Guest guest Posted January 16, 2004 Report Share Posted January 16, 2004 NYC Hospital Resumes Liver Transplants Jan 15, 7:34 PM (ET) By VERENA DOBNIK NEW YORK (AP) - The Mount Sinai Hospital - one of the world's top live-donor liver transplant centers - has resumed transplants between adults two years after the death of a man who gave part of his liver to his brother, a hospital spokesman said Thursday. This week, a 66-year-old woman received part of her daughter's liver. The patient, Therese Lee Mallon of Mahopac, N.Y., was battling liver cancer and was in urgent need of a transplant, which was performed Wednesday. Since no cadaver donor was immediately available, her 41-year-old daughter, Rose Anne Mallon, offered part of her organ. Mount Sinai had voluntarily suspended its adult-to-adult liver donation program in January 2002, after the death of Hurewitz, a 57-year-old Albany Times-Union reporter who succumbed to a post-surgical infection. He was the first living liver donor to die at the hospital. State health officials said Hurewitz had received " woefully inadequate " care. The state found other lapses, including a first-year surgical resident left alone with 34 patients in the transplant unit, and fined Mount Sinai the maximum $48,000 on 18 violations. While state health officials reviewed the case and other adult-to-adult transplant procedures, the hospital continued its adult-to-child live-donor liver transplants. Bill Van Slyke, a spokesman for the state Department of Health, said Thursday that the hospital has corrected the problems. " We have confidence that they're providing excellent care, " he said. Since 1988, Mount Sinai physicians have performed more than 2,300 liver transplants, including more than 180 involving living donors. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 16, 2004 Report Share Posted January 16, 2004 NYC Hospital Resumes Liver Transplants Jan 15, 7:34 PM (ET) By VERENA DOBNIK NEW YORK (AP) - The Mount Sinai Hospital - one of the world's top live-donor liver transplant centers - has resumed transplants between adults two years after the death of a man who gave part of his liver to his brother, a hospital spokesman said Thursday. This week, a 66-year-old woman received part of her daughter's liver. The patient, Therese Lee Mallon of Mahopac, N.Y., was battling liver cancer and was in urgent need of a transplant, which was performed Wednesday. Since no cadaver donor was immediately available, her 41-year-old daughter, Rose Anne Mallon, offered part of her organ. Mount Sinai had voluntarily suspended its adult-to-adult liver donation program in January 2002, after the death of Hurewitz, a 57-year-old Albany Times-Union reporter who succumbed to a post-surgical infection. He was the first living liver donor to die at the hospital. State health officials said Hurewitz had received " woefully inadequate " care. The state found other lapses, including a first-year surgical resident left alone with 34 patients in the transplant unit, and fined Mount Sinai the maximum $48,000 on 18 violations. While state health officials reviewed the case and other adult-to-adult transplant procedures, the hospital continued its adult-to-child live-donor liver transplants. Bill Van Slyke, a spokesman for the state Department of Health, said Thursday that the hospital has corrected the problems. " We have confidence that they're providing excellent care, " he said. Since 1988, Mount Sinai physicians have performed more than 2,300 liver transplants, including more than 180 involving living donors. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 16, 2004 Report Share Posted January 16, 2004 NYC Hospital Resumes Liver Transplants Jan 15, 7:34 PM (ET) By VERENA DOBNIK NEW YORK (AP) - The Mount Sinai Hospital - one of the world's top live-donor liver transplant centers - has resumed transplants between adults two years after the death of a man who gave part of his liver to his brother, a hospital spokesman said Thursday. This week, a 66-year-old woman received part of her daughter's liver. The patient, Therese Lee Mallon of Mahopac, N.Y., was battling liver cancer and was in urgent need of a transplant, which was performed Wednesday. Since no cadaver donor was immediately available, her 41-year-old daughter, Rose Anne Mallon, offered part of her organ. Mount Sinai had voluntarily suspended its adult-to-adult liver donation program in January 2002, after the death of Hurewitz, a 57-year-old Albany Times-Union reporter who succumbed to a post-surgical infection. He was the first living liver donor to die at the hospital. State health officials said Hurewitz had received " woefully inadequate " care. The state found other lapses, including a first-year surgical resident left alone with 34 patients in the transplant unit, and fined Mount Sinai the maximum $48,000 on 18 violations. While state health officials reviewed the case and other adult-to-adult transplant procedures, the hospital continued its adult-to-child live-donor liver transplants. Bill Van Slyke, a spokesman for the state Department of Health, said Thursday that the hospital has corrected the problems. " We have confidence that they're providing excellent care, " he said. Since 1988, Mount Sinai physicians have performed more than 2,300 liver transplants, including more than 180 involving living donors. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 16, 2004 Report Share Posted January 16, 2004 NYC Hospital Resumes Liver Transplants Jan 15, 7:34 PM (ET) By VERENA DOBNIK NEW YORK (AP) - The Mount Sinai Hospital - one of the world's top live-donor liver transplant centers - has resumed transplants between adults two years after the death of a man who gave part of his liver to his brother, a hospital spokesman said Thursday. This week, a 66-year-old woman received part of her daughter's liver. The patient, Therese Lee Mallon of Mahopac, N.Y., was battling liver cancer and was in urgent need of a transplant, which was performed Wednesday. Since no cadaver donor was immediately available, her 41-year-old daughter, Rose Anne Mallon, offered part of her organ. Mount Sinai had voluntarily suspended its adult-to-adult liver donation program in January 2002, after the death of Hurewitz, a 57-year-old Albany Times-Union reporter who succumbed to a post-surgical infection. He was the first living liver donor to die at the hospital. State health officials said Hurewitz had received " woefully inadequate " care. The state found other lapses, including a first-year surgical resident left alone with 34 patients in the transplant unit, and fined Mount Sinai the maximum $48,000 on 18 violations. While state health officials reviewed the case and other adult-to-adult transplant procedures, the hospital continued its adult-to-child live-donor liver transplants. Bill Van Slyke, a spokesman for the state Department of Health, said Thursday that the hospital has corrected the problems. " We have confidence that they're providing excellent care, " he said. Since 1988, Mount Sinai physicians have performed more than 2,300 liver transplants, including more than 180 involving living donors. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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