A California surgeon who allegedly removed the wrong kidney from a
federal inmate has been placed on probation by the state medical board.
UPI has more:
The California Medical Board ruled Dr. Charles Coonan
Streit, a urologist who has had a license to practice for 41 years,
committed “an extreme departure from the standard of care” when he
relied on his memory and removed a healthy kidney from the 59-year-old
federal inmate at St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton in 2012.
The board said the error put the patient’s “future renal function in
jeopardy” and forced him to undergo a second surgery to remove the
cancer-stricken kidney.
The hospital was fined $100,000 by the state Department of Health
after an investigation found CT scans showing the affected kidney had
been left in the office of a surgical team doctor on the day of the
surgery.
Streit was placed on probation for three years and ordered to enroll
in a wrong-site surgery class at the University of California-San Diego
School of Medicine within 60 days. He was also banned from supervising
physician assistants for the duration of his probation.
A 2006 study
in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggested wrong-site
surgeries are rare, occurring an estimated once every five to 10 years
at large hospitals.
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