In the night and on weekends, senior doctors are usually not available. Residents (fresh pass outs) and PG students are the medical staff who are there
We want our kids to be doctors and work in UK and US and mint money and even Middle East. No one wants to stay back in India and serve the nation. It’s our mistake. I met with an accident head injury and my face got smashed. Doctor didn’t know about head injury they treated my nose and face first
Hello Mr. Kataria, I am really sorry for your loss. And I am even more sorry for the injustice you are getting. My mother was also killed by such practice. Would it be possible to contact you somehow? I would really appreciate to learn how to approch this Medical Malpractise. Thank you
we see a lot of cases of fracture ribs.people dont die. pt might have succcumbed due to bleeding .cpr cant kill .fracture of ribs after cpr can happen in old age ,in young age its next to impossible .
This is medical negligence cpr was doing more harm instead of saving the patient chest compression + hemothorax (can be easily diagnosed with chest xray+ pt might be in hypovolumic shock due to internal bleed) they just had one thing that is to drain the accumulated blood in the chest cavity and give the patient fast ringer lactate and arrange for blood products.
It was him who was negligent in driving car , why blame doctors. Btw in emergency cases ATLS protocol is applied, so airway and breathing are maintained first.
Not correctly diagnosed n managed at that point ....general examination not done which lead them to overlook chest injuries ...which is gross mistake ....sorry for your loss ...
Iam surprised Iam an mbbs graduate but I have assisted the case of hemoperitonem( of course with a senior jr) in exam also we have been asked about golden hour of life saving and management through hemoperitonem through chest tube insertion
That is the shock first Artemis put just passed out MBBS less than 3 months experience as General surgeon in emergency against law, this doctor did not know what to do and forgot everything he had learned like chest tube, which is very basic. What’s more the Artemis tried to cover it says they did 1 hrs CPR and it is now close to 2 years and still no result.
@@akataria1964 First of all, i'm sorry for your loss, i can only imagine how you've been coping. I will definitely say that there were serious issues with the way your son was treated. ABCDE - Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Expose. This is something that every doctor is taught, be that newly qualified, someone with 8 years of experience (like myself) or someone with 40 years of experience (like my father). We all approach a patient the same way. There are specilists who will be available in the hospital on-call, they won't all be in the emergency department. A recently passed out MBBS grad can definitely serve in the emergency department, so can a First Year Surgical Resident. A massive trauma like this always requires a trauma team review, it includes the surgical team, medical team and anaesthetic team. I have done trauma reviews as a junior doctor with only 2 years of experience. A full trauma panel CT is necessary. A full body survey should never be skipped. From what i assume, your son was initially stable (talking in full sentences, with a stable heart rate and blood pressure), but that shouldn't have been a reason to skip the initial resuscitation, primary and secondary surveys. Unfortunately, an actively bleeding massive haemothorax and cardiac tamponade have a significant fatality rate. But the prime focus is that we as doctors should be able to say that we did EVERYTHING possible in such a scenario. If death happens despite all our efforts, it is still heartbreaking, but our conscience will be clear. Even the best doctor can have a bad day, we're all humans at the end of the day. That's where protocols and guideline play their part, to eliminate the chances of human error. Some hospitals need to implement such guidelines strictly, and make ATLS compulsory for all surgical and anaesthetic residents.
@@satyamprasad4617 i am amazed on your knowledge if you are going to insert tube in chest for hemoperitoneum you are going to kill the patient with such knowledge how can you survive felling sorry for you.
In the night and on weekends, senior doctors are usually not available. Residents (fresh pass outs) and PG students are the medical staff who are there
We want our kids to be doctors and work in UK and US and mint money and even Middle East. No one wants to stay back in India and serve the nation. It’s our mistake.
I met with an accident head injury and my face got smashed. Doctor didn’t know about head injury they treated my nose and face first
So sorry to know of your loss. No words can ever heal this wound. I pray to God that time plays the role of the healer.
Hello Mr. Kataria, I am really sorry for your loss. And I am even more sorry for the injustice you are getting. My mother was also killed by such practice. Would it be possible to contact you somehow? I would really appreciate to learn how to approch this Medical Malpractise. Thank you
Yes definitely doctor responsible but no link or responsibility of the crash which injured him. 👏
we see a lot of cases of fracture ribs.people dont die. pt might have succcumbed due to bleeding .cpr cant kill .fracture of ribs after cpr can happen in old age ,in young age its next to impossible .
May God bless you with right justice soon .My prayers 🙏 for you & the departed soul .
This is medical negligence cpr was doing more harm instead of saving the patient chest compression + hemothorax (can be easily diagnosed with chest xray+ pt might be in hypovolumic shock due to internal bleed) they just had one thing that is to drain the accumulated blood in the chest cavity and give the patient fast ringer lactate and arrange for blood products.
It was him who was negligent in driving car , why blame doctors.
Btw in emergency cases ATLS protocol is applied, so airway and breathing are maintained first.
Justice क्रान्ति zindabad
Not correctly diagnosed n managed at that point ....general examination not done which lead them to overlook chest injuries ...which is gross mistake ....sorry for your loss ...
Iam surprised Iam an mbbs graduate but I have assisted the case of hemoperitonem( of course with a senior jr) in exam also we have been asked about golden hour of life saving and management through hemoperitonem through chest tube insertion
That is the shock first Artemis put just passed out MBBS less than 3 months experience as General surgeon in emergency against law, this doctor did not know what to do and forgot everything he had learned like chest tube, which is very basic. What’s more the Artemis tried to cover it says they did 1 hrs CPR and it is now close to 2 years and still no result.
@@akataria1964 First of all, i'm sorry for your loss, i can only imagine how you've been coping.
I will definitely say that there were serious issues with the way your son was treated.
ABCDE - Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Expose.
This is something that every doctor is taught, be that newly qualified, someone with 8 years of experience (like myself) or someone with 40 years of experience (like my father). We all approach a patient the same way. There are specilists who will be available in the hospital on-call, they won't all be in the emergency department.
A recently passed out MBBS grad can definitely serve in the emergency department, so can a First Year Surgical Resident.
A massive trauma like this always requires a trauma team review, it includes the surgical team, medical team and anaesthetic team. I have done trauma reviews as a junior doctor with only 2 years of experience.
A full trauma panel CT is necessary. A full body survey should never be skipped. From what i assume, your son was initially stable (talking in full sentences, with a stable heart rate and blood pressure), but that shouldn't have been a reason to skip the initial resuscitation, primary and secondary surveys.
Unfortunately, an actively bleeding massive haemothorax and cardiac tamponade have a significant fatality rate. But the prime focus is that we as doctors should be able to say that we did EVERYTHING possible in such a scenario. If death happens despite all our efforts, it is still heartbreaking, but our conscience will be clear. Even the best doctor can have a bad day, we're all humans at the end of the day. That's where protocols and guideline play their part, to eliminate the chances of human error. Some hospitals need to implement such guidelines strictly, and make ATLS compulsory for all surgical and anaesthetic residents.
@@satyamprasad4617 i am amazed on your knowledge if you are going to insert tube in chest for hemoperitoneum you are going to kill the patient with such knowledge how can you survive felling sorry for you.