found lying at the side of her bed,
bruised, bleeding on Saturday a.m.? How long had she been
there? What was done to examine what must have been a
sore abdomen even at that time?
6) Were Drs. Wickham, Richmond, or Noble (those
who knew her case) ever consulted over this critical period
given they were the ones who knew her? Was she left to
Dr. Quinn who had never met her before... and then were
staff so hesitant to call him in on a Saturday afternoon
or evening that they left her sitting in the chair for
hours?
7) Given the obvious staffing shortage, why is
family not advised so that we could bring in someone to
watch her through the evening and day? Why was she situated
behind the curtain on the left side so that no one would
be able to see her from the door of the ward room?
8) Why was it left to the family to insist (via
having to phone contacts in Vancouver to describe symptoms
to them over the phone) that a doctor be brought in to
see her STAT. It was fully obvious that unless I had stood
at the front station and insisted on the phone call, my
mother would have been left sitting in the chair until
someone had got to her at evening’s end.
9) Why was more morphine administered given the
no morphine on her wristband.
10) Who called us to tell us of the death? Given
four doctors we knew: Noble, Richmond, Wickham and at
the end, Quinn... did we really need a new one at 3:30
in the morning whom we couldn’t even ask questions. She
was short, to the point, and hung up immediately.
11) Most importantly, is what we have experienced
as a family, doomed to be repeated for others? Can people
not realize that 77, cancer survivor, and post op does
not mean relegating a proud and articulate woman to the
back corner behind a curtain to die in extreme discomfort?
MEDICAL
NOTES
The following notes were taken at the reading of the Medical Examiner's findings, over a year ago in March 2001. The family was allowed to take notes, but not photocopy any of the findings. These are our notes:
Apparent
Chain of Events:
Autopsy showed Ischemia and infarcation
of the transverse colon and extensive organizing hemorrhage
cerebral infarcts, due to prolonged oxygen de-saturation
and hypotension, status postoperative left hip replacement.
Also fractured ribs and no evidence of an MI.
Chain of Events: Seen by Dr. Suleman on Feb. 20th, the night before surgery,
@ 2200. Classified her as level three, high risk due to
severe system involvement. High risk, yet no EKG was
done pre-op. Potassium was 2.9; result ignored. Urinalysis
showed ++ white cells and red cells; no culture sent off.
Foley still inserted next day.
Questions around the use of general anesthesia.
Previous surgery of 1994 (see attached letter which Esther
Winckler had on her file) shows previous aborted surgery
under general anesthetic. Based on this history, a February
2, 2000 pre-op consult was ordered with anesthetist Dr.
Lavin, who wrote a letter (on file) which stated clearly
that general anesthesia was ill advised for this elective
hip replacement surgery. Everyone was apparently in agreement,
except Dr. Suleman who acknowledges he was aware of this
letter, but went ahead with a general anyway Mrs. Winckler
called her daughter after Dr. Sulemans Sunday night
visit and expressed extreme concern about the general,
but there was no GP or surgeon around that night to talk
to. Note that she had expressed on numerous occasions
to family, friends and her GP that if a general was used,
she was not comfortable going ahead with the surgery given
her 1994 experience.
According to Dr. David Wickhams statement, risks
of surgery were explained. Given that he told the daughter
following the surgery that he was as surprised as
anyone to see her under a general when I got to the operating
room, when was he aware that all risks were explained?
It was the familys understanding that he was in
total agreement with the spinal. Was it he that ordered
the pre-op consult? Had he scheduled an operation based
on a spinal or a general? Was there any written
document or signed document supporting Mrs. Wincklers
comfort with the decision? Did Dr. Suleman explain
risks of general anesthesia, especially given her past
history?
Re. Operation February 21, 2000. Operation started
around 9 am, completed 1015. Was operation completed very
quickly, especially for a total hip replacement? Again,
what was Dr. Wickhams OR schedule like for that
day?
During the operation Mrs. Winckler was given 2000cc (2
litres) of fluid; output 150cc. The patient weighed not
too much more than 100 pounds. At 1020, BP found low and
she was given 500cc of Ringers. Portable CXR done showed
interstitial edema. Nothing was done. Mrs. Winckler
only had one lung, already compromised now due to fluid
overload. Received now 2500cc (21/2 litres) of fluid in
less than 2 hours.
EKG finally done. Repeat electrolytes showed low potassium;
pre-op low potassium was ignored. O2 saturation low, pulmonary
edema not treated; instead given ventolin.
In the recovery room Mrs. Winckler received another 1275cc
of fluid; rate of infusion not noted. In total she
has now received 3775 cc (almost 4 litres) of fluid in
a couple of hours. She was now in atrial fibrillation.
Internist Dr. Richmond now involved in her care. Her
SaO2 was 84% on 97% O2. Dr. Richmond said this was satisfactory.
(Is this considered satisfactory according to common
medical practice?) He diagnosed a myocardial infarction
based on an increase in the CKMB (Could this not have
arisen due to hip surgery itself?)
Her blood pressure now drops to 73/40 and she is given
another 500cc of Normal Saline.
Summary to date:
Mrs. Winckler underwent a hip replacement under general
anesthesia, yet this appeared to be contraindicated. No
EKG was done, and pre-op potassium was low, but not corrected.
She is found to be in failure post op, yet no treatment
for pulmonary edema was given. Instead she continued to
receive more fluids. She has one lung and is hypoxic,
and as a probable result she is in atrial fibrillation.
The underlying pulmonary edema was not treated and her
hypoxia continued.
It was now noted that her renal perfusion has decreased.
Her breathing is already compromised, but now @ 0120 she
was given more Demerol.Her pH was 7.3, PCO2 54 and
PO2 45. This shows severe hypoxia (lack of oxygen).
Was anyone called? She was on now a dobutamine
drip. At 0230 her heart rate was 35-50. Was she electrically
cardioverted at this time? Why? At 0324 she
was intubated. Why so long? Hypoxic for a long
time. Still, underlying pulmonary edema not treated.
At 0330 CXR showed pulmonary edema and lasix finally given.
At this point this is the first mention of lasix given
and to date no mention of an anticoagulant given. She
just had a hip replacement, in atrial fibrillation and
apparently cardioverted, but no anticoagulant yet.
EKG has now new finding of left anterior hemiblock.
She is also on an epinephrine drip. Why? Dr. Richmond
believes she has a myocardial infarction. No mention of
infusion rate during this time, but mentioned that they
finally decreased the rate to 25 cc/hr.
WBC increased with shift to left. At 1500 given Ancef
and Tinzaparin (first mention of anticoagulant) At 2100
she was restrained. What was her PaO2? Could she not have
most likely been restless due to hypoxia?
February 22 CXR showed consolidation of lung, clearing.
Did she have an infiltrate, or was this resolution
of her pulmonary edema? Hgb now 87 ( ?dilutional
or due to blood loss), Na 131 with normal CKMB.
February 23 @ 0130 BP 190-200 systolic. Was
she still on epi drip? What was being given in her epidural
and at what rate? She now was given narcan (Why
was narcan given?), but later given demerol again.
At this this time it was first noted that her abdomen
was distended.
February 25 Facial droop note. She has had a CVA;
Was she still in AF(atrial fibrillation)? She was
complaining of nausea, she was distended and has not had
a BM since the surgery.
February 26. It was noted that she had decreased
air entry to lung bases (has had a R lung resection),
and bronchial breathe sounds. Her potassium now was
2.7. The treatment for her now was an antipsychotic,
loxapine and restraint jacket. She still has not had
a BM.
February 27. She was confused so Loxapine given
again. What were her blood gases like? Was she still
hypoxic? Was she still in AF? Has anyone listened
for bowel sounds?
February 28 Still no BM. Very little charting for
someone who apparently suffered a MI and was in ICU on
multiple drugs. (Question: Where was Dr. David Wickham,
her surgeon through this hospital stay? There are
no notations by him on her chart following surgery. Who
is taking care of Mrs. Winckler?)
March 1. Pulse 54. Still no BM.
March 2. No BM.
March 3. Suffered fall, was anyone notified
at time? (According to interview later, no one initially
told). No one examined her. Family was not given any information
at this time about falls, lack of BM, low potassium.
March 4. Found lying beside bed. Seen by her GPs
partner, Dr. Quinn, who tells daughter he had never met
her and so was at somewhat of a disadvantage as he had
no baseline for her current behavior. No investigations.
Now WBC 34.9 with shift to left. Nothing done.
At this time the patients daughter is keeping progressive
notes of the day (see Journal).
These notes comprised part of the Medical Examiners
investigation. Notes speak to total absence of attention
by doctors or nurses, extreme agitation of patient, swollen
abdomen and dehydration as
well as inability of family to find anyone to attend to
the patient. Why were no calls made to her GP or her
surgeon?
March 5th. At 0100 complaining of ++ pain, she
was given a warm blanket. Finally x-rays of abdomen ordered;
however was there anyone to read them? Why were
they ordered if the surgeon already said he was not coming
in that night and would see her in the morning?
At 0300 she was pronounced dead.
Autopsy
Ischemia/infarcation of the transverse colon
Subdural hematoma
Fractured ribs
No evidence of an MI
Summary
Mrs. Winckler was a bright and articulate 77 year old
woman with a previous history of lung cancer (diagnosed
and treated in 1986) but still had a very good quality
of life. She suffered from a great deal of pain because
of her hip and went into hospital for elective hip replacement
surgery. Note: The week prior to admission she was still
in her garden, visiting neighbours, watching TV with family,
cooking meals and aside from the high level of pain she
was experiencing, was enjoying life and the possibility
of traveling once again, once the pain had been minimized
in her hip and knee.
Statements show discrepancy: while she was deemed high
risk by Dr. Suleman, it appeared not to be high enough
risk to get an EKG or supplement her potassium. Note:
It was previously discussed that she should not have a
general, but that the operation would be performed under
epidural and there is a letter on file from Dr. Lavin
regarding this recommendation. Despite this, Dr. Suleman
made the decision to go ahead with the general even though
this apparently was not the wish of her other doctors,
the patient, or her family.
During the operation of about 1 hour and 15 minutes she
received a great deal of fluid considering her body weight
and the amount of blood loss and her already compromised
medical health. In the recovery room she received more
fluids and was now in pulmonary edema. The underlying
fluid overload was not treated, and most likely because
of the interstitial fluid in her one lung and the subsequent
hypoxia, Mrs. Winckler went into atrial fibrillation.
Because it appears that the underlying pulmonary edema
was not treated, she remained in atrial fibrillation.
Dr. Richmond diagnosed a myocardial infarction and now
was treating as such, giving her more fluids and putting
her on an epinephrine drip. She continued to receive medications
which would be an insult to her already compromised health.
Her confusion was treated with antipsychotics and restraints
instead of treating the underlying hypoxia.
Her distended abdomen and the total lack of a BM since
admission and her complaints of pain were all ignored
until it was too late to do anything about it.
The pathologist had to be re-questioned regarding the
cause of death as there was no evidence of a myocardial
infarction. The cerebral infarctions and bowel infarctions
were said to be due to the hypotension she suffered and
this, according to the pathologist, could also explain
the subdural hematoma.
Mrs. Winckler was in atrial fibrillation for a long period
on time and severely compromised due to pulmonary edema
and was not initially coagulated. Would it not appear
more reasonable that her infarctions were due to emboli
secondary to her atrial fibrillation and her fracture
ribs and subdural more likely related to at least two
documented falls?
Questions Our Family Wants Answered
1. Why was a general anesthetic given?
2. Why was there not a pre-op EKG done?
3. Why was her initial potassium ignored?
4. Were all risks of procedure explained to Mrs.
Winckler? By whom and was anyone on her medical team notified
(ie. GP, surgeon, and family)?
5. Did Dr. Wickham have a busy surgical slate that
day? Is one hour and 15 minutes sufficient time to do
a total hip replacement from opening to closing? Did Dr.
Wickham influence the decision to do the procedure under
general? Would this have made the procedure quicker versus
epidural alone?
6. Why did Mrs. Winckler receive so much fluid?
7. When the chest x-ray showed interstitial fluid,
why wasnt anything done?
8. Was her blood gases really satisfactory
as stated by Dr. Richmond? Was the diagnosis of myocardial
infarction a correct presumption based on her findings?
9. Why wasnt she intubated much earlier?
10. Was her atrial fibrillation corrected properly?
11. Where was Dr. Wickham during her stay? Should
he not have been checking on his surgical patient daily?
Should he not have listened for bowel sounds at some point?
12. Why wasnt she anticoagulated earlier?
13. Why wasnt her pulmonary edema treated
earlier?
14. Why were there not more detailed nursing notes,
considering the seriousness of her condition?
15. Why was her restlessness treated with restraints
and antipsychotics instead of looking for an underlying
cause?
16. Why was her distended abdomen ignored for so
long and finally her daughter told that it was because
of the leather strap on the wheelchair they were using
to confine her?
17. Why was her lack of a BM since admission ignored?
18. Why was no one called in after her first fall?
Note that the autopsy found broken ribs and subdural hematoma.
19. Why was she in a position to fall at least
twice?
20. Why did the daughter have so much trouble throughout
the day March 4th finding a Doctor to attend to Mrs. Winckler;
told the Resident was occupied (all day). Then had to
finally insist on calling in a Doctor on the late afternoon
of March 4th given Mrs. Winckler was in such obvious pain?
Why hadnt the nurses already called a Doctor?
21. After they took x-rays of Mrs. Wincklers
abdomen, was there anyone to read them? Why had the surgeon
called by phone that night said he would not be in until
the morning when it was obvious that she was distended
and in a great deal of pain (Note: this comment made before
the results of the x-rays made available).