Guest guest Posted January 23, 2006 Report Share Posted January 23, 2006 (((I forwarded this on to Tina.))) SINAI LIVER DEATHS By SUSAN EDELMAN January 8, 2006 -- Twenty liver-transplant patients suffered bacterial infections at Mount Sinai Hospital in the last six months — including six people who died, The Post has learned. Liver transplants are highly risky — but the rate of infection at Mount Sinai, one of the city's busiest transplant centers, was high enough to cause the hospital to alert the state last month, state and hospital officials said. The state Department of Health is investigating the source of the bacteria and any links among the 20 cases, said agency spokesman Kenny. Kenny would not state the number of deaths, pending the outcome of the state investigation, but a source familiar with the probe confirmed that six infected patients had died. Mount Sinai also declined to discuss the deaths, but a spokesperson noted that liver-transplant patients can die from many causes. " Patients who receive liver transplants are very ill, and in these complex cases, infection is only one of many factors that can contribute to death, " the spokesperson said. Organ recipients are given powerful drugs that weaken their immune systems, making them highly susceptible to infection. " They are some of the most vulnerable patients, with complex and urgent needs, " Kenny said. No new cases have been reported since Dec. 14, when the state ordered the Upper East Side hospital to take such precautions as isolating infected patients, thorough hand-washing by caregivers and proper wound dressing, Kenny said. The same ward was partially shut down for a year after liver donor Hurewitz and other transplant patients died of infections and Mount Sinai was cited for many violations. Three years ago, state Health Commissioner Dr. Antonia Novello lifted the ban that barred Mount Sinai from using live donors for adult liver transplants. Hurewitz, 57, a former Post reporter, died three days after he had donated a piece of his liver to save his brother's life. The state found that Hurewitz — one of only a few liver donors nationwide who have died — got " woefully inadequate " postsurgical care. His case spawned a major probe of nearly 200 complaints of poor patient care — including 114 deaths — at Mount Sinai. The state eventually hit the hospital with violations in 53 patient cases for filthy conditions, a lack of infection control and other problems in the liver ward and other units. The hospital made sweeping improvements, and a year later the state gave the liver unit a green light. In a statement last week, Mount Sinai acknowledged an " increase in postoperative infections " in adults who got livers from cadavers but refused to divulge any numbers. " All the bacteria are known and common in these cases, and the patients were treated appropriately, " the hospital said. Barb in Texas - Together in the Fight, Whatever it Takes! Son (Ken) 31 - UC 91 & PSC 99 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.